Thank you for your question. It is very important.
The definition of poverty is not very easy. We have many poverties, not only one. You can also have poverty with money in the pocket.
We issue a national survey every three years, in which we measure poverty not only in terms of income. We also have situations with women, children, and housing where I think we can measure poverty. In this case, the service we named was the CASEN survey. It has many different indicators that give us a more sophisticated notion of poverty.
We also have some research over a two-year period. I brought it with me. We measured our social situation in terms of the United Nations human development method, which is an absolutely independent index. According to this index, we rank 37th in the world out of 177 countries. This means that we don't want to fool ourselves, because poverty is more than income. We have the instruments to measure real poverty in different dimensions.
I also want to address this question to say something important. Normally when poverty is measured statistically in different countries, it's necessary for the person to have the income to obtain a group of basic goods and services in the market. That's a basket of basic needs. If we use this measure in this case, poverty is two baskets of basic needs, and indigence is one of those baskets. This is not our figure, because we introduced different indicators in this measure of poverty and indigence in Chile.