Why does Honduras remain the poorest country in Central America despite a decade of growth?

Woman cooking in Honduras. Maria de la Cruz Rodriguez, 80, Elguanabano.

Image source, AFP via Getty Images

photo caption, In Honduras, poverty affects 60% of families, and extreme poverty affects 40%.

    • author, Cecilia Barea
    • Author title, BBC World News

Whoever wins Sunday’s presidential election in Honduras will face the challenge of leading the poorest country in Latin America, save for Haiti.

Whether it is the victory of the ruling leftist party led by Rexy Moncada, the victory of Salvador Nasrallah – a former broadcaster who has run through various parties, including that of President Xiomara Castro – or the right-wing opposition led by Nasri Asfora, persistent poverty will remain one of the greatest open wounds in the Central American nation.

The new government will have to respond to the expectations of a country where 60.1% of its families live in poverty and whose history is marked by organized crime, political violence and corruption.

An emblematic case of the country’s institutional fragility is that of former President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who in June last year was sentenced by a US court to 45 years in prison for crimes linked to cocaine trafficking.

In a society punctuated by corruption scandals at the highest levels, international observers, such as the Organization of American States, have expressed concern in recent days about the independence of the upcoming electoral process.