fbpx
Wikipedia

Economy of Mexico

The economy of Mexico is a developing mixed-market economy.[22] It is the 14th largest in the world in nominal GDP terms and the 13th largest by purchasing power parity, according to the International Monetary Fund.[23] Since the 1994 crisis, administrations have improved the country's macroeconomic fundamentals. Mexico was not significantly influenced by the 2002 South American crisis, and maintained positive, although low, rates of growth after a brief period of stagnation in 2001. However, Mexico was one of the Latin American nations most affected by the 2008 recession with its gross domestic product contracting by more than 6% in that year.

Economy of Mexico
CurrencyMexican peso (MXN, Mex$)
calendar year
Trade organizations
G20, APEC, CPTPP, USMCA, OECD and WTO
Country group
Statistics
Population 128,649,565 (2020 est.)[3]
GDP
  • $1.663 trillion (nominal; 2023)[4]
  • $3.125 trillion (PPP; 2023)[4]
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • 3.1% (2022)[5]
  • 1.8% (2023f)[5]
  • 1.6% (2024f)[5]
GDP per capita
  • $12,673 (nominal; 2023)[4]
  • $23,819 (PPP; 2023)[4]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
8.7% August 2022[6]
Population below poverty line
41.5 medium (2020)[9]
Labor force
  • 57,558,589 (2019)[12]
  • 57.6% employment rate (2018)[13]
Labor force by occupation
Unemployment
  • 5.3% (2020 est.)[14]
  • 3.5% (September 2019)[15]
Average gross salary
Mex$2,821 / $732 monthly[16] (2022)
Main industries
60th (easy, 2020)[17]
External
Exports $491.6 billion (2019 est.)[3]
Export goods
manufactured goods, electronics, vehicles and auto parts, oil and oil products, silver, plastics, fruits, vegetables, coffee, cotton
Main export partners
Imports $467.2 billion (2019 est.)[3]
Import goods
metalworking machines, steel mill products, agricultural machinery, electrical equipment, automobile parts for assembly and repair, aircraft, aircraft parts, plastics, natural gas and oil products
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • $554.3 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[3]
  • Abroad: $243.8 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[3]
−$19.35 billion (2017 est.)[3]
$445.8 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[3]
Public finances
54.3% of GDP (2017 est.)[3]
−1.1% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[3]
Revenues261.4 billion (2017 est.)[3]
Expenses273.8 billion (2017 est.)[3]
Economic aid$189.4 million (2008)
$196.917 billion (September 2022)[21]
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

The Mexican economy has had unprecedented macroeconomic stability, which has reduced inflation and interest rates to record lows. In spite of this, significant gaps persist between the urban and the rural population, the northern and southern states, and the rich and the poor.[24] Some of the unresolved issues include the upgrade of infrastructure, the modernization of the tax system and labor laws, and the reduction of income inequality. Tax revenues, altogether 19.6 percent of GDP in 2013, were the lowest among the then 34 OECD countries.[25] As of 2022, the OECD 38 has members.[26]

The economy contains rapidly developing modern industrial and service sectors, with increasing private ownership. Recent administrations have expanded competition in ports, railroads, telecommunications, electricity generation, natural gas distribution and airports, with the aim of upgrading infrastructure. As an export-oriented economy, more than 90% of Mexican trade is under free trade agreements (FTAs) with more than 40 countries, including the European Union, Japan, Israel, and much of Central and South America. The most influential FTA is the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA), which came into effect in 2020, and was signed in 2018 by the governments of the United States, Canada and Mexico. In 2006, trade with Mexico's two northern partners accounted for almost 90% of its exports and 55% of its imports.[27] Recently, Congress approved important tax, pension, and judicial reforms.[clarification needed] Reform to the oil industry is currently being debated. In 2016, Mexico had 16 companies in the Forbes Global 2000 list of the world's largest companies.[28]

Mexico's labor force consisted of 52.8 million people as of 2015.[29] The OECD and WTO both rank Mexican workers as the hardest-working in the world in terms of the number of hours worked yearly. Pay per hours worked remains low.[30][31][32][33][34]

History Edit

 
Porfirio Díaz, (1876–1911) in whose presidency rapid industrialization took place in foreign capital.

The Porfiriato brought unprecedented economic growth during the last quarter of the nineteenth century.[35] This growth was accompanied by foreign investment and European immigration, the development of railroad networks and the exploitation of the country's natural resources. Annual economic growth between 1876 and 1910 averaged 3.3%.[36] Large-scale ownership made considerable progress while foreign land companies accumulated millions of hectares. At the end of Porfirio Díaz's dictatorship, 97% of arable land belonged to 1% of the population and 95% of peasants were landless, becoming farmworkers in huge haciendas or forming an impoverished urban proletariat whose revolts were crushed one by one.[37]

Political repression and fraud, as well as huge income inequalities exacerbated by the land distribution system based on latifundios, in which large haciendas were owned by a few but worked by millions of impoverished peasants living in precarious conditions, led to the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), an armed conflict that drastically transformed Mexico's political, social, cultural, and economic structure during the twentieth century. The war itself left a harsh toll on the economy and population, which decreased over the 11-year period between 1910 and 1921.[38] The reconstruction of the country was to take place in the following decades.

The period from 1940 to 1970 has been dubbed by economic historians as the Mexican Miracle, a period of economic growth that followed the end of the Mexican Revolution and the resumption of capital accumulation during peacetime. During this period, Mexico adopted an import substitution industrialization (ISI) model, which protected and promoted the development of national industries. Mexico experienced an economic boom through which industries rapidly expanded their production.[39] Important changes in the economic structure included free land distribution to peasants under the concept of ejido, the nationalization of the oil and railroad companies, the introduction of social rights into the 1917 Constitution, the birth of large and influential labor unions, and the upgrading of infrastructure. While population doubled from 1940 to 1970, GDP increased sixfold during the same period.[40]

 
President José López Portillo 1976–1982, during whose administration the economy soared with the discovery of oil and then crashed when the price dropped.

Growth while under the ISI model had reached its peak in the late 1960s. During the 1970s, the presidential administrations of Luis Echeverría (1970–76) and José López Portillo (1976–82) tried to include social development in their policies, an effort that entailed increased public spending. With the discovery of vast oil fields during a period of oil price increases and low international interest rates, the government borrowed from international capital markets to invest in the state-owned oil company Pemex, which in turn seemed to provide a long-run income source to promote social welfare. This produced a remarkable growth in public expenditure,[39] and president López Portillo announced that the time had come to "manage prosperity"[41] as Mexico multiplied its oil production to become the world's fourth-largest exporter.[42]

Average annual GDP growth by period
1900–1929 3.4%
1929–1945 4.2%
1945–1972 6.5%
1972–1981 5.5%
1981–1995 1.5%
1983 Debt Crisis -4.2%
1995 Peso Crisis -6.2%
1995–2000 5.1%
2001 US Recession -0.2%
2009 Great Recession -6.5%
Sources:[43][39][44][45]

