Increasing workers’ earning power and offering Latino-owned companies easier access to funding that can be used for growth and expansion can help improve the social and economic status of Latinos in the US and throughout Latin America, Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim told a group of religious and community leaders.
During a speech on Sunday at the annual conference of the Catholic Association of Latino Leaders, Slim spoke for more than an hour on how to better the plight of Latino workers and Latino-owned businesses.
Slim, a telecommunications magnate who this year was ranked by Forbes magazine as the world’s second-richest person — with an estimated net worth of US$72 billion — suggested establishing investment firms or companies dedicated to working with small and medium-sized Latino businesses in need of financing.
He told a crowd of about 200 people that during a time of economic crises, countries need to focus on strengthening the middle class as well as healthcare systems and education.
“What is important is that people earn more and that more middle classes are formed,” said Slim, who owns telecommunications giant America Movil, a leading cellphone service provider in Latin America.
Slim also reiterated an idea he first made public last month at another conference: his proposal for a three-day working week. He said the idea would mean longer work hours and delaying retirement until a person is 70 to 75 years old, but would mean people having more free time with their families or for personal enrichment.
Last week, Slim’s foundation unveiled Acceso Latino, a free Web site providing US Latinos easy access to content about education, healthcare, job training, culture and other areas.
The growing importance of the Latino population can be seen in its rising numbers, Slim said. There are more than 53 million people of Hispanic origin living in the US, making up about 17 percent of the nation’s total population, according to US Census figures.
Slim said this figure makes the US Hispanic population larger than the populations of many Latin American countries.
Martin Cabrera, the CEO of a Chicago-based investment firm who attended the conference, said there are already multibillion-dollar pension funds that have investment arms that provide financing to startups and other companies.
“The amount of business they are doing with Latino [firms] is close to zero,” he said.
Cabrera said Slim can use his influence and stature to develop a dialogue with these pension funds and their investment arms to get them to see the potential of investing in Latino-owned businesses.
Cabrera added that these funds and investment firms not only provide much needed money, but also bring “management and experience to help” Latino-owned businesses grow and “get them to the next level and even possibly be the Latino Facebook or the Latino Google.”
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