Honduras The Middle Class
Campaign posters on a main street in Tela
Courtesy Ann Gardner
Typical street scene in Copán
Courtesy Randall Baldwin
In 1993 the middle class in Honduras is still a small,
albeit
growing, sector. Inclusion in this sector is best defined
by
economic factors and by occupation. Except for merchants,
an
equally important factor in classifying a person as middle
class
appears to be completion of a higher education. Included
among
middle class ranks are professionals, students, farmers,
merchants,
business employees, and civil servants. Although a
well-paying
occupation is crucial for movement up to the middle
sector, incomes
for this group are still relatively low.
One factor limiting the size of the middle class is the
slow
growth of industry and commerce in Honduras
(see Macroeconomic Trends
, ch. 3). Employment opportunities are scarce. The
growth of
the middle class in the Caribbean coast region has been
directly
tied to that area's industries and foreign enterprises.
The success
of merchants in the north has resulted from the markets
created by
workers employed in the area's agribusinesses. The middle
class in
Honduras has not been politically active as a unified
group,
although many in its ranks are politically active through
unions,
church groups, or other organizations.
Data as of December 1993
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