In the period of 1981–1982 the international panorama changed abruptly: oil prices plunged and interest rates rose. In 1982, López Portillo, just before ending his administration, suspended payments of foreign debt, devalued the peso and nationalized the banking system, along with many other industries that were severely affected by the crisis, among them the steel industry. While import substitution had contributed to Mexican industrialization, by the 1980s protracted protection of Mexican companies had led to an uncompetitive industrial sector with low productivity gains.[39]

President Miguel de la Madrid (1982–88) was the first of a series of presidents that implemented neoliberal policies. After the crisis of 1982, lenders were unwilling to return to Mexico and, in order to keep the current account in balance, the government resorted to currency devaluations, which sparked unprecedented inflation,[39] reaching an annual record of 139.7% in 1987.[46]

One of the first steps toward trade liberalization was Mexico's signature of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1986 under President de la Madrid. During the administration of Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988–94) many state-owned companies were privatized. The telephone company Telmex, a government monopoly, became a private monopoly, sold to Carlos Slim.[47] Also not opened to private investors were the government oil company Pemex or the energy sector. Furthermore, the banking system that had been nationalized in the waning hours of the López Portillo administration in 1982 were privatized, but with the exclusion of foreign banks.[47] Salinas pushed for Mexico's inclusion in the North American Free Trade Agreement, expanding it from a U.S.-Canada agreement. The expanded NAFTA was signed in 1992, after the signature of two additional supplements on environments and labor standards, it came into effect on January 1, 1994.[48]

Salinas also introduced strict price controls and negotiated smaller minimum wage increments with the labor union movement under the aging Fidel Velázquez with the aim of curbing inflation.[47] While his strategy was successful in reducing inflation, growth averaged only 2.8 percent a year.[39] By fixing the exchange rate, the peso became rapidly overvalued while consumer spending increased, causing the current account deficit to reach 7% of GDP in 1994. The deficit was financed through tesobonos a type of public debt instrument that reassured payment in dollars.[49]

The January 1994 Chiapas uprising, and the assassinations of the ruling party's presidential candidate in March 1994, Luis Donaldo Colosio and the Secretary-General of the party and brother of the Assistant-Attorney General José Francisco Ruiz Massieu in 1994, reduced investor confidence. Public debt holders rapidly sold their tesobonos, depleting the Central Bank's reserves,[49] while portfolio investments, which had made up 90% of total investment flows, left the country as fast as they had come in.[39]

This unsustainable situation eventually forced the entrant Zedillo administration to adopt a floating exchange rate. The peso sharply devalued and the country entered into an economic crisis in December 1994.[50] The boom in exports, as well as an international rescue package crafted by U.S. president Bill Clinton (1993-2001), helped cushion the crisis. In less than 18 months, the economy was growing again, and annual rate growth averaged 5.1 percent between 1995 and 2000.[39] More critical interpretations argue that the crisis and subsequent public bailout "preserved, renewed, and intensified the structurally unequal social relations of power and class characteristic of finance-led neoliberal capitalism" in forms institutionally specific to Mexican society, with GDP growth spurred by one-time privatizations.[50] Per capita economic growth in the 2000s was low.[38]

President Ernesto Zedillo (1994–2000), and President Vicente Fox (2000–06), of the National Action Party (Mexico), the first opposition party candidate to win a presidential election since the founding of the precursor of the Institutional Revolutionary Party in 1929, continued with trade liberalization. During Fox's administrations, several FTAs were signed with Latin American and European countries, Japan and Israel, and both strove to maintain macroeconomic stability. Thus, Mexico became one of the most open countries in the world to trade, and the economic base shifted accordingly. Total trade with the United States and Canada tripled, and total exports and imports almost quadrupled between 1991 and 2003.[51] The nature of foreign investment also changed with a greater share of foreign-direct investment (FDI) over portfolio investment.

Macroeconomic, financial and welfare indicators Edit

 
Mexico inflation rate 1970-2022
 
Mexico bonds
  30 year
  10 year
  1 year
  3 month

Main indicators Edit

 
A portion of the port of Veracruz
GDP per capita PPP US $16,900 (2012–15)
GNI per capita PPP US $16,500 (2012–15)
Inflation (CPI) 3.7% (February 2021)
Gini index 43.4 (World Bank 2016)
Unemployment 4.5% (January 2021)
HDI   0.779 (2020)
Labor force 78.4 million (2011)
Pop. in poverty 13.8%

Mexico's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in purchasing power parity (PPP) was estimated at US$2,143.499 billion in 2014, and $1,261.642 billion in nominal exchange rates.[43] It is the leader of the MINT group. Its standard of living, as measured in GDP in PPP per capita, was US$16,900. The World Bank reported in 2009 that Mexico's Gross National Income in market exchange rates was the second highest in Latin America, after Brazil at US$1,830.392 billion,[52] which lead to the highest income per capita in the region at $14,400.[53] As such, Mexico established itself as an upper middle-income country. After the slowdown of 2001 the country has recovered and has grown 4.2, 3.0 and 4.8 percent in 2004, 2005 and 2006,[54] even though it is considered to be well below Mexico's potential growth.[49]

The Mexican peso is the currency (ISO 4217: MXN; symbol: $). One peso is divided into 100 centavos (cents). MXN replaced MXP in 1993 at a rate of 1000 MXP per 1 MXN. The exchanged rate remained stable between 1998 and 2006, oscillating between 10.20 and 11=3.50 MXN per US$. The Mexican peso parity decreased under president Enrique Peña Nieto, lost in a single year 19.87% of its value March 29, 2017, at the Wayback Machine reaching an exchange rate of $20.37 per dollar in 2017. Interest rates in 2007 were situated at around 7 percent,[55] having reached a historic low in 2002 below 5 percent. Inflation rates are also at historic lows; the inflation rate in Mexico in 2006 was 4.1 percent, and 3 percent by the end of 2007. Compared against the US Dollar, Mexican Peso has devalued over %7,500 since 1910.[citation needed]

Unemployment rates are the lowest of all OECD member countries at 3.2 percent. However, underemployment is estimated at 25 percent.[27] Mexico's Human Development Index was reported at 0.829 in 2008,[56] (comprising a life expectancy index of 0.84, an education index of 0.86 and a GDP index of 0.77), ranking 52 in the world within the group of high-development.

