The Americas | A land of frustrated workers

Why are Latin American workers so strikingly unproductive?

Blame education, corruption and a huge shadow economy

An elderly man plays the cello on a street in Colombia.
Image: AP

Editor’s note (June 9th): The original headline in this article attracted criticism for the phrase “A land of useless workers”. We have changed it to make clear that we are analysing the social and economic costs of low productivity. Our aim is to draw attention to the structural causes of low average labour productivity in Latin American countries, including powerful oligopolies that mute competition and a large informal sector which forces many businesses to remain subscale. As the article makes clear, all of this is beyond the control of individual Latin Americans, whose living standards have suffered. We end with a call for better policymaking.

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “A land of frustrated workers”

Ukraine strikes back

From the June 10th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from The Americas

Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau makes an announcement outside Rideau Cottage in Ottawa.

Justin Trudeau leaves a wrecked party and divided Canada

Mark Carney and Chrystia Freeland are among those tipped as the next Liberal leader

A collage illustration showing a cutout of XI Jinping's facing Donald Trump's face on the right with a small cutout image of Claudia Sheinbaum between them. Behind them are some shipping containers and the The San Lázaro Legislative Palace of Mexico along

Does made in Mexico mean made by China?

Donald Trump believes Mexico is a trojan horse for Chinese mercantilism


People stand on the destroyed Saopin bridge due to the flooding of the Cangrajal river.

Failure to prepare for climate change is costing Honduras dear

Weeks after the most recent storm, the country is still in emergency mode


Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro looks set to take the throne

Relying on a fabricated election victory, the incumbent will be sworn in again

Why Spanish firms have cooled towards Latin America

Slow growth and messy politics are largely to blame

Latin Americans are worryingly relaxed about authoritarianism

The Latinobarómetro poll shows a region that is happier with its democracies, but at ease with illiberalism