Haiti qualifies as having a lower income per capita:
Mexico has an income per capita (PPP) of US$18,500 while Haiti has an income per capita of US$1,800 (both for 2015).
Mexico has over ten times the per capita income of Haiti.
Haiti qualifies as having a lower income per capita:
Haiti has a lower per capita income (2017):
Higher
Higher. Arizona has a per capita income of $34,999, and Colorado has a per capita income of $42,802.
As of 2010 it is LOWER
It is by far the least developed region in Mexico with an income per capita much lower than the rest of the country:Guerrero: US$4,981Oaxaca: US$4,003Chiapas: US$3,657Mexico avg. income per capita: US$8,945Also, southern Mexico is one of the richest regions in terms of culture, natural resources and beauty, with places such as the Zapotec ruins of Monte Alban, the Sumidero Canyon in Chiapas or Zihuatanejo city and resort.
No, the fistribution of income must also be considered.
The people living in low income countries have, on average, a lower level of real per capita income. Low income leads to low investment in education and health as well as plant and equipment and infrastructure, which in turn leads to low productivity and economic stagnation.
According to the WorldBank, the per capita income in Ethiopia is $410 which is comparatively lower than other nations.
Low per capita income means that the total income of a region (usually a country) divided by its total population is, by some set of criteria, relatively small. Usually it is used to describe countries or regions existing in the lower percentage (category, class, bin, etc.) of a group.
In India, most people are lower middle class. It is due to low per capita income.
Portugal. Something like $22,000. Lower than Greece's $27,000 and Spain's $30,000.
Brazil has a higher GDP than Mexico, but Mexico has a higher GDP per capita than Brazil, which is what matters. Mexico also has a lower inequality index than Brazil. But Argentina has better stats than Mexico or Brazil. For more info look up "GDP per capita by country" and "Gini index by country" in Wikipedia
It has. However, not on the levels that were promised, and not everyone benefited from it. Trade has increased income per capita from $5,800 in the early 1990's to $19,500 in 2017; combined trade (imports + exports) equal 60% of Mexico's GDP. However, inequalities persist and nowadays, the median income per household is still very low, at $13,891 per year, which is still much lower than the OECD average of $30,563 per year.