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Where have all the Spaniards gone?

By Mark Johanson

Twenty-five percent unemployment, a dismal economic outlook and faith in the

government at an all-time low. If it sounds like a recipe for failure for

anyone with aspirations of building a career and a life, for Spaniards, that s

exactly what it is.

But rather than grit their teeth and hope to stretch their money and career

prospects until the crisis wanes, some are taking matters into their own hands,

leaving Spain and heading not just to Europe, but to Latin America, where

language barriers are few and opportunities are plenty.

There, they are prized for their European education and background, and they

are wooed with big salaries and the promise of moving quickly up the corporate

ladder. Many Spaniards who ve made the move find themselves surprised by the

mix of modernity, opportunity and comforts of home in countries like Peru,

Chile and Brazil.

In Brazil you can find all of the First World attractions we have back in

Europe, but it has the pace and attitude of a developing country, which I m

attracted to. Javier Garc a-Ramos

Some 700,000 Spaniards left Spain between 2008 and 2012, according to research

from Fundacion Alternativas. Figures from Spain s National Statistics Institute

show that another 547,890 people left in 2013, although officials say just

79,306 of them were Spanish nationals born in Spain. They re following a wave

of Latin Americans who themselves migrated to Spain in the late 1990s but went

back home as Spain s recession lingered on and on. Those returnees have, in

large part, spurred a wave of migration from Spaniards who had no connection to

the American content before.

While their numbers are still very modest immigration of Spaniards going to

Latin America has risen a lot, said Jesus Fernandez-Huertas Moraga, a Spanish

researcher at the independent academic think tank Fedea.

From unpaid intern to head of media

Angel Lopez, 26, is one of them. The Alicante native arrived in Lima, Peru, in

March, 2012, and went from an unpaid internship at Spain s former Canal 9 TV

station to a job as the head of media for a large educational company in Peru

two years later. He s now a regular fixture in televised debates, and

frequently tours Peru as a keynote speaker on issues related to advertising and

marketing.

I left Spain earlier than many people of my generation, but I was working in a

television station that everyone knew was closing, I had almost completed my

studies, and I thought, if I stay, I ll be lucky to be a paid intern or trainee

at 30, he said.

Angel Lopez works for National Radio of Peru in Lima. (Radio Nacional del Peru)

Angel Lopez works for National Radio of Peru in Lima. (Radio Nacional del Peru)

It took Lopez a few months to adapt to a different culture, but the common

language helped and Lopez said his life has turned around 360 degrees in terms

of opportunities and professional growth.

Both family and friends were initially leery of the move. Lopez said there was

widespread ignorance in Spain of what Peru was really like several years ago,

with plenty of Spaniards viewing the country as a simple place of mountains,

traditional costumes and tacky TV shows. He believes that vision has changed

dramatically as the number of Spaniards in the country increases.

If a few years ago we numbered in the hundreds, now there are thousands like

me, and there are many Spanish companies bringing their business to Peru every

day, Lopez said.

That could be in part because Peru, and other parts of Latin America, sits

squarely on an upward growth curve. While the International Monetary Fund

projects Spain s economy to grow in 2014 at 1.2%, it predicts Peru s economy

will grow at 5.5% , Mexico s at 3%, Chile s at 3.6% and Panama s at 7.2%. Toss

in a lower cost of living and the opportunity to leapfrog up the corporate

ladder, and the attraction for Spaniards is even clearer.

The Spaniards are coming!

In several Latin American cities, locals commonly joke that not since the

colonial days have so many Spaniards turned up with one ticket, two bags and

the dream of a better life.

For 38-year-old Ana Bobo, that dream was birthed from a nightmare near

bankruptcy and the loss of her marketing agency in Madrid when her core market

(public administration) saw a 50% decline.

By the beginning of 2013 I was counting my days, she recalled. I just kept

thinking about my future and as I began talking with people in Spain I realised

there was no longer a place for me. Bobo, who speaks Spanish and English, set

her eyes on England, Peru, Colombia and Chile.

There were not many opportunities [in England], so I focused on Latin America

where there are more opportunities not only for jobs but for quicker growth,

she said.

Bobo flew to Santiago, Chile, last November to see if its economic prosperity

and reputation as a safe city for expats and locals was real. Impressed (and

wooed by several job offers) she returned in January to take a job as the

marketing and development manager of a financial and operational leasing

company. She s encountered less cultural challenge than she d imagined, said

she hasn t sacrificed her quality of life and earns a salary that s two- to

three-times what she thinks she could make in Spain these days.

Ana Bobo takes in Chile's Lakes and Volcanoes District. (Ana Bobo)

Ana Bobo visits Chile's Lakes and Volcanoes District. She moved from Spain to

Chile in January. (Ana Bobo)

The European brand is still a huge advantage here, she noted. If you have

the skills, you have the advantage.

Government statistics show that immigration into Chile, Latin America s

wealthiest country, more than doubled last year with 5,739 Spaniards obtaining

either temporary or permanent residency. By comparison, in 2005 only 3,700

Spaniards moved to the whole of Latin America, according to statistics compiled

by The Economist.

One foot in each door

Javier Garc a-Ramos had always wanted to live in South America, so when the

economic slowdown in Spain stifled his professional growth, the Madrid-native

made a bold move and relocated to S o Paulo. The 44-year-old serves as

director of mergers and acquisitions at a boutique Brazilian advisory firm.

That was two and a half years ago, and Garc a-Ramos said the laidback Brazilian

lifestyle has suited him.

In Brazil you can find all of the First World attractions we have back in

Europe, he explained, but it has the pace and attitude of a developing

country, which I m attracted to.

Javier Garcia-Ramos attends a football game in Rio de Janeiro. (Javier Garc

a-Ramos)

Spaniard Javier Garcia-Ramos attends a football game at Rio de Janeiro's

Maracan Stadium (Javier Garc a-Ramos)

What s more, his colleagues were patient as he learned Portuguese and he s

earning more money than he did in Spain. Now, he asks himself whether he will

make Brazil his home, or set in motion an eventual move back to Madrid.

It s a spot many Spaniards now living in Latin America find themselves in, with

one foot in each door.

My ideal move right now would be a position at a Spanish multinational, he

said. It could be based here in South America or Madrid, but I would always

have the possibility of going back to either in the future.