Development

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2021(with IMF staff stimtates in 2022–2027). Inflation below 5% is in green.[57]

Year GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP per capita

(in US$ nominal)

GDP growth

(real)

Inflation rate

(in Percent)

Unemployment

(in Percent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

1980 404.3 5,984.8 228.6 3,383.7  9.5%  26.5% 1.2% n/a
1981  480.3  6,934.4  293.6  4,238.8  8.5%  28.0%  0.9% n/a
1982  507.4  7,148.6  213.1  3,002.2  -0.5%  59.1%  4.2% n/a
1983  508.8  7,001.9  173.7  2,390.4  -3.5%  101.8%  6.1% n/a
1984  545.2  7,331.8  204.9  2,755.0  3.4%  65.4%  5.6% n/a
1985  574.7  7,559.2  217.4  2,859.2  2.2%  57.8%  4.4% n/a
1986  568.3  7,314.4  150.5  1,937.4  -3.1%  86.4%  4.3% n/a
1987  592.3  7,465.9  165.1  2,080.4  1.7%  132.0%  3.9% n/a
1988  621.1  7,670.6  201.9  2,493.8  1.3%  113.5%  3.5% n/a
1989  671.9  8,137.0  246.1  2,979.9  4.1%  19.9%  2.9% n/a
1990  733.2  8,710.7  290.4  3,450.2  5.2%  26.7%  2.7% n/a
1991  789.9  9,212.0  348.1  4,060.0  4.2%  22.6%  2.7% n/a
1992  836.5  9,580.9  403.7  4,624.0  3.5%  15.5%  2.8% n/a
1993  879.8  9,902.0  500.8  5,636.4  2.7%  9.8%  3.4% n/a
1994  943.0  10,435.6  527.8  5,841.0  4.9%  7.0%  3.7% n/a
1995  902.2  9,823.1  360.1  3,920.7  -6.3%  35.1%  6.2% n/a
1996  980.9  10,514.4  411.0  4,405.1  6.8%  34.4%  5.5% 44.7%
1997  1,066.2  11,256.0  500.4  5,283.1  6.8%  20.6%  3.7%  40.9%
1998  1,133.9  11,796.6  526.5  5,477.9  5.2%  15.9%  3.2%  42.0%
1999  1,181.5  12,120.0  600.2  6,157.2  2.8%  16.6%  2.5%  43.8%
2000  1,268.0  12,835.7  707.9  7,166.1  4.9%  9.5%  2.2%  40.3%
2001  1,291.3  12,899.4  756.7  7,559.0  -0.4%  6.4%  2.8%  39.3%
2002  1,310.9  12,916.1  772.1  7,607.4  0.0%  5.0%  3.0%  41.9%
2003  1,356.1  13,180.1  729.3  7,088.5  1.4%  4.6%  3.4%  44.2%
2004  1,447.1  13,878.1  782.2  7,501.9  3.9%  4.7%  3.9%  40.8%
2005  1,526.9  14,450.1  877.5  8,304.0  2.3%  4.0%  3.5%  38.5%
2006  1,644.8  15,349.7  975.4  9,102.5  4.5%  3.6%  3.5%  37.4%
2007  1,728.0  15,890.1  1,052.7  9,680.4  2.3%  4.0%  3.6%  37.2%
2008  1,781.2  16,133.6  1,110.0  10,053.7  1.1%  5.1%  3.9%  42.5%
2009  1,697.9  15,146.9  900.0  8,029.3  -5.3%  5.3%  5.3%  43.7%
2010  1,806.3  15,879.3  1,057.8  9,299.5  5.1%  4.2%  5.3%  42.0%
2011  1,911.3  16,567.2  1,180.5  10,232.4  3.7%  3.4%  5.2%  42.9%
2012  2,012.8  17,212.6  1,201.1  10,271.4  3.6%  4.1%  4.9%  42.7%
2013  2,064.5  17,428.6  1,274.4  10,759.0  1.4%  3.8%  4.9%  45.9%
2014  2,173.2  18,119.8  1,315.4  10,967.1  2.9%  4.0%  4.8%  48.9%
2015  2,230.6  18,382.2  1,171.9  9,657.1  3.3%  2.7%  4.3%  52.8%
2016  2,383.4  19,422.1  1,078.5  8,788.6  2.6%  2.8%  3.9%  56.7%
2017  2,472.6  19,933.5  1,158.9  9,342.9  2.1%  6.0%  3.4%  54.0%
2018  2,587.2  20,643.6  1,222.4  9,753.7  2.2%  4.9%  3.3%  53.6%
2019  2,628.3  20,764.0  1,269.0  10,025.5  -0.2%  3.6%  3.5%  53.3%
2020  2,445.6  19,137.4  1,089.8  8,528.1  -8.1%  3.4%  4.4%  60.1%
2021  2,669.1  20,694.8  1,297.7  10,061.5  4.8%  5.7%  4.1%  57.6%
2022  2,919.9  22,440.1  1,424.5  10,948.0  2.1%  8.0%  3.4%  56.8%
2023  3,058.7  23,307.8  1,476.4  11,250.5  1.2%  6.3%  3.7%  58.7%
2024  3,178.5  24,023.7  1,527.1  11,541.8  1.8%  3.9%  3.7%  59.0%
2025  3,306.9  24,798.2  1,586.4  11,896.6  2.1%  3.3%  3.8%  59.3%
2026  3,441.0  25,609.4  1,650.4  12,283.1  2.1%  3.1%  3.8%  59.6%
2027  3,580.7  26,449.1  1,718.6  12,694.3  2.1%  3.0%  3.8%  59.9%

Poverty Edit

 
Poverty headcount ratio at $5.50 a day (2011 PPP) (% of population). Based on World Bank data ranging from 1998 to 2018.

Poverty in Mexico is measured under parameters such as nutrition, clean water, shelter, education, health care, social security, quality and basic services in the household, income and social cohesion as defined by social development laws in the country.[58] It is divided in two categories: Moderate poverty and Extreme poverty.

While less than 2% of Mexico's population lives below the international poverty line set by the World Bank, as of 2013, Mexico's government estimates that 33% of Mexico's population lives in moderate poverty and 9% lives in extreme poverty,[59] which leads to 42% of Mexico's total population living below the national poverty line.[60] The gap might be explained by the government's adopting the multidimensional poverty method as a way to measure poverty, so a person who has an income higher than the "international poverty line" or "well being income line" set by the Mexican government might fall in the "moderate poverty" category if he or she has one or more deficiencies related to social rights such as education (did not complete studies), nutrition (malnutrition or obesity), or living standards (including elemental, such as water or electricity, and secondary domestic assets, such as refrigerators). Extreme poverty is defined by the Mexican government as persons who have deficiencies in both social rights and an income lower than the "well being income line".[61] Additional figures from SEDESOL (Mexico's social development agency) estimates that 6% (7.4 million people) live in extreme poverty and suffer from food insecurity.[62]

Recently, extensive changes in government economic policy[63] and attempts at reducing government interference through privatization of several sectors,[64] for better[65] or worse,[66] allowed Mexico to remain the biggest economy in Latin America,[67][dubious ] until 2005 when it became the second-largest;[68] and a so-called "trillion dollar club" member.[69] Despite these changes, Mexico continues to suffer great social inequality and lack of opportunities.[70] The Peña Nieto's administration made an attempt at reducing poverty in the country, to provide more opportunities to its citizens such as jobs,[71] education, and the installation of universal healthcare.[72][73]

Income inequality Edit

 
The GDP per capita of Mexican States in USD, 2012.

