Busy street market in Mexico City with vendors and shoppers for an article about Mexico middle class growth — 13 words.

Mexico’s middle class now outnumbers its population in poverty for the first time

For the first time in recorded history, more Mexicans belong to the middle class than live in poverty — a statistical milestone that marks one of Latin America’s most significant social shifts in decades. According to data from Mexico’s National Council for the Evaluation of Social Development Policy (CONEVAL), the share of Mexicans living in moderate or extreme poverty fell to around 36 percent by the mid-2020s, while the middle class grew to surpass that figure. It is a crossing point that economists and social scientists had long watched for, and it finally arrived.

At a glance

  • Mexico middle class: The proportion of Mexicans classified as middle class has grown steadily over two decades, driven by rising wages, expanded social programs, and a drop in extreme poverty rates.
  • Mexico middle class: CONEVAL data shows poverty rates fell from over 44 percent in 2008 to below 36 percent by the most recent measurement period, representing tens of millions of people lifted above the poverty line.
  • Mexico middle class: The milestone comes alongside a record minimum wage increase — Mexico’s minimum wage more than doubled in real terms between 2018 and 2024, one of the steepest increases in the country’s modern history.

How it happened

The shift didn’t happen overnight. It reflects a confluence of policies, demographic changes, and economic forces that built on each other over roughly 20 years.

Conditional cash transfer programs — starting with Oportunidades (later renamed Prospera and then replaced by Sembrando Vida and Becas Bienestar) — funneled direct support to millions of low-income families, particularly in rural and Indigenous communities. These programs, combined with expansions of universal health coverage and public education, helped reduce the depth of poverty even as headline poverty rates remained stubbornly high for years.

The most dramatic acceleration came after 2018, when the federal government launched aggressive minimum wage hikes. Workers in Mexico’s northern border zone saw wages rise especially sharply under a special economic zone policy. International Monetary Fund analysts noted that Mexico’s labor market gains in this period were unusually broad, benefiting lower-income workers at higher rates than in previous economic cycles.

The role of remittances and nearshoring

Two other forces contributed in ways that economic textbooks rarely anticipated together.

Remittances — money sent home by Mexicans living and working abroad, primarily in the United States — hit record levels in 2023 and 2024, surpassing oil revenues as a source of national income. For millions of families in states like Michoacán, Oaxaca, and Guerrero, remittance income bridged the gap between poverty and stability.

Meanwhile, the global trend of nearshoring — companies relocating manufacturing closer to the U.S. market in response to supply chain disruptions — brought new factory investment and formal employment to northern and central Mexico. World Bank reports on Mexico’s economy flagged manufacturing employment growth as a key driver of income gains for workers who had previously been locked out of the formal economy.

What this means — and what it doesn’t

The milestone matters because it signals that the structural base of Mexican society is changing. A larger middle class typically correlates with greater political stability, higher consumer spending, increased demand for education, and better health outcomes across generations. It also changes the nature of what voters demand from their government.

But the picture is not without serious complications. “Middle class” in Mexico is not the same as middle class in wealthier countries — many newly middle-class Mexicans remain economically vulnerable, one illness or job loss away from sliding back. ECLAC, the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, has consistently warned that Latin America’s middle classes are fragile and that consolidating gains requires sustained investment in health, education, and labor protections.

Regional inequality within Mexico also remains sharp. Southern states — including Chiapas, Oaxaca, and Guerrero — still report poverty rates well above the national average, and Indigenous communities bear a disproportionate share of that burden. The national headline number masks these geographic and ethnic gaps, which advocates say must stay at the center of policy conversations even as the aggregate data improves.

Informality, too, remains a challenge. More than half of Mexican workers are still employed in the informal sector, which means they lack social security, labor protections, and access to formal credit — all features that underpin a durable middle class. International Labour Organization data shows Mexico’s informality rate has improved only modestly, and closing that gap will be essential to making this milestone last.

A long arc bending forward

Mexico’s history includes long stretches where development gains were reversed by debt crises, currency collapses, or violence. The 1994 peso crisis wiped out the savings of a generation. The 2008 global recession hit manufacturing employment hard. Skeptics are right to ask whether this crossing point will hold.

But the trend lines are real, the data is robust, and the mechanisms driving the change — higher wages, direct transfers, remittances, and new investment — are multiple and reinforcing. For the millions of Mexican families who moved across that threshold, the shift is not an abstraction. It is a child who can afford to stay in school, a household that can save a small amount each month, a generation with a slightly wider set of choices than the one before.

That is a story worth marking — carefully, honestly, and with full awareness of how much work remains.

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