The changes underway are the result of largely positive trends, although governments can do more to handle the transition.
Reading Time: 2 minutesThis article is adapted from AQ’s special report on Latin America’s demographic transformation
When I attended Columbia University Graduate School of Business in New York in the 1970s, the percentage of women MBA students was only about 5-10%. Upon graduation, Citibank hired me as one of just a handful of women international trainees and sent me to Venezuela. People in Caracas were wonderful, but there were very few women in the workforce—and the men seemed a bit mystified by my life choices, asking me if I wouldn’t have preferred to stay in the U.S., get married and have children.
The truth is, all of our countries have changed a lot over the last 50-plus years—for the better, when it comes to opportunities for women. Just as in the United States, women in Latin America now account for a majority of students at universities. Today, about six in 10 women of college age in the region are enrolled in higher education.
More women have also entered the workforce, giving them more independence—which has resulted in later marriages and delays in having children. This is also a huge generational change: In 1980, only 30-40% of the workforce were women and the average marriage age was between 22-23. By 2024, 50-55% of the workforce were women. The average age for marriage was only a bit higher on average, although in certain urban areas in countries like Chile and Argentina, women often delay marriage to their late 20s and 30s or co-habit with no children at all.






