Sponsored by the International Fund for Agricultural Development and the Ministry of Agricultural Development, among other entities, the symposium’s objectives include examining structural gaps between countries and population groups, as well as proposing strategies to address them.
At the inauguration, the Director of the Subregional Headquarters in Mexico at the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Hugo Vitietta, stated in his Conference on Rural Areas that since past times these areas have undergone profound transformations, which, however, are limited to understanding the changes.
The official explained how the countries’ domestic product has contracted at the present time, and there are changes in household income sources, business structure, information and communication technology, and changes in the management and management of natural resources.
We also see changes in exposure to human mobility, migrants, refugees, displaced persons and their counterparts, which are remittance flows, but these events have not been reflected as the way we measure and understand the routine nature.
This is understood through the previous and limited insights to understand the changes, but not the complexity of the interaction in the regions.
At the same time, he explained, another important narrative is that of middle-income countries that are sensitive to Costa Rica.
The official explained that by increasing per capita income, problems must be solved, however, other problems can worsen, pollution and gender gaps, which do not disappear.
Figures show that 72 percent of the world’s poor live in middle-income countries, and the explanation is that they are countries walking alone. He stressed that, on the contrary, they represent persistent loopholes for long periods that impede development.
Poem / Alp
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