Ethnic groups of Argentina

Last updated

Argentina has a racially and ethnically diverse population. [1] The territory of what today is Argentina was first inhabited by numerous indigenous peoples. The first white settlers came during the period of Spanish colonization, beginning in the 16th century. The Spaniards imported African slaves, who would go on to become the first Afro-Argentines. Following independence from Spain in the 19th century and well into the 20th century, numerous migration waves took place, with Argentina being the second most popular destination for migrants in the early 20th century, after the United States. Most of these migrants came from Europe. [2] [3]

Contents

Most modern-day Argentines are descendants of these 19th and 20th century immigrants, with about 97% of the population being of full or partial European ancestry, [4] [5] while an estimated 31-56% have some indigenous or mestizo ancestry, [6] [7] [8] and 5-9% have some African or mulatto ancestry. [9] [8] [10] In the 2010 census [INDEC], some 955,032 Argentines (2.38% of the population) identified as indigenous or first-generation descendants of indigenous peoples, while 149,493 (0.37% of the population) identified as Afro-Argentine. [11] [12]

In addition, Argentines of Arab (mostly Syrian and Lebanese) descent constitute a significant minority, and the Jewish population is the largest in all Latin America and the sixth largest in the world. [13]

Indigenous peoples continue to have significant populations in the country's north-west (Quechua, Diaguita, Kolla, Aymara); north-east (Guaraní, Mocoví, Toba, Wichí); and in the south or Patagonia (Mapuche, Tehuelche).

Asian peoples have increasing minorities in some Buenos Aires neighborhoods and are expanding to other large Argentine cities. More recent migratory flows have come from other Latin American countries, with Paraguayans, Bolivians, Peruvians and Venezuelans making up the bulk of Argentina's modern-day immigrant communities. [14] [15]

Ethnic groups

Ethnic map of Argentina. Map showing the ethnic groups in Argentina.png
Ethnic map of Argentina.
Ethno-racial groups in Argentina (2022 census) [16]
  1. Undeclared (White, Mixed and East Asian) (96.5%)
  2. Native (2.80%)
  3. Black (0.70%)

Estimated Argentine ancestry

Argentina's National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INDEC) does not conduct ethnic/racial censuses, nor does it include questions about ethnicity. [19] [20] Traditionally, only questions on identification with a particular community of Indigenous peoples were conducted, as well as questions on the national origin of immigrants, in order to better identify and protect these communities. Since the 2010 census, the Afro-descendants category was also added. [86] [19]

As a result, most of the figures in this table come from varied estimates and sources that attempt to map the different patterns of ancestry that have shaped the modern Argentine population. As these figures mostly represent partial ancestry, numbers may overlap and not add up to the total.

Full or Partial Ancestry [87] Number of descendants [40] Percentage [40] References date
EuropeanMaybe more than 45 million with at least one European ancestor97% with some European ancestry2008 [4] [5]
Spanish"Predominant"2018 [88] [89]
Italian15—30 million30—70%1996 [90]
2010 [27]
2011 [91]
2020 [92]
2023 [93]
AmerindianMaybe more than 15-20 million with at least one native ancestor on one parental lineage. Maybe more than 5 million with at least one native ancestor on both parental lineages. 955,032 Argentines self-identify as belonging to a community of indigenous peoples or as first-generation descendants of indigenous peoples.31-56% with at least one native ancestor, 11% with native ancestors on both parental lineages. 2.38% identify as belonging to an indigenous community.2005. [94] [95] [96]
2021 [8] [97]
2022 [19]
Spanish and ItalianPossibly more than 20 million with both Italian and Spanish ancestorsPossibly more than 50% [87]
French6 million17%2006 [29]
Galician5.5 million11.9%2023 [98]
Middle Eastern Arab3.5 million or little moreA little over 7%2011 [99]
2015 [100]
Volga German and German2.5 million Volga German and between 600 thousand—1 million GermanA little over 7%2021 [28] [101] [102] [103] [104]
Basque3—3.5 million6.5%—7.6%2004 [105]
2012 [106]
Sub-Saharan AfricanAround 2 million with at least one African ancestor on one parental lineage. [107] 302,936 individuals identified as Afro-Argentines on the 2022 census. [19] Around 4% with at least some African ancestry. 0.66% identify as Afro-Argentines.2014 [108]
2018 [107]
2021 [109]
2022 [19]
Irish600 thousand—1 millionBetween 1.3% and 2.2%2005 [110]
2017 [111]
PolishAt least 500 thousand [112] [113] At least 1%2004 [114]
Ukrainian250—470 thousand0.54% to 1.02%2008 [115]
2012 [116]
2022 [39]
2022 [117] [118]
Russian100—350 thousand0.22% to 0.76%2010 [119] [120]
2019 [121] [122]
Jewish250—330 thousandBetween 0.54% and 0.72%2018 [123] [124]
Croatian250 thousand0.54%2013 [125]
2022 [126]
Chinese250 thousand0.54%2005 [127]
2010 [127]
2019 [128]
Armenian80—135 thousandBetween 0.17% and 0.29%2018 [45] [47]
Scottish100 thousandAround 0.22%2008 [129]
English100 thousandAround 0.22%1985 [130]
SwissPossibly 100 thousandAround 0.22%2019 [131] [132]
Japanese76 thousandAround 0.16%2024 [133]
2011 [134]
Welsh50—70 thousandAround 0.1% to 0.15%2008 [135]
2015 [136]
Dutch60 thousand0.13%2012 [137]
Bulgarian40—80 thousandAround 0.08% to 0.17%2008 [138] [139]
Albanians50 thousand0.11%2021 [140]
Belarussian50 thousand0.11%2012 [141]
Montenegrin50 thousand0.11%2018 [142]
Hungarian40—50 thousand0.08% to 0.10%2010 [143] [144] [145]
2016 [146]
2016 [147]
Portuguese42 thousand0.09%2016 [148] [149] [150] [151]
CzechAt least 40 thousandAt least 0.08%2009 [152]
Greek30-50 thousandAround 0.06% to 0.10%2006 [153]
2018 [154] [155]
LithuanianAt least 35 thousandAt least 0.07%2016 [156]
Macedonian30 thousand0.06%2011 [157]
Serbian30 thousandAround 0.06%2010 [158]
Slovene30 thousandAround 0.06%2003 [159]
ScandinavianAt least 28 thousandAt least 0.06%2010 [160] [161]
2014 [162]
BelgianAt least 25 thousandAt least 0.054%2010 [163]
Korean20—25 thousand0.043% to 0.054%2010 [164]
2022 [165] [166]
AustrianAt least 10 thousandAt least 0.02%2010 [167]
RomanianAt least 10 thousandAt least 0.02%2014 [168]
LaotianAt least 2 thousandAt least 0.004%2005 [169]

