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Report: Hispanic middle class remains overlooked, but continues its ascent

by Maira Garcia

The Hispanic middle class could see dramatic growth in the next 10 years with the right financial strategies, according to a report released July 24 by the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute.

The report proposes fi­nancial institutions that want to tap into the income and spending power of the 44 mil­lion Hispanics in the United States should ad­just policies to attract and keep them. The chang­es include requiring ­lower minimum balances for checking and saving accounts and offering more cash-based services and new credit scoring methodologies.

Harry Pachón, president and CEO of the Univer­sity of Southern California based-TRPI, said its recom­mendations to the financial industry were substantive and would not be easy to change overnight, payoff would be great.

“You can start the pro­cess of financial literacy and financial rehabilitation now rather than waiting for 10 or 15 years,” he said. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated 36 percent of Hispanic house­holds in 2002 had middle-class wealth. The report indicated there were about 3.7 million affluent Hispan­ics nationwide.

The very existence of the Hispanic middle and up­per classes goes unnoticed in mainstream society, accord­ing to Pachón. The image of Hispanics remains as a poor immigrant group, he said.

Pachón said there are many routes to the middle class for Hispanics.

“You get Hispanic entre­preneurs. You have people coming over with money already or an education,” he said. “You get people with educational capital rather than monetary capital. Then you get job mobility of Lati­nos occurring.”

However, Pachón said ruling out immigrants and first-generation Hispanics as having the ability to move into the middle class would be wrong.

“The mobil­ity of these two sectors has been over­looked by many,” he said. “Even the mobility of the undocumented has been overlooked.”

Rogelio Saenz, a sociol­ogy professor at Texas A&M University,
compared in­comes of native and foreign-born Hispanics to an hour­glass figure. He said about 60 percents of all Hispanics whose income is $25, 000 or less are foreign born. Those earning more than $25, 000 are mostly native born. His­panics earning above $250,000 tend to be well-educated immigrants.

The report stated 50 per­cents of wealthy Hispanics are foreign born.

Saenz said the key for Hispanics to move up the socioeconomic ladder is education, but there would have to be changes in the current system.

“Something I think that is very important, is at a very early, young age, you begin linking up people in the com­munity—for example success­ful professional Latinos that work alongside schools where you have the role models that poor Latino children could have access to,” he said.

Saenz proposed programs where role models could teach Hispanic youths about financial responsibility.

The report is ­available at www.trpi.org. Hispanic link.

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