One In Three Latin Americans Wants To Leave: UN 2026 Report
| Indicator | 2004 / 2016 | 2023 / 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Want to emigrate within 3 years | 21% (2004) | 32% (2023) |
| Consider immigration harmful | n.a. | 51.4% (2024) |
| Trust in electoral authorities | 47% (2016) | 34% (2024) |
| Believe elections are fraudulent | 48.5% (2016) | 60.6% (2024) |
| Intra-regional migrants | 3.7 million (1990) | 14 million (2024) |
| Top emigration intent | - | Haiti 74.6%, Jamaica 54.3%, Suriname 45.7% |
| Highest 2025 homicide rate per 100k | - | Haiti 68, Ecuador 50.9 |
The exception is El Salvador, whose homicide rate dropped from 62 per 100,000 in 2017 to 1.3 in 2025, the lowest in Latin America, after President Nayib Bukele's mass-incarceration approach. The case is read across the region as evidence that violence can be reduced rapidly, though at a cost to civil liberties that the UNDP report flags as a parallel democratic risk.
Why does the rejection of immigrants matter?UNDP describes the 51.4% rejection figure as the trigger for a feedback loop that erodes democracy from within. Public discourse increasingly criminalises migrants, reinforcing an“us-versus-them” logic that the report warns undermines the democratic contract. The political consequences are visible: the rise of anti-migrant platforms across Argentina, Chile, Peru, and the Dominican Republic; the December 2025 closure of large parts of the Darién migration corridor by Panama; and the 2025-2026 escalation of restrictive measures in the United States that has rebounded flows inside Latin America itself.
UNDP calls for strengthening electoral autonomy, rebuilding political representation, limiting economic capture of political processes, and protecting the information ecosystem from disinformation. Latin American social media users now distrust the platforms that have become their main information source, a paradox the report attributes to algorithmic amplification and AI-driven manipulation of public deliberation.
What should investors and policymakers watch next?-
Peru runoff (June 7). Keiko Fujimori versus Rafael López Aliaga will test whether anti-incumbent emigration sentiment translates into a hardened security mandate.
Brazil and Mexico elections in 2026. Both will be read for whether centrist coalitions can rebuild trust before democratic erosion deepens.
Venezuelan post-Maduro flows. Cuba's energy collapse and Venezuela's post-Maduro political reorganisation could trigger new waves of departure or, alternatively, return migration.
Bukele template adoption. Several presidential candidates across the region are running on explicit replication of El Salvador's mass-incarceration model. Adoption rates will reshape regional civil-liberty baselines.
U.S. deportation policy. The Trump administration's enforcement posture will be the largest external variable for intra-regional flows through 2027.
Haiti combines the region's highest homicide rate (68 per 100,000), state collapse following the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, and ongoing gang control of large parts of Port-au-Prince. Three-quarters of the population reporting emigration intent reflects the absence of a functioning state more than discontent with policy.
Why are intra-regional flows growing fastest?U.S. and European border policy has tightened substantially since 2025, raising the cost and risk of long-distance migration. Neighbouring countries are easier to reach, often with weaker entry controls. The Venezuelan exodus alone accounts for several million of the additional 10 million intra-regional migrants since 1990.
Is the region still a democracy?UNDP describes Latin America as the most democratic developing region in the world, with more than four of every five citizens living under elected governments. The threat the report describes is not collapse but gradual erosion through weakened checks and balances, personalist leadership, polarisation, and capture of institutions by organised economic interests.
Connected CoverageThe migration data interlocks with three running clusters in our coverage. The Venezuelan exodus and its political reorganisation sit in our Venezuela transition tracker. The Bukele security model and its export to Ecuador and Peru sit in our Bukele export analysis. The Cuba energy collapse, which threatens the next migration wave, sits in our CIA-in-Havana readout. The Peru runoff that will read directly against this data sits in our Peru runoff analysis.
Reported by The Rio Times - Latin American financial news. Filed May 15, 2026.
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