Mexico City, Sep 23 (IANS): In recent decades, US administrations have invested little in the development of Latin America, a factor that could reduce migration flows, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said.
Addressing the media here on Wednesday, the President said that the last time the US invested significantly in the region was during the John F. Kennedy administration (1961-1963), with some $10 billion, Xinhua news agency reported.
"How much have they invested since then in the development of Latin America and the Caribbean? Not even 10 per cent of that amount," he said.
Lopez Obrador noted that when he took office in December 2018, the US had committed to investing $4 billion in development projects in Mexico and Central America, but "nothing has arrived".
However, he said he was "confident" that his incumbent US counterpart Joe Biden will accept his proposal to boost development in Central America to curb migration.
The migratory phenomenon should not be solved with force, Lopez Obrador said, but with productive options that discourage emigration.
"Enough of trying to solve a social and economic problem with coercive measures what we want is for people to have resources to plant and cultivate their land," he said.
Mass migration north from impoverished parts of Central America has been further aggravated recently by the Covid-19 pandemic and its impact on jobs and production.