In an eye-opening new study published in the journal Ecological Economics, researchers from the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB) have unveiled the staggering scale of resource and labor appropriation from Latin America by the Global North. Through rigorous data and statistical analysis, this groundbreaking research quantifies the unequal exchange embedded in international trade, shedding light on the persistent economic dependencies and ecological injustices underpinning the global economy.
The comprehensive study maps out how, in the year 2020 alone, Northern economies net appropriated over 900 million tonnes of natural materials from Latin America. This haul includes a wide spectrum of primary resources, such as biomass, minerals, metals, and fossil fuels, illustrating an extractive trade relationship that perpetuates resource depletion in the Global South. Coupled with this resource extraction is the appropriation of a colossal 4 million square kilometers of land and 53 billion hours of human labor, further underscoring the deep economic imbalance between regions.
By integrating analyses of embodied labor and natural resources, this research constitutes the first effort to jointly quantify these unequal exchanges, positioning them within the wider global economic machinery. The findings reveal that this dynamic operates not merely as transactional trade, but as a systemic transfer of value that fuels consumption and wealth accumulation in the Global North while simultaneously entrenching economic dependency and environmental degradation in Latin America.
Delving into a 25-year timeframe from 1995 to 2020, the analysis revealed that the Global North’s net appropriation of 935 million tonnes of vital materials from Latin America enabled disproportionate benefits for wealthier economies. This continues an entrenched pattern where Latin America remains specialized in raw material exports, with these resources subsequently converted into high-value manufactured goods and services consumed predominantly in the Northern hemisphere.
One of the most striking aspects uncovered is the prolific scale of labor extraction valued at €816 billion in terms of Northern wages. This figure encapsulates over 53 billion hours of human labor embedded in the traded natural resources, reflecting how labor exploitation is interwoven with ecological extraction. The study eloquently highlights the deeply intertwined nature of labor and resource drain in sustaining the consumption patterns of affluent economies.
The root causes of this systemic imbalance lie in pronounced global power asymmetries. Wealthier nations strategically suppress prices paid for Southern raw materials and labor through mechanisms embedded in international trade systems, thereby securing cheap inputs critical to their production chains. This manipulation fosters a cycle whereby profits and wealth amplify in the Global North, while Latin America’s productive capacity and sovereign developmental ambitions are systematically undermined.
Crucially, the analysis draws attention to the fact that Latin America experiences appropriations far exceeding those of other Global South regions on a per capita basis. As of 2020, land appropriation from Latin America was an astonishing 1909% higher than from other Southern regions, while the disparity for metals soared to 2164%, and for biomass was 660% higher. These figures not only underscore Latin America’s peripheral position in the world economy but also suggest the intensification of resource exploitation in the region relative to others.
The research further documents divergent trajectories within the Global South. While resource and labor appropriations from regions such as China and other peripheral economies have seen relative declines since 1995, Latin America has experienced a continuous rise in resource drain. This persistence reinforces the region’s ongoing specialization as a resource-exporting periphery tied to Northern consumption, impeding development diversification.
Latin America’s entrenched role as a supplier of raw materials for Northern consumption is evocative of a historical “core-periphery” structure in the global economy deeply resistant to change. The study argues that this pattern not only perpetuates economic dependence but also exacerbates ecological vulnerabilities inherent to resource extraction economies, particularly in an era of escalating environmental crises.
Such systemic inequalities bear significant consequences for sustainable development and social equity. The incessant outflow of natural and human resources constrains Latin America’s ability to build economic resilience and pursue sovereign development pathways that prioritize local welfare, environmental stewardship, and inclusive growth.
The authors emphasize the urgent necessity for a fundamental restructuring of international trade relations. They advocate for political and economic reforms aimed at rebalancing power asymmetries between the Global North and South, fostering fairer trade frameworks that validate the sovereignty and developmental rights of resource-producing regions.
In conclusion, the study’s sobering revelations send a clarion call to policymakers, economists, and environmentalists alike. Without transformative global reforms, Latin America’s entrenched peripheral status—characterized by disproportionate resource and labor exports to the Global North—will continue to hinder equitable development and sustainable futures, perpetuating a global economic order marked by ecological inequity and social injustice.
Subject of Research: Ecologically unequal exchange and economic dependency between Latin America and the Global North.
Article Title: Open veins: Drain from Latin America through ecologically unequal exchange.
News Publication Date: 8-May-2026
Web References: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2026.109055
Keywords: Environmental economics, Economic development, Market economics, Macroeconomics, Economics, International trade, Fair trade