A single person in Mexico, Carlos Slim,[74] has a net worth equal to six percent of GDP. Additionally, only ten percent of Mexicans represent 25% of Mexican GDP. A smaller group, 3.5%, represent 12.5% of Mexican GDP.[75]

According to the OECD, Mexico is the country with the second highest degree of economic disparity between the extremely poor and extremely rich, after Chile – although this gap has been diminishing over the last decade. The bottom ten percent on the income rung disposes of 1.36% of the country's resources, whereas the upper 10% dispose of almost 36%. OECD also notes that Mexico's budgeted expenses for poverty alleviation and social development is only about a third of the OECD average – both in absolute and relative numbers.[76] According to the World Bank, in 2004, 17.6% of Mexico's population lived in extreme poverty, while 21% lived in moderated poverty.[77]

Remittances Edit

Mexico was the fourth largest receiver of remittances in the world in 2017. Remittances, or contributions sent by Mexicans living abroad, mostly in the United States, to their families at home in Mexico comprised $28.5 billion in 2017.[78] In 2015, remittances overtook oil to become the single largest foreign source of income for Mexico, larger than any other sector.[79]

The growth of remittances have more than doubled since 1997.[80] Recorded remittance transactions exceeded 41 million in 2003, of which 86 percent were made by electronic transfer.[81]

The Mexican government, cognizant of the needs of migrant workers, began issuing an upgraded version of the Matrícula Consular de Alta Seguridad (MACS, High Security Consular Identification), an identity document issued at Mexican consulates abroad. This document is now accepted as a valid identity card in 32 US states, as well as thousands of police agencies, hundreds of cities and counties, as well as banking institutions.[81]

The main states receiving remittances in 2014 were Michoacán, Guanajuato, Jalisco, the State of Mexico and Puebla, which jointly captured 45% of total remittances in that year.[82] Several state governments, with the support of the federal government, have implemented programs to use part of the remittances to finance public works. This program, called Dos por Uno (Two for every one) is designed in a way that for each peso contributed by migrants from their remittances, the state and the federal governments will invest two pesos in building infrastructure at their home communities.[83]

Regional economies Edit

 
Mexican States by Human Development Index, 2015.

Regional disparities and income inequality are a feature of the Mexican economy. While all constituent states of the federation have a Human Development Index (HDI) higher than 0.70 (medium to high development), the northern and central states have higher levels of HDI than the southern states. Nuevo León, Jalisco and the Federal District have HDI levels similar to European countries, whereas that of Oaxaca and Chiapas is similar to that of China or Vietnam.[84]

At the municipal level, economic disparities are even greater: Benito Juárez borough in Mexico City has an HDI similar to that of Germany or New Zealand, whereas, Metlatónoc in Guerrero, would have an HDI similar to that of Malawi. The majority of the federal entities in the north have a high development (higher than 0.80), as well as the entities Colima, Jalisco, Aguascalientes, the Federal District, Querétaro and the southeastern states of Quintana Roo and Campeche). The less developed states (with medium development in terms of HDI, higher than 0.70) are located along the southern Pacific coast.

In terms of share of the GDP by economic sector (in 2004), the largest contributors in agriculture are Jalisco (9.7%), Sinaloa (7.7%) and Veracruz (7.6%); the greatest contributors in industrial production are the Federal District (15.8%), State of México (11.8%) and Nuevo León (7.9%); the greatest contributors in the service sector are also the Federal District (25.3%), State of México (8.9%) and Nuevo León (7.5%).[85]

Since the 1980s, the economy has slowly become less centralized; the annual rate of GDP growth of the Federal District from 2003 to 2004 was the smallest of all federal entities at 0.2%, with drastic drops in the agriculture and industrial sectors. Nonetheless, it still accounts for 21.8% of the nation's GDP. The states with the highest GDP growth rates are Quintana Roo (9.0%), Baja California (8.9%), and San Luis Potosí (8.2%).[86] In 2000, the federal entities with the highest GDP per capita in Mexico were the Federal District (US$26,320), Campeche (US$18,900) and Nuevo León (US$30,250); the states with the lowest GDP per capita were Chiapas (US$3,302), Oaxaca (US$4,100) and Guerrero (US$6,800).[87]

Economic sectors Edit

 
Hacienda of San Antonio Coapa by José María Velasco Gómez.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in purchasing power parity (PPP) in 2022 was estimated at US$2,89 trillion, and GDP per capita in PPP at US$22,216.[23] The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 70.5%, followed by the industrial sector at 25.7% (2006 est.). Agriculture represents only 3.9% of GDP (2006 est.). Mexican labor force is estimated at 38 million of which 18% is occupied in agriculture, 24% in the industry sector and 58% in the service sector (2003 est.). Mexico's largest source of foreign income is remittances.[88]

Agriculture Edit

Agriculture as a percentage of total GDP has been steadily declining, and now resembles that of developed nations in that it plays a smaller role in the economy. In 2006, agriculture accounted for 3.9% of GDP,[27] down from 7% in 1990,[89] and 25% in 1970.[90] Given the historic structure of ejidos, it employs a considerably high percentage of the work force: 18% in 2003,[27] mostly of which grows basic crops for subsistence, compared to 2–5% in developed nations in which production is highly mechanized.

History Edit

Food and agriculture
 
Farmers in Puebla
Product Quantity (Tm) World Rank1
Avocados 1,040,390 1
Onions and chayote 1,130,660 1
Limes and lemons 1,824,890 1
Sunflower seed 212,765 1
Dry fruits 95,150 2
Papaya 955,694 2
Chillies and peppers 1,853,610 2
Whole beans 93 000 3
Oranges 3,969,810 3
Anise, badian, fennel 32 500 3
Chicken meat 2,245,000 3
Asparagus 67,247 4
Mangoes 1.503.010 4
Corn 20,000,000 4
1Source:FAO[91]

After the Mexican Revolution Mexico began an agrarian reform, based on the 27th article of the Mexican Constitution than included transfer of land and/or free land distribution to peasants and small farmers under the concept of the ejido.[92] This program was further extended during President Cárdenas' administration during the 1930s[93] and continued into the 1960s at varying rates.[94] The cooperative agrarian reform, which guaranteed small farmers a means of subsistence livelihood, also caused land fragmentation and lack of capital investment, since commonly held land could not be used as collateral. In an effort to raise rural productivity and living standards, this constitutional article was amended in 1992 to allow for the transfer of property rights of the communal lands to farmers cultivating it.[95] With the ability to rent or sell it, a way was open for the creation of larger farms and the advantages of economies of scale. Large mechanized farms are now operating in some northwestern states (mainly in Sinaloa). However, privatization of ejidos continues to be very slow in the central and southern states where the great majority of peasants produce only for subsistence.[citation needed]

Until the 1980s, the government encouraged the production of basic crops (mainly corn and beans) by maintaining support prices and controlling imports through the National Company for Popular Subsistence (CONASUPO). With trade liberalization, however, CONASUPO was gradually dismantled and two new mechanisms were implemented: Alianza and Procampo. Alianza provides income payments and incentives for mechanization and advanced irrigation systems. Procampo is an income transfer subsidy to farmers. This support program provides 3.5 million farmers who produce basic commodities (mostly corn), and which represent 64% of all farmers, with a fixed income transfer payment per unit of area of cropland. This subsidy increased substantially during president Fox's administration, mainly to white corn producers in order to reduce imports from the United States. This program has been successful, and in 2004, roughly only 15% of corn imports are white corn –the one used for human consumption and the type that is mostly grown in Mexico– as opposed to 85% of yellow and crashed corn –the one use for feeding livestock, and which is barely produced in Mexico.[96]

