Latin America 2026 Economic Forecast Why Lithium Nearshoring and Centrist Politics Converge
New supply-chain maps and green-tech hunger are reshaping Latin America in 2026. A J.P. Morgan outlook sees $280 billion in foreign investment, rich lithium and copper reserves, and moderating politics—if governments curb crime, inequality, and fiscal fragility for households, too.
The Promise That Never Quite Cashes Out
In the region’s capitals, ambition and scarcity share the same sidewalk: young workers chasing opportunity, elders counting pesos, and storefronts that open late because the neighborhood isn’t safe at dawn. Latin America is strategically located and resource-rich, yet it has struggled for decades to translate those advantages into sustained prosperity. Investors have learned to admire the potential and fear the pattern—brief booms followed by familiar reversals.
In an analysis credited to J.P. Morgan, that pattern still shows in the headline metric: Latin America’s share of world GDP remains around 6%, and growth over the last two decades has lagged global and emerging-market peers. Research in World Development has repeatedly argued that commodity-rich economies often underperform when fiscal rules are weak and politics is volatile, because windfalls arrive faster than institutions can absorb them.
The resources themselves are undeniable. The “lithium triangle” of Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia concentrates more than 60% of resources and over 45% of global reserves. Chile and Peru together supply close to 40% of global copper production, while Brazil matters for nickel and rare earths. The region is also young—median age 31, compared with China (38) and Europe (48)—a demographic advantage that can power growth if jobs and security keep talent from leaving or slipping into informality.

Tailwinds From Lithium to Logistics
What feels new heading into 2026, J.P. Morgan suggests, is the global backdrop. The transition toward digital and more sustainable economies is raising demand for critical minerals, energy, and food security—areas where Latin America is structurally competitive. At the same time, supply chains are being redrawn. Nearshoring is pushing new projects toward Mexico, Central America, and parts of South America, as firms seek shorter routes and lower geopolitical risk.
Capital flows already reflect that shift. J.P. Morgan cites annual foreign direct investment of roughly $280 billion, more than double levels from two decades ago, with Brazil, Mexico, Chile, and Peru as major destinations. The figures draw on Bloomberg Finance L.P. and the World Bank, dated December 5, 2025. The stakes are not only how much arrives, but what it builds: supply chains that generate skills, formal jobs, and tax revenue—rather than extractive enclaves that enrich a few and leave the state brittle.
When Politics Meets the Macro
The third change is political tone. Elections in Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, and Bolivia have pointed toward more centrist, pragmatic leadership, a response to voters who want stability after years of ideological whiplash. Argentina’s 2023 election brought in a market-friendly government focused on fiscal consolidation and deregulation, a signal—at minimum—that volatility has a cost. J.P. Morgan argues that greater moderation can improve policy predictability and revive interest in regional trade and infrastructure deals.
But the region’s constraints are stubbornly human. Crime and violence cost an estimated 3.44% of regional GDP each year, with Mexico and Colombia among the hardest hit. Trust is thin: only 35% of people report high or moderately high confidence in government. Inequality remains entrenched, with a regional Gini near 0.46, far above the OECD average of 0.32—a gap the Journal of Development Economics and Latin American Research Review have linked to weaker social cohesion and slower long-term growth.
Remittances sustain many households, but they also tether local demand to the United States labor market, exposing economies to shocks they cannot vote on. That is why J.P. Morgan treats 2026 as a hinge year, with consensus regional growth around 2.3%—promising, but not transformative unless governments also deliver safer streets, cleaner procurement, and courts that work on time.
The report notes that many governments are already leaning into security investment, judicial reforms, and anti-corruption measures because long-term capital depends on rule of law, not slogans. The window is open, but the climb will be earned—and for Latin Americans, the real measure of success will be ordinary: fewer extortion payments, steadier electricity, and a future that doesn’t require leaving home.
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