[84] [85]

Surnames of the presidents

Origin of the surnames of Argentine leaders, directors, and presidents
#Head of state1st surname2nd surname3rd surnameEthnoracial groupPresidential period
° Cornelio Saavedra y Rodríguez Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1810-1811
° Domingo Matheu Chicola Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1811
° Gervasio A. de Posadas y Dávila Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1814-1815
° Carlos María de Alvear y Balbastro Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1815
° José Rondeau Pereyra Flag of France.svg French Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1815
1820
° Ignacio Álvarez Thomas Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of England.svg English White 1815-1816
° Antonio González Balcarce Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1816
° Juan Martín de Pueyrredón y O'Dogan Flag of France.svg French Flag of Ireland.svg Irish White 1816-1819
° Juan Pedro Aguirre y López de Anaya Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1820
Bernardino González y Rodríguez de Rivadavia Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1826-1827
Vicente López y Planes Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1827 
Justo José de Urquiza y García Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1854-1860
Santiago Derqui Rodríguez Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1860-1861 
Juan Esteban Pedernera Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1861
Bartolomé Mitre Martínez Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1862-1868
Domingo F. Sarmiento Albarracín Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1868-1874
Nicolás Avellaneda Silva Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1874-1880
Julio Argentino Roca Paz Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1880-1886
1898-1904
10° Miguel Juárez Celman Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Ireland.svg Irish White 1886-1890
11° Carlos Pellegrini Bevans Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of England.svg English White 1890-1892
12° Luis Sáenz Peña Dávila Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1892-1895 
13° José Evaristo Uriburu y Álvarez de Arenales Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1895-1898
14° Manuel Quintana y Sáenz de Gaona Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1904-1906
15° José Figueroa Alcorta Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1906-1910
16° Roque Sáenz Peña Lahitte Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of France.svg French White 1910-1914 
17° Victorino de la Plaza y Palacios Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1914-1916
18° Hipólito Yrigoyen Alem Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Germany.svg German White 1916-1922
1928-1930
19° Marcelo T. de Alvear Pacheco Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1922-1928
20° José Félix Uriburu Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1930-1932
21° Agustín Pedro Justo Rolón Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1932-1938
22° Roberto Marcelino Ortiz Lizardi Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1938-1942 
23° Ramón S. Castillo Barrionuevo Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1942-1943 
° Arturo Rawson Corbalán Flag of England.svg English Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1943
24° Pedro Pablo Ramírez Menchaca Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1943-1944
25° Edelmiro Julián Farrell Plaul Flag of Ireland.svg Irish Flag of Germany.svg German White 1946-1952
26° Juan Domingo Perón Sosa Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1946-1955
1973-1974
27° Eduardo Lonardi Doucet Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of France.svg French White 1955
28° Pedro Eugenio Aramburu Silveti Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque White 1955-1958
29° Arturo Frondizi Ércoli Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1958-1962
30° José María Guido Cibeira Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1962-1963
31° Arturo Umberto Illia Francesconi Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1963-1966 
32° Juan Carlos Onganía Carballo Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1966-1970
33° Roberto Marcelo Levingston Laborda Flag of Scotland.svg Scottish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1970-1971
34° Alejandro Agustín Lanusse Gelly Flag of France.svg French Flag of France.svg French White 1971-1973
35° Héctor José Cámpora Demaestre Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of France.svg French White 1973
36° Raúl Alberto Lastiri Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1973
37° María Estela Martínez Cartas Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1974-1976
38° Jorge Rafael Videla Redondo Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1976-1981
39° Roberto Eduardo Viola Prevedini Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1981
40° Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri Castelli Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 1981-1982
41° Reynaldo Bignone Ramayón Flag of Italy.svg Italian Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1982-1983
42° Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín Foulkes Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Welsh White 1983-1989
43° Carlos Saúl Menem Akil Flag of Syria (2025-).svg Syrian Flag of Syria (2025-).svg Syrian White 1989-1999
44° Fernando de la Rúa Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 1999-2021
45° Adolfo Rodríguez Saá Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 2001 
46° Eduardo Duhalde Maldonado Flag of the Basque Country.svg Basque Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 2002-2003
47° Néstor Kirchner Ostoić Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Swiss Flag of Croatia.svg Croatian White 2003-2007
48° Cristina Fernández Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 2007-2015
49° Mauricio Macri Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 2015-2019
50° Alberto Fernández Flag of Spain.svg Spanish White 2019-2023
51° Javier Gerardo Milei Flag of Italy.svg Italian White 2023-2027

