Economic power, political power, health, education, housing, the complete map of where Latinos hold America up, and where America keeps them out. Every indicator measured against one line: parity.
Click an issue area. Every card shows the Latino figure, the U.S. comparison, the gap against population parity, and where the data breaks by national-origin group.
Latino representation in America's high-paying leadership roles sits at 6%. The population line keeps rising. The professions line, extended at the rate it has actually moved, does not reach parity until around 2119. The gold area between them is the cost of that gap, the careers, the wealth, the power left on the table.
Aggregate Latino share of the highest-paid leadership roles across medicine, law, corporate, tech, education, and government. The line extends the measured current rate, about +0.15 points per year. Population projection: U.S. Census Bureau.
The highest-paid role in each field, plotted as Latino representation since 1980, against the population line climbing toward 24 percent by 2045. The dashed events are the laws and rulings that moved it. Hover any event below to isolate it.
Sources: AAMC, ABA, BLS CPS, NCES, NSF NCSES, Congressional Research Service (1980–2024). 2045 population projection: U.S. Census Bureau. Pre-2024 series interpolated from decennial benchmarks; full methodology in the LIGAZON data repository.
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