Crops Edit

In spite of corn as being a staple in the Mexican diet, Mexico's comparative advantage in agriculture is not in corn, but in horticulture, tropical fruits, and vegetables. Negotiators of NAFTA expected that through liberalization and mechanization of agriculture two-thirds of Mexican corn producers would naturally shift from corn production to horticultural and other labor-intensive crops such as fruits, nuts, vegetables, coffee and sugar cane.[97] While horticultural trade has drastically increased due to NAFTA, it has not absorbed displaced workers from corn production (estimated at 600,000).[96] Corn production has remained stable (at 20 million metric tons), arguably, as a result of income support to farmers, or a reluctance to abandon a millenarian tradition in Mexico: not only have peasants grown corn for millennia, corn originated in Mexico. Mexico is the seventh largest corn producer in the world.[91]

Potatoes Edit

The area dedicated to potatoes has changed little since 1980 and average yields have almost tripled since 1961. Production reached a record 1.7 million tonnes in 2003. Per capita consumption of potato in Mexico stands at 17 kg a year, very low compared to its maize intake of 400 kg.[98] On average, potato farms in Mexico are larger than those devoted to more basic food crops. Potato production in Mexico is mostly for commercial purposes; the production for household consumption is very small.[99]

Avocado Edit
 
Mexico is the world's leading producer of avocados as of 2020, supplying nearly 30% of the global harvest in that year.

Mexico is by far the world's largest avocado growing country, producing several times more than the second largest producer. In 2013, the total area dedicated to avocado production was 188,723 hectares (466,340 acres), and the harvest was 2.03 million tonnes in 2017. The states that produce the most are México, Morelos, Nayarit, Puebla, and Michoacan, accounting for 86% of the total.[citation needed]

Sugar cane Edit

Approximately 160,000 medium-sized farmers grow sugar cane in 15 Mexican states; currently there are 54 sugar mills around the country that produced 4.96 million tons of sugar in the 2010 crop, compared to 5.8 million tons in 2001.[100] Mexico's sugar industry is characterized by high production costs and lack of investment. Mexico produces more sugar than it consumes.[101] Sugar cane is grown on 700,000 farms in Mexico with a yield of 72 metric tons per farm.[102]

Mining Edit

 
Mexico is the world's leading producer of silver.
 
The former Acosta mine, now a museum in Hidalgo

In 2019, the country was the world's largest producer of silver[103] 9th largest producer of gold,[104] the 8th largest producer of copper,[105] the world's 5th largest producer of lead,[106] the world's 6th largest producer of zinc,[107] the world's 5th largest producer of molybdenum,[108] the world's 3rd largest producer of mercury,[109] the world's 5th largest producer of bismuth,[110] the world's 13th largest producer of manganese[111] and the 23rd largest world producer of phosphate.[112] It is also the 8th largest world producer of salt.[113]

In April 2022, the Senate passed a law that nationalizes the lithium mining industry in the country. The federal government will have a monopoly on all new lithium mines in the country, but existing operations will be allowed to continue in private hands.[114] Critics of the move argue that the constitution already does this[114] and that the government lacks the technical capacity to mine the major reserves, which are mostly in clay deposits that are difficult to mine. The government made a similar failed attempt to nationalize uranium mining in the 1980s.[115]

Industry Edit

Industrial production
Main industries Aircraft, automobile industry, petrochemicals, cement and construction, textiles, food and beverages, mining, consumer durables, tourism
Industrial growth rate 3.6% (2006)
Labor force 29% of total labor force
GDP of sector 25.7% of total GDP
 
Grupo Bimbo

The industrial sector as a whole has benefited from trade liberalization; in 2000 it accounted for almost 50% of all export earnings.[51]

 
A Cemex plant on the outskirts of Monterrey.

Among the most important industrial manufacturers in Mexico is the automotive industry, whose standards of quality are internationally recognized. The automobile sector in Mexico differs from that in other Latin American countries and developing nations in that it does not function as a mere assembly manufacturer. The industry produces technologically complex components and engages in some research and development activities, an example of that is the new Volkswagen Jetta model with up to 70% of parts designed in Mexico.[51][116]

The "Big Three" (General Motors, Ford and Chrysler) have been operating in Mexico since the 1930s, while Volkswagen and Nissan built their plants in the 1960s.[117] Later, Toyota, Honda, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz have also participated. Given the high requirements of North American components in the industry, many European and Asian parts suppliers have also moved to Mexico: in Puebla alone, 70 industrial part-makers cluster around Volkswagen.[51]

The relatively small domestic car industry is represented by DINA Camiones, a manufacturer of trucks, busses and military vehicles, which through domestic production and purchases of foreign bus manufacturers has become the largest bus manufacturer in the world; Vehizero that builds hybrid trucks[118] and the new car companies Mastretta design that builds the Mastretta MXT sports car and Autobuses King that plans to build 10000 microbuses by 2015,[119][120][121] nevertheless new car companies are emerging among them CIMEX that has developed a sport utility truck, the Conin, and it is to be released in September 2010 in Mexico's national auto show,[122] And the new electric car maker Grupo Electrico Motorizado.[123] Some large industries of Mexico include Cemex, the world's largest construction company and the third largest cement producer[124] the alcohol beverage industries, including world-renowned players like Grupo Modelo; conglomerates like FEMSA, which apart from being the largest single producer of alcoholic beverages and owning multiple commercial interests such OXXO convenience store chain, is also the second-largest Coca-Cola bottler in the world; Gruma, the largest producer of corn flour and tortillas in the world; and Grupo Bimbo, Telmex, Televisa, among many others. In 2005, according to the World Bank, high-tech industrial production represented 19.6% of total exports.[125]

 
Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma Brewery in Monterrey, Mexico. This company was established in 1889. Today it still operates as a brewery and lodges two museums.

Maquiladoras (manufacturing plants that take in imported raw materials and produce goods for domestic consumption and export on behalf of foreign companies) have become the landmark of trade in Mexico. This sector has benefited from NAFTA, in that real income in the maquiladora sector has increased 15.5% since 1994, though from the non-maquiladora sector has grown much faster.[49] Contrary to popular belief, this should be no surprise since maquiladora's products could enter the US duty-free since a 1960s industry agreement. Other sectors now benefit from the free trade agreement, and the share of exports from non-border states has increased in the last 5 years while the share of exports from maquiladora-border states has decreased.

