Social protection systems in Latin America developed in a fragmented
manner, offering varying access to benefits and benefit levels to
population groups. In the context of widespread informal and precarious
work, social insurance institutions could only provide limited coverage.
In this context, progress toward a Citizen's Income policy in Latin
America depends on the possibility of reappraising its importance for an
integrated institutional system which promotes the empowerment and
economic independence of people. A Citizen's Income policy is not only a
cash transfer to alleviate poverty or a basic income for food. It is a
basic right to improve democracy and encourage a more autonomous
development of people living in profoundly unequal societies.