糖心Vlog

Latin American students choosing Spain over US, Esade head says

Staff and students who would once have picked North America looking to Europe for stability and freedom, according to leading business school dean

Published on
June 21, 2026
Last updated
June 21, 2026
Director general of Esade, Daniel Traca, wearing a black and white suit and smiling at the camera
Source: Esade

Latin American students increasingly want to study in Spain amid growing political uncertainty in the US, the head of one of Europe鈥檚 leading business schools has said.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a lot of interest from students from Latin America, who are going to Madrid and Barcelona because America has become more closed off and less accepting,鈥 Daniel Tra莽a, director general of Esade Business School, told聽糖心Vlog.

Tra莽a said Esade, a business and law school with campuses in Barcelona, Sant Cugat and Madrid, is actively positioning itself to capitalise on the rising interest from students who would have otherwise chosen North America.

The school is also seeing more students and academics arriving from the US itself, drawn to cities like Barcelona and Madrid at a moment of political turbulence back home.

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鈥淓verything is messy, uncertain, and becoming toxic,鈥 Tra莽a said. 鈥淸Barcelona and Madrid] are large, growing cities with amazing lifestyles, with a sense of freedom and social conscience. We鈥檙e going to see less, just purely geographic moves but more of a notion of looking to be at a place that is intellectually and socially free.鈥

Spain, like many European countries, has moved quickly to capture this shift. The government鈥檚 鈥淓duBridge to Spain鈥 initiative, launched in September 2025, offers students at all academic levels a streamlined route to transfer from US institutions to Spanish ones. It is a scheme aimed at those affected by US visa restrictions.

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Esade聽has about 15,700 students in total, with international students making up between 60 and 70 per cent.

Tra莽a says Madrid is a particular focus for growth. 鈥淲e need to build up in Madrid, which is becoming a European megahub,鈥 he said.

But not all markets are growing. Tra莽a pointed to a decline in Chinese students at the school. 鈥淭here used to be this big flow of students from China, but we are no longer getting those numbers. China has extraordinary institutions of its own now,鈥 he said.

Indian students, meanwhile, are increasingly returning home after graduating, drawn by expanding opportunities on the subcontinent.

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But Tra莽a stressed that the Iberian Peninsula was emerging as a new hub for students and professionals seeking stability, adding that instability in eastern Europe, driven by security concerns, was adding further momentum.

Beyond student recruitment, Tra莽a, who has been at the helm for nearly two years, said the school was focused on rethinking business education. 鈥淲e are rethinking everything,鈥 he said, in response to pressures of artificial intelligence, geopolitical upheaval and what he sees as a long-overdue reassessment of the purpose of business education.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to reassess this idea that business schools are just marketing, finance and so on,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n terms of skills we need to provide three layers. One is the business and law side, the core of what we鈥檙e doing, and then touching on the tech side and on the geopolitical and social side, to understand where we鈥檙e going and how we can fix it. And also focusing on humanities.鈥

The school recently launched a bachelor鈥檚 degree in business and AI and a degree in global governance.

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鈥淏usiness schools are really at a fundamental transformation point. We need to change a lot of the presumptions we鈥檝e had about where we鈥檙e going, what our role is and what our relevance is,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 believe a future where business schools do not coalesce around this goal [of contributing to the betterment of society] will be a very challenging one for them.鈥

seher.asaf@timeshighereducation.com

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