Currently Mexico is focusing in developing an aerospace industry and the assembly of helicopter and regional jet aircraft fuselages is taking place. Foreign firms such as MD Helicopters,[126] Bell,[127] Cessna[128] and Bombardier[129] build helicopter, aircraft and regional jets fuselages in Mexico. Although the Mexican aircraft industry is mostly foreign, as is its car industry, Mexican firms have been founded such as Aeromarmi,[130] which builds light propeller airplanes, and Hydra Technologies, which builds Unmanned Aerial Vehicles such as the S4 Ehécatl, other important companies are Frisa Aerospace that manufactures jet engine parts for the new Mitsubishi Regional jet and supplies Prat&whittney and Rolls-Royce jet engine manufacturers of casings for jet engines[131][132][133] and Kuo Aerospace that builds parts for aircraft landing gear and Supplies bombardier plant in Querétaro.[134]

As compared with the United States or countries in Western Europe a larger sector of Mexico's industrial economy is food manufacturing which includes several world class companies but the regional industry is undeveloped. There are national brands that have become international and local Mom and Pop producers but little manufacturing in between.[citation needed]

Electronics Edit

 
A tablet PC and touch screen computer / television made by Mexican Meebox

The electronics industry of Mexico has grown enormously within the last decade. Mexico has the sixth largest electronics industry in the world after China, United States, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Mexico is the second largest exporter of electronics to the United States where it exported $71.4 billion worth of electronics in 2011.[135] The Mexican electronics industry is dominated by the manufacture and OEM design of televisions, displays, computers, mobile phones, circuit boards, semiconductors, electronic appliances, communications equipment and LCD modules. The Mexican electronics industry grew 20% between 2010 and 2011, up from its constant growth rate of 17% between 2003 and 2009.[135] Currently electronics represent 30% of Mexico's exports.[135]

Televisions Edit

The design and manufacture of flat panel plasma, LCD and LED televisions is the single largest sector of the Mexican electronics industry, representing 25% of Mexico's electronics export revenue.[135] In 2009 Mexico surpassed South Korea and China as the largest manufacturer of televisions,[136][137] with Sony,[138] Toshiba,[139] Samsung,[140] Sharp (through Semex),[141][142] Zenith[143] LG,[144] Lanix,[145] TCL,[146] RCA,[147] Phillips,[148] Elcoteq,[149] Tatung,[150] Panasonic,[151] and Vizio[141][152] manufacturing CRT, LCD, LED and Plasma televisions in Mexico. Due to Mexico's position as the largest manufacturer of television it is known as the television capital of the world[141] in the electronics industry.

Computers Edit

Mexico is the third largest manufacturers of computers in the world with both domestic companies such as Lanix,[153] Texa,[154] Meebox,[155] Spaceit,[156] Kyoto[157] and foreign companies such as Dell,[158][159] Sony, HP,[160] Acer[161] Compaq,[162] Samsung and Lenovo[163][164] manufacturing various types of computers across the country. Most of the computers manufactured in Mexico are from foreign companies. Mexico is Latin America's largest producer of electronics and appliances made by domestic companies.

OEM and ODM manufacturing Edit

 
A Lanix LT10.1 high definition LCD assembled under OEM contract by Lanix for use in a Sharp LCD television.

Mexico is also home to a large number of OEM and ODM manufactures both foreign and domestic. Among them include Foxconn,[165] Celestica, Sanmina-SCI,[166][167] Jabil,[168] Elcoteq,[169][170] Falco,[171] Kimball International, Compal,[172] Benchmark Electronics,[173] Plexus, Lanix[174] and Flextronics.[175][176] These companies assemble finished electronics or design and manufacture electronic components on behalf of larger companies such as Sony or Microsoft using locally sourced components, for example the ODM, Flextronics manufactures Xbox video games systems in Guadalajara, Mexico[177][178] for Microsoft using components such as power systems and printed circuit boards from a local company, Falco Electronics which acts as the OEM.

Engineering and design Edit

The success and rapid growth of the Mexican electronics sector is driven primarily by the relatively low cost of manufacturing and design in Mexico; its strategic position as a major consumer electronics market coupled with its proximity to both the large North American and South American markets whom Mexico shares free trade agreements with; government support in the form of low business taxes, simplified access to loans and capital for both foreign multinational and domestic startup tech-based firms; and a very large pool of highly skilled, educated labor across all sectors of the tech industry. For example, German multinational engineering and electronics conglomerate Siemens has a significant Mexican base, which also serves as its business and strategy hub for Central American countries and the Caribbean region.[179]

 
The Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education is one of Mexico's most prestigious technology and engineering universities and is ranked one of the leading engineering institutions in Latin America.[180]

There are almost half a million (451,000) students enrolled in electronics engineering programs[181] with an additional 114,000 electronics engineers entering the Mexican workforce each year[135] and Mexico had over half a million (580,000) certified electronic engineering professionals employed in 2007.[137] From the late 1990s, the Mexican electronics industry began to shift away from simple line assembly to more advanced work such as research, design, and the manufacture of advanced electronics systems such as LCD panels, semiconductors, printed circuit boards, microelectronics, microprocessors, chipsets and heavy electronic industrial equipment and in 2006 the number of certified engineers being graduated annually in Mexico surpassed that of the United States.[182] Many Korean, Japanese and American appliances sold in the US are actually of Mexican design and origin but sold under the OEM's client names.[183][184] In 2008 one out of every four consumer appliances sold in the United States was of Mexican design.[185]

Joint production Edit

While many foreign companies like Phillips, Vizio and LG simply install wholly owned factories in Mexico; a number of foreign companies have set up semi-independent joint venture companies with Mexican businesses to manufacture and design components in Mexico. These companies are independently operated from their foreign parent companies and are registered in Mexico. These local companies function under Mexican law and retain a sizable portion of the revenue. These companies typically function dually as in-company OEM development and design facilities and manufacturing centers and usually produce most components needed to manufacture the finished products. An example would by Sharp which has formed Semex.[186]

Semex was founded as a joint venture between Sharp and Mexican investors which acts as an autonomous independent company which Sharp only maintains partial control over. The company manufactures whole products such televisions and designs individual components on behalf of Sharp such as LCD modules and in return Semex is granted access to Sharp capital, technology, research capacity and branding. Notable foreign companies which have set up joint venture entities in Mexico include Samsung which formed Samex,[187] a local designer and manufacturer of finished televisions, white goods and individual electronic components like printed circuit boards, LCD panels and semiconductors,[188] Toshiba, who formed Toshiba de México, S.A. de C.V., an administratively autonomous subsidiary which produces electronics parts, televisions and heavy industrial equipment.[189]

Some of these subsidiaries have grown to expand into multiple branches effectively becoming autonomous conglomerates within their own parent companies. Sony for example started operations in Mexico in 1976 with a group of Mexican investors, and founded the joint venture, Sony de Mexico[190] which produces LED panels, LCD modules, automotive electronics, appliances and printed circuit boards amongst other products for its Japanese parent company, Sony KG. Sony de Mexico has research facilities in Monterrey and Mexico City, designs many of the Sony products manufactured in Mexico and has now expanded to create its own finance, music and entertainment subsidiaries which are Mexican registered and independent of their Japanese parent corporation.[191]

Domestic industry Edit

 
Lanix W10 Ilium tablet PC.

Although much of Mexico's electronics industry is driven by foreign companies, Mexico also has a sizeable domestic electronics industry and a number of electronics companies including Mabe, a major appliance manufacturer and OEM which has been functioning since the nineteen fifties and has expanded into the global market, Meebox, a designer and manufacturer desktop and tablet computers, solar power panels and electronics components, Texa, which manufactures computers laptops and servers, Falco, a major international manufacturer of electronic components such as printed circuitboards, power systems, semiconductors, gate drives and which has production facilities in Mexico, India and China, and Lanix, Mexico's largest electronics company which manufactures products such as computers, laptops, smartphones, LED and LCDs, flash memory, tablets, servers, hard drives, RAM, optical disk drives, and printed circuitboards and employs over 11,000 people in Mexico and Chile and distributes its products throughout Latin America.[192][193][194] Another area being currently developed in Mexico is Robotics, Mexico's new Mexone robot has been designed with the idea that in future years develop a commercial application for such advanced robots[195]

Oil Edit

 
A Pemex offshore oil platform just off the coast of Ciudad del Carmen.

