Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) have traditionally hosted large immigrant populations. But the region is now facing a significant increase in intra-regional mobility owing to poverty, violence, climate shocks, political instability and the socio-economic fallout of covid-19. Masses of people continue to flee Venezuela, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala in record numbers, seeking refuge across the continent. As a result, LAC now hosts more migrants per capita than any other.
Research shows that refugees face numerous barriers to working and starting businesses. Many countries have restrictive economic policies toward refugees and those with refugee-like status, including banning employment. Refugees also face challenges integrating into host communities due to tensions between the two groups, as well as the biases they face from employers and investors, who perceive the risk of hiring or investing to be too high. Yet, only when countries prioritize the social and economic inclusion and integration of refugees will they realize their full potential.
Economist Impact has developed the Refugee Opportunities Index (ROI), sponsored by the Refugee Investment Network (RIN) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) to explore the opportunities and obstacles refugees and other displaced persons face in their journey toward economic selfreliance and success. This index provides insights into these issues by comparing policies on refugees across ten countries in East Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda) and LAC (Belize, Colombia, Chile, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador and Peru) against a set of 45 qualitative and quantitative indicators organized into three categories (1. admission, integration and resettlement; 2. basic rights and access to services; and 3. employment conditions) and 13 sub-categories. This is the first edition of the ROI and it considers legislation, policies, programs and practices implemented by June 2022. This report covers the performance of the LAC in the different categories and sub-categories of the ROI. (see figure 1).