...the [Oportunidades] payments, helpful as they are, are still heartbreakingly small. Emma PasarĂ¡n in the town of Venustiano Carranza in Puebla, told me that one of the benefits of the program is that “I am never without money. If my daughter says, ‘Mom, I need a pencil,’ I can say to her, ‘Here’s the money.’ ” She mimes taking a coin out of her purse, a proud smile on her face. In the same town, I talked to Elia Valderrama Vargas, a mother of three, in her dirt-floor house, about the jobs that will be open to her soon-to-be-educated children. “My husband cuts weeds with a machete,” she told me. “My children will be able to work in a tortilla factory because they’ll know how to cobrar” — how to add purchases and give change. For PasarĂ¡n, buying a pencil on a whim was the fulfillment of a dream; for Valderrama, it was seeing her children in indoor work.
They say these are the best (Scottish)(Public Health)(academic) years of my life...
Sunday, December 21, 2008
... of a white Christmas
From today's Times Magazine, on Mexico's groundbreaking anti-poverty program:
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