Mineral resources are public property by constitution. As such, the energy sector is administered by the government with varying degrees of private investment. Mexico is the fourteenth-largest oil producer in the world, with 1,710,303 barrels per day (271,916.4 m3/d).[196] Pemex, the state-owned company in charge of administering research, exploration and sales of oil, is the largest company in Mexico, and the second largest in Latin America after Brazil's Petrobras.[197] Pemex is heavily taxed of almost 62 per cent of the company's sales, a significant source of revenue for the government.[39]

Without enough money to continue investing in finding new sources or upgrading infrastructure, and being protected constitutionally from private and foreign investment, some have predicted the company may face institutional collapse.[39] While the oil industry is still relevant for the government's budget, its importance in GDP and exports has steadily fallen since the 1980s.[198] In 1980 oil exports accounted for 61.6% of total exports; by 2000 it was only 7.3%.[51]

Energy Edit

Mexico's installed electricity capacity in 2008 was 58 GW. Of the installed capacity, 75% is thermal, 19% hydro, 2% nuclear and 3% renewable other than hydro.[199] The general trend in thermal generation is a decline in petroleum-based fuels and a growth in natural gas and coal. Since Mexico is a net importer of natural gas, higher levels of natural gas consumption (i.e. for power generation) will likely depend upon higher imports from either the United States or via liquefied natural gas (LNG).[200]

Manufacturing Edit

 
A maquiladora assembly plant in Mexico.

Manufacturing in Mexico grew rapidly in the late 1960s with the end of the US farm labor agreement known as the bracero program. This sent many farm laborers back into the Northern border region with no source of income. As a result, the US and Mexican governments agreed to The Border Industrialization Program, which permitted US companies to assemble products in Mexico using raw materials and components from the US with reduced duties. The Border Industrialization Program became known popularly as The Maquiladora Program or shortened to The Maquila Program.

Over the years, simple assembly operations in Mexico have evolved into complex manufacturing operations including televisions, automobiles, industrial and personal products. While inexpensive commodity manufacturing has flown to China, Mexico attracts U.S. manufacturers that need low-cost solutions near-by for higher value end products and just-in-time components.

Automobiles Edit

 
Mastretta-MXT-lg

The automotive sector accounts for 17.6% of Mexico's manufacturing sector. General Motors, Chrysler, Ford Motor Company, Nissan, Fiat, Renault, Honda, Toyota, and Volkswagen produce 2.8 million vehicles annually at 20 plants across the country, mostly in Puebla.[201] Mexico manufactures more automobiles of any North American nation.[202] The industry produces technologically complex components and engages in research and development.[51]

The "Big Three" (General Motors, Ford and Chrysler) have been operating in Mexico since the 1930s, while Volkswagen and Nissan built their plants in the 1960s.[117] In Puebla 70 industrial part-makers cluster around Volkswagen.[51] In the 2010s expansion of the sector was surging. In 2014 more than $10 billion in investment was committed in the first few months of the year. Kia Motors in August 2014 announced plans for a $1 billion factory in Nuevo León. At the time Mercedes-Benz and Nissan were already building a $1.4 billion plant near Aguascalientes, while BMW was planning a $1-billion assembly plant in San Luis Potosí. Additionally, Audi began building a $1.3 billion factory at San José Chiapa near Puebla in 2013.[203]

Retailing Edit

 
OXXO store in Cancún, Quintana Roo
 
Grupo Sanborns is a large chains of stores that began in the early 20th century

Mexico has a MXN 4.027 trillion retail sector (2013, about US$300 billion at the 2013 exchange rate)[204] including an estimated US$12 billion (2015) in e-commerce.[205] The largest retailer is Walmart, while the largest Mexico-based retailers are Soriana super/hypermarkets, FEMSA incl. its OXXO convenience stores, Coppel (department store), Liverpool department stores, Chedraui super/hypermarkets, and Comercial Mexicana super/hypermarkets.[204]

Services Edit

 
Camino Real Hotels

In 2013 the tertiary sector was estimated to account for 59.8% of Mexico's GDP.[27] In 2011 services employed 61.9% of the working population.[27] This section includes transportation, commerce, warehousing, restaurant and hotels, arts and entertainment, health, education, financial and banking services, telecommunications as well as public administration and defense. Mexico's service sector is strong, and in 2001 replaced Brazil's as the largest service sector in Latin America in dollar terms.[206]

Tourism Edit

 
The beach in Cancún, México.

Tourism is one of the most important industries in Mexico. It is the fourth largest source of foreign exchange for the country.[81] Mexico is the eighth most visited country in the world (with over 20 million tourists a year).[207]

Finance Edit

Banking system Edit

 
BBVA Bancómer Tower

According to the IMF the Mexican banking system is strong, in which private banks are profitable and well-capitalized.[208] The financial and banking sector is increasingly dominated by foreign companies or mergers of foreign and Mexican companies with the notable exception of Banorte. The acquisition of Banamex, one of the oldest surviving financial institutions in Mexico, by Citigroup was the largest US-Mexico corporate merger, at US$12.5 billion.[209] The largest financial institution in Mexico is Bancomer associated to the Spanish BBVA.[210]

The process of institution building in the financial sector in Mexico has evolved hand in hand with the efforts of financial liberalization and of inserting the economy more fully into world markets.[211] Over the recent years, there has been a wave of acquisitions by foreign institutions such as US-based Citigroup, Spain's BBVA and the UK's HSBC. Their presence, along with a better regulatory framework, has allowed Mexico's banking system to recover from the 1994–95 peso crisis. Lending to the public and private sector is increasing and so is activity in the areas of insurance, leasing and mortgages.[212] However, bank credit accounts for only 22% of GDP, which is significantly low compared to 70% in Chile.[213] Credit to the Agricultural sector has fallen 45.5% in six years (2001 to 2007), and now represents about 1% of total bank loans.[214] Other important institutions include savings and loans, credit unions (known as "cajas populares"),[215] government development banks, “non-bank banks”, bonded warehouses, bonding companies and foreign-exchange firms.[216]

A wave of acquisitions has left Mexico's financial sector in foreign hands. Their foreign-run affiliates compete with independent financial firms operating as commercial banks, brokerage and securities houses, insurance companies, retirement-fund administrators, mutual funds, and leasing companies.

Securities market Edit

 
The Mexican Stock Exchange

Mexico has a single securities market, the Mexican Stock Exchange (Bolsa Mexicana de Valores, known as the Bolsa). The market has grown steadily, with its main indices increasing by more than 600% in the last decade. It is Latin America's second largest exchange, after Brazil's. The total value of the domestic market capitalization of the BMV was calculated at US$409 billion at the end of 2011, and raised to US$451 billion by the end of February this year.[217]

 
Pacific Alliance-Logo Since 2014 it is part of the Mercado Integrado Latinoamericano, as part of a unified bag of The Pacific Alliance.

The Indice de Precios y Cotizaciones (IPC, the general equities index) is the benchmark stock index on the Bolsa. In 2005 the IPC surged 37.8%, to 17,802.71 from 12,917.88, backed by a stronger Mexican economy and lower interest rates. It continued its steep rise through the beginning of 2006, reaching 19,272.63 points at end-March 2006. The stockmarket also posted a record low vacancy rate, according to the central bank. Local stockmarket capitalisation totalled US$236bn at end-2005, up from US$170 bn at end-2004. As of March 2006 there were 135 listed companies, down from 153 a year earlier. Only a handful of the listed companies are foreign. Most are from Mexico City or Monterrey; companies from these two cities compose 67% of the total listed companies.

The IPC consists of a sample of 35 shares weighted according to their market capitalisation. The largest companies include America Telecom, the holding company that manages Latin America's largest mobile company, América Móvil; Telmex, Mexico's largest telephone company; Grupo Bimbo, world's biggest baker; and Wal-Mart de México, a subsidiary of the US retail company. The makeup of the IPC is adjusted every six months, with selection aimed at including the most liquid shares in terms of value, volume and number of trades.

Mexico's stock market is closely linked to developments in the US. Thus, volatility in the New York and Nasdaq stock exchanges, as well as interest-rate changes and economic expectations in the US, can steer the performance of Mexican equities. This is both because of Mexico's economic dependence on the US and the high volume of trading in Mexican equities through American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). Currently, the decline in the value of the dollar is making non-US markets, including Mexico's, more attractive.

Despite the recent gains, investors remain wary of making placements in second-tier initial public offerings (IPOs). Purchasers of new issues were disappointed after prices fell in numerous medium-sized companies that made offerings in 1996 and 1997. IPO activity in Mexico remains tepid and the market for second-tier IPOs is barely visible. There were three IPOs in 2005.[218]

Government Edit

Monetary and financial system and regulation Edit

Banco de México Edit

Financial indicators
 
Banco de México headquarters
Currency exchange rate 23.83 MXN per US$1 (31/03/2020)
Reserves US $176.579 billion (2013)[219]
Government budget US $196.5 billion (revenues)
Public debt 20.7% of GDP (2006)
External debt US $178.3 billion (2006)
Bank funding rate 5.25% (5/15/2009)

Banco de México is Mexico's central bank, an internally autonomous public institution whose governor is appointed by the president and approved by the legislature to which it is fully responsible. Banco de México's functions are outlined in the 28th article of the constitution and further expanded in the Monetary Law of the United Mexican States.[220] Banco de México's main objective is to achieve stability in the purchasing power of the national currency. It is also the lender of last resort.

Currency policy Edit

 
National Auditorium

Mexico has a floating exchange rate regime.

The floating exchange originated with reforms initiated after the December 1994 peso crash which had followed an unsustainable adherence to a short band. Under the new system, Banco de México now makes no commitment to the level of the peso exchange rate, although it does employ an automatic mechanism to accumulate foreign reserves. It also possesses tools aimed at smoothing out volatility. The Exchange Rate Commission sets policy; it is made up of six members—three each from the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit (Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Publico—SHCP) and the central bank, with the SHCP holding the deciding vote.

In August 1996, Banco de México initiated a mechanism to acquire foreign reserves when the peso is strong, without giving the market signals about a target range for the exchange rate. The resulting high levels of reserves, mostly from petroleum revenues, have helped to improve the terms and conditions on debt Mexico places on foreign markets. However, there is concern that the government relies too heavily on oil income in order to build a healthy base of reserves. According to the central bank, international reserves stood at US$75.8 billion in 2007.[221] In May 2003, Banco de México launched a program that sells U.S. dollars via a monthly auction, with the goal of maintaining a stable, but moderate, level of reserves.

From April 1, 1998, through April 1, 2008, the Peso traded around a range varying from $8.46 MXN per US$1.00 on April 21, 1998, to $11.69 MXN per US$1.00 on May 11, 2004, a 10-year peak depreciation of 38.18% between the two reference date extremes before recovering.

After the onset of the US credit crisis that accelerated in October 2008, the Peso had an exchange rate during October 1, 2008, through April 1, 2009 fluctuating from lowest to highest between $10.96 MXN per US$1.00 on October 1, 2008, to $15.42 MXN per US$1.00 on March 9, 2009, a peak depreciation ytd of 28.92% during those six months between the two reference date extremes before recovering.

From the $11.69 rate during 2004's low to the $15.42 rate during 2009's low, the peso depreciated 31.91% in that span covering the US recession coinciding Iraq War of 2003 and 2004 to the US & Global Credit Crisis of 2008.

Some experts including analysts at Goldman Sachs who coined the term BRIC in reference to the growing economies of Brazil, Russia, India, and China for marketing purposes believe that Mexico is going to be the 5th or 6th biggest economy in the world by the year 2050, behind China, United States, India, Brazil, and possibly Russia.

Monetary system Edit

 
Old hall of the Treasury at the National Palace.

Mexico's monetary policy was revised following the 1994–95 financial crisis, when officials decided that maintaining general price stability was the best way to contribute to the sustained growth of employment and economic activity. As a result, Banco de México has as its primary objective maintaining stability in the purchasing power of the peso. It sets an inflation target, which requires it to establish corresponding quantitative targets for the growth of the monetary base and for the expansion of net domestic credit.

The central bank also monitors the evolution of several economic indicators, such as the exchange rate, differences between observed and projected inflation, the results of surveys on the public and specialists’ inflation expectations, revisions on collective employment contracts, producer prices, and the balances of the current and capital accounts.

A debate continues over whether Mexico should switch to a US-style interest rate-targeting system. Government officials in favor of a change say that the new system would give them more control over interest rates, which are becoming more important as consumer credit levels rise.[citation needed]

Until 2008[citation needed],[222] Mexico used a unique system, amongst the OECD countries,[212] to control inflation in a mechanism known as the corto (lit. "shortage") a mechanism that allowed the central bank to influence market interest rates by leaving the banking system short of its daily demand for money by a predetermined amount. If the central bank wanted to push interest rates higher, it increased the corto. If it wished to lower interest rates, it decreased the corto. In April 2004, the Central Bank began setting a referential overnight interest rate as its monetary policy.[citation needed]

Business regulation Edit

Corruption Edit

 
Facade of the former convent and current Interactive Museum of Economics on Tacuba Street

Petty corruption based on exercise of administrative discretion in matters of zoning and business permits is endemic in Mexico[223] adding about 10% to the cost of consumer goods and services.[224] An April 2012 article in The New York Times reporting payment of bribes to officials throughout Mexico in order to obtain construction permits, information, and other favors[225] resulted in investigations in both the United States and Mexico.[226][227]

Using relatively recent night light data and electricity consumption in comparison with Gross County Product, the informal sector of the local economy in Veracruz state is shown to have grown during the period of the Fox Administration though the regional government remained PRI. The assumption that the informal economy of Mexico is a constant 30% of total economic activity is not supported at the local level. The small amount of local spatial autocorrelation that was found suggests a few clusters of high and low literacy rates amongst municipