Growth without well-being
For almost three decades, the Dominican Republic has been presented as one of the most successful cases of economic growth in Latin America and the Caribbean. Official reports, multilateral organizations and analysis centers frequently highlight the dynamism of an economy that has maintained expansion rates higher than the regional average. On paper, the figures are encouraging; However, in the daily reality of millions of Dominicans, the perception is very different.
True development is not measured only by how much an economy produces, but by how much well-being it generates for its people. Progress must be felt in homes, neighborhoods, schools and communities. It must be expressed in the reduction of inequalities and the strengthening of human dignity.
While statistics celebrate growth, families face a reality marked by the constant increase in the cost of living. The prices of food, medicine, transportation and basic services continue to put pressure on family budgets. Salaries, for their part, are advancing at a pace insufficient to compensate for the loss of purchasing power. The consequence is evident: a growing feeling that the announced prosperity is not reaching homes.
A legitimate question then arises: What is the point of growing economically if that growth does not translate into well-being for the majority of the population? How can we explain that a country advances in macroeconomic indicators while broad sectors of society feel that they are regressing in quality of life? The answer requires deep reflection on the development model we have built.
For years, the measurement of growth through the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been privileged, an important indicator, but insufficient to evaluate the true progress of a nation. Economic growth alone does not guarantee a better distribution of wealth, ensure equitable opportunities, or automatically strengthen essential public services.
There is also a moral and communicational debt of the economic sector and the authorities with the citizens. Macroeconomic concepts are often presented in technical terms that are foreign to most people. There is talk of stability, foreign investment, productive expansion and positive indicators, but it is rarely explained clearly why these advances are not reflected on the families’ table, in the quality of public services or in the savings capacity of workers.
Economics cannot continue to be an exclusive language for specialists. It must become a tool for citizen understanding. When the population does not perceive the benefits of growth, distrust is generated towards institutions and towards the economic system itself. Transparency, pedagogy and empathy must accompany any discourse on development.
In this context, the report published this June by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) is particularly relevant, which raises a fundamental truth: the main challenge for Caribbean countries is not only to grow more, but to build stronger institutions capable of managing the structural vulnerabilities that limit development. The report points out persistent obstacles that hold back regional stability such as poor productive diversification, high levels of debt, international financing difficulties and great exposure to external shocks.
The time has come to overcome the sophistry of growth without social justice. The Dominican Republic needs to move towards a more inclusive development model, where macroeconomic figures are a means and not an end in themselves. Because when growth does not improve people’s lives, it ceases to be development and becomes simply a statistic.
The national goal should not only be to grow more, but to grow better. And growing better means guaranteeing that economic progress is transformed into tangible well-being for all Dominicans.
















