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Haiti Drained of Its Strength: When Elites Manufacture Exodus and Inherit the Ruins

Lequotidien509 by Lequotidien509
January 26, 2026
in Editorial, The 509 Editorial, Top Story
Reading Time: 3 mins read

Haiti is not emptying by chance. It is emptying by design.

A complex mechanism allows small groups of men and women to practice a politics of decapitation and scorched earth. A system that fuels social inequalities and perpetuates them at the expense of the Haitian people — the ultimate losers.
Is it not time to question the true vocation of those who, day after day, present themselves as political leaders and influential economic decision-makers in Haiti?


Under gang gunfire, under the crushing weight of hunger, under the collapse of the State, millions of Haitian women and men are taking the road to exile or becoming displaced inside a country that has become unrecognizable. More than one million internally displaced people, nearly two million members of the diaspora, a recessionary economy, phantom institutions: this is not a passing crisis, but a well-oiled machine reproducing inequality.


This article by our contributor Marc Arthur Paul sheds light on an uncomfortable but necessary truth: Haiti’s political and economic elites are not mere witnesses to the disaster — they are central actors in it.

A Contemporary Crisis Rooted in History

VOUS AIMEREZ PEUT-ÊTRE AUSSI

“Haiti: U.S. Calls for the Dissolution of the TPC by February 7 and a Refocusing of BINUH’s Mandate.”

Alleged Ammo Sales: Rameau Normil Out of the Country, Will Not Attend Summons

Roger Gaillard had already written it: in Haiti, power has historically been built against the people, never with them. The period opened after the assassination of Jovenel Moïse in 2021 has only confirmed this constant. Transitional governments without legitimacy, the absence of elections, persistent clientelism — the State operates without the nation, and sometimes against it.
The institutional vacuum thus created becomes fertile ground for armed gangs, now occupying the space abandoned by elites more concerned with preserving their privileges than rebuilding the social contract.

An Economy Designed to Exclude


Étzer Émile completes this diagnosis with an uncompromising economic reading. Haiti is not poor by fate, but by repeated political choices. A rent-based economy dominated by imports, oligopolies, and informality prevents any real social mobility. While the majority struggles to survive, a minority captures resources, diverts opportunities, and blocks productive investment.
The result: massive unemployment, widespread food insecurity, and a steady brain drain toward the diaspora — a country that exports its talent and imports its misery.

Price-Mars, or the Ignored Prophecy

In the face of this reality, the thinking of Jean Price-Mars resonates like a warning left unheeded. As early as 1919, he urged Haiti’s elite to embrace a national vocation: to serve, educate, integrate, and guide. A century later, the cultural alienation, contempt for the masses, and social disconnection he denounced still structure the dominant order.
The elite has globalized. The nation has fragmented.

Exodus as Symptom and Consequence
Mass emigration and internal displacement are not merely reactions to violence; they are the direct product of an exclusionary political and economic model. Each departure further weakens the national fabric, reduces collective resilience, and paradoxically strengthens the power of those who remain in control. The reproduction of inequality becomes circular — almost perfect.

Nationalizing the Elites: A Political Emergency

The proposed path is radical in its meaning, yet lucid in its form: to nationalize the elites — not by expropriating them, but by re-anchoring them in the general interest. Transparency, redistributive taxation, civic education, public service, productive mobilization of the diaspora: transforming social prestige into national responsibility, power into service, individual success into collective leverage.

Serve or Disappear

Haiti does not merely need aid; it needs a moral and political awakening. As long as elites view the nation as a resource to exploit rather than a project to build, exodus will continue, violence will recycle itself, and the State will remain an empty shell.
The choice is now clear: an elite in service of the nation — or a nation sacrificed by its elites.


And History is watching. It never forgets.

Marc Arthur Paul

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