pull down to refresh

Source: International Organization for Migration data between 2020 and 2023.
The number of Latin Americans and Caribbeans living in other countries in the region grew 83.2% in just five years, rising from 6.17 million in 2015 to 11.3 million in 2020, according to UNDESA data, primarily due to Venezuelan migration.
Argentina: Emigrants: ~1.1 million (2020). Total population: ~45.4 million. Percentage: ~2.4%. Note: Main destination is Spain (294,921 emigrants).
Bolivia: Emigrants: ~927,244 (2020). Total population: ~11.7 million. Percentage: ~7.9%. Note: Main destination is Argentina (423,136 emigrants).
Brazil: Emigrants: ~1.8 million (estimate based on regional trends, 2020). Total population: ~212.6 million. Percentage: ~0.8%. Note: Specific data are limited, but Brazil has a low emigration rate relative to its population.
Chile: Emigrants: ~1.1 million (2020, estimated). Total population: ~19.1 million. Percentage: ~5.8%. Note: Approximate figure; Chilean emigration is moderate, with destinations such as Argentina and the US.
Colombia: Emigrants: ~3 million (2020). Total population: ~50.9 million. Percentage: ~5.9% Note: Main destinations include the US and Venezuela (pre-crisis).
Costa Rica: Emigrants: ~150,000 (estimate, 2020, based on regional flows). Total population: ~5.1 million. Percentage: ~2.9%. Note: Costa Rica is more of a recipient of migrants (9% of its population are immigrants).
Cuba: Emigrants: ~2.2 million (2020). Total population: ~11.3 million. Percentage: ~19.5%. Note: High emigration due to political and economic factors; the main destination is the US.
Ecuador: Emigrants: ~1.1 million (2020). Total population: ~17.6 million. Percentage: ~6.3%. Note: Main destinations are the US and Spain.
El Salvador: Emigrants: ~1.4 million (2020, estimated). Total population: ~6.5 million. Percentage: ~21.5%. Note: High emigration, especially to the US, due to economic and security factors.
Guatemala: Emigrants: ~1.2 million (estimate, 2020, based on Central American flows). Total population: ~17.9 million. Percentage: ~6.7%. Note: Main destination is the US.
Haiti: Emigrants: ~1.8 million (2020). Total population: ~11.4 million. Percentage: ~15.8%. Note: Significant emigration to the Dominican Republic, Chile, and the US.
Honduras: Emigrants: ~1 million (estimate, 2020, based on Central American flows). Total population: ~9.9 million. Percentage: ~10.1%. Note: Main destination is the US; motivated by violence and poverty.
Mexico: Emigrants: ~11.2 million (2020). Total population: ~128.9 million. Percentage: ~8.7%. Note: 97% of Mexican emigrants reside in the US.
Nicaragua: Emigrants: ~700,000 (estimate, 2020, based on flows to Costa Rica and the US). Total population: ~6.6 million. Percentage: ~10.6%. Note: High emigration to Costa Rica due to the political and economic crisis.
Panama: Emigrants: ~200,000 (estimate, 2020, based on regional trends). Total population: ~4.3 million. Percentage: ~4.7%. Note: Panama is more of a recipient of migrants; emigration data is limited.
Paraguay: Emigrants: ~1 million (estimate, 2020, based on flows to Argentina). Total population: ~7.1 million. Percentage: ~14.1%. Note: Main destination is Argentina.
Peru: Emigrants: ~1.5 million (2020). Total population: ~33 million. Percentage: ~4.5% Note: Main destinations are the US (435,868) and Chile.
Dominican Republic: Emigrants: ~1.6 million (2020). Total population: ~10.8 million. Percentage: ~14.8%. Note: Main destination is the US (1.2 million).
Uruguay: Emigrants: ~367,060 (2020). Total population: ~3.5 million. Percentage: ~10.5% (although one 2022 source estimates it as high as 18.3%). Note: Main destination is Argentina (134,043).
Venezuela: Emigrants: ~5.5 million (2020); ~7.7 million (2023). Total population: ~28.4 million (2023). Percentage: ~19.3% (2020); ~27.5% (2023). Note: Venezuelan emigration has grown rapidly; the main destinations are Colombia (2.9 million in 2023), Peru (1.5 million), and Brazil (500,000).
Venezuelan migration is only surpassed by volume due to the displacement caused by the war in Ukraine and has already exceeded the number of people who abandoned Syria in recent years.
This resource extracted from the source is totally amazing, I find it quite incredible that the data of Venezuelan migration are similar to the migratory wave data most created by the war (Ukraine and Syria)
Bitcoin, solves this, but it is really difficult to get.
reply