Five Facts about Honduras and Immigration | Facing History & Ourselves
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Five Facts about Honduras and Immigration

Explore key findings about Honduran immigration, including the recent wave of minors seeking asylum.
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At a Glance

Reading

Language

English — US

Subject

  • History
  • Social Studies
  • Global Migration & Immigration

The following Pew Research Center article from 2014 summarizes several key findings about Honduran immigration, particularly the recent wave of minors seeking to enter the United States and the economic and social reasons driving it, based on analysis of demographic data.

The number of unaccompanied minors from Honduras apprehended at the U.S.-Mexico border shot up from less than 7,000 in fiscal year 2013 to more than 17,500 through July [2014], making Honduras the country of origin for the highest number of those minors.

Here are some facts and figures to help understand the conditions that Hondurans face in their home country and their ties to the U.S., in the years leading up to the surge.

  1. The wave of all immigrants in the U.S. coming from Honduras—both authorized and unauthorized—is relatively new. Over half of Honduran immigrants currently living in the U.S. arrived in 2000 or later, and about a quarter since 2006, according to a Pew Research analysis of 2012 census data.
  2. More than 60% of the 573,000 Honduran immigrants in the U.S. are unauthorized, a higher share than those from Guatemala, El Salvador and Mexico, where most other apprehended minors are from, according to an analysis by Pew Research’s senior demographer Jeffrey Passel. The overall unauthorized immigrant population to the U.S. (including those from Mexico—the largest source) peaked in 2007, and has decreased by about 8% from 2007 to 2012. But the unauthorized immigrant numbers from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala have increased since 2007.
  3. Poor social and economic conditions plague a large share of Hondurans: In 2013, 64.5% of Hondurans were living in poverty, according to the World Bank. That’s mostly unchanged since 2004. It’s also higher than the national poverty rates in El Salvador (34.5% in 2012), Guatemala (53.7% in 2011) and Mexico (52.3% in 2012). In 2013, economic growth decelerated in Honduras to 2.6%, from 4% in 2012, according to the latest IMF assessment. . . .
  4. The Honduran economy is heavily dependent on money sent home from migrants: In 2012, 15.7% of Honduras’s GDP ($3 billion) came from remittances—the vast majority of which were U.S.-based, according to Pew Research analysis of World Bank data. That compares with 16.5% of El Salvador’s GDP and 10% of Guatemala’s GDP that are based on remittances. Those three Central American nations are actually the three most remittance-dependent nations in Spanish-speaking Latin America, by share of GDP. The remittances they received in 2013 are estimated to be higher than their peak before the recession.
  5. Honduras leads the world with the highest homicide rate: In 2012, some 90 people were murdered for every 100,000 inhabitants. That’s more than twice the rate in El Salvador and Guatemala, and more than four times the rate in Mexico. San Pedro Sula in Honduras—the largest source of unaccompanied minors—is the world’s “murder capital,” with a homicide rate of 187 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2013. Organized crime and street gangs are pervasive in Honduras, accounting for 34.8% of all homicides in 2010, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. In 2012, just 49% of Hondurans said they felt safe walking alone at night, according to Gallup. 1
  • 1George Gao, "5 Facts about Honduras and Immigration," Pew Research Center, August 11, 2014, accessed April 12, 2019.

How to Cite This Reading

Facing History & Ourselves, “Five Facts about Honduras and Immigration,” last updated April 27, 2022. 

This reading contains text not authored by Facing History & Ourselves. See footnotes for source information.

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