Immigration in recent times

Besides substantial immigration from neighboring countries during the middle and late 1990s, Argentina received significant numbers of people from Asian countries such as Korea (both North and South), China, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Japan who joined the previously existing Sino-Japanese communities in Buenos Aires. Despite the economic and financial crisis Argentina suffered at the start of the 21st century, people from all over the world continued arriving to the country, because of Argentina's immigration-friendly policies and high standard of living.

According to official data, between 1992 and 2003 an average of 13,187 people per year immigrated legally into Argentina. The government calculates that 504,000 people entered the country during the same period, giving about 345,000 undocumented immigrants. The same source gives a plausible total figure of 750,000 undocumented immigrants currently residing in Argentina.

From 2004 onwards, after Immigration Law 25871 [170] was sanctioned, which makes the State responsible for guaranteeing access to health and education for immigrants, many foreigners have chosen Buenos Aires as their destination to work or study. Between 2006–2008 and 2012–2013 a relatively large group of Senegal nationals (4500 in total) have immigrated to Argentina, 90 percent of which have refugee status. [171]

In April 2006, the national government started the Patria Grande plan to regularize the migratory situation of undocumented immigrants. The plan attempts to ease the bureaucratic process of getting documentation and residence papers, and is aimed at citizens of Mercosur countries and its associated states (Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela). The plan came after a scandal and a wave of indignation caused by fire in a Buenos Aires sweatshop, which revealed the widespread utilization of undocumented Bolivian immigrants as cheap labor force in inhumane conditions.

As of 2020, Argentina counted with a positive net migration rate (one of the only three such countries in the region, alongside Chile and Costa Rica) and remains a major destination for migrants within Latin America and the Caribbean. [172]

However, since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, in light of the international sanctions on Russian passports, Russian couples and pregnant Russian women have started to emigrate to Argentina in hopes of acquiring an Argentine passport in order to continue their journey onto Europe, or to permanently establish themselves in Argentina with their children. [173] As of July 2023, more than 18,500 Russians have come to Argentina after Russia invaded Ukraine. Argentina does not require a visa for Russian citizens to enter the country as tourists and it also allows the parents of children born on Argentinian soil to receive residency, and, later, a passport. This opportunity has led to approximately 10,500 Russians travelling to Argentina to give birth in 2022. [174]

Country of birth of Argentine residents

Proportion of foreign South Americans in each department as of the 2022 Argentine census. Distribution of South American immigrants in Argentina, 2022.svg
Proportion of foreign South Americans in each department as of the 2022 Argentine census.
Immigrants by continent in 2022 [175]
  1. America (81.1%)
  2. Europe (7.50%)
  3. Asia (1.90%)
  4. Africa and Oceania (0.20%)
  5. Unknown (9.30%)

Genetic studies

AutosomalNRY DNA (patrilineal)mtDNA (matrilineal)
  1. European contribution (78.6%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (17.3%)
  3. African contribution (4.10%)
  1. European contribution (94.1%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (4.90%)
  3. African contribution (1.00%)
  1. Amerindian contribution (53.7%)
  2. European contribution (44.3%)
  3. African contribution (2.00%)
Autosomal, patrilineal and matrilineal ancestry of Argentines (Corach et al., 2009) [75]
Genetic admixture in Argentina and Chile according to Parolin et al. (2019) Individual genetic ancestry estimated in individuals who inhabit in Argentinian Patagonia.PNG
Genetic admixture in Argentina and Chile according to Parolin et al. (2019)
CenterSouthNortheastNorthwest
  1. European contribution (81.0%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (15.0%)
  3. African contribution (4.00%)
  1. European contribution (68.0%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (28.0%)
  3. African contribution (4.00%)
  1. European contribution (79.0%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (17.0%)
  3. African contribution (4.00%)
  1. European contribution (55.0%)
  2. Amerindian contribution (35.0%)
  3. African contribution (10.0%)
Genetic admixture across Argentine regions (Salzano et al., 2013) [188]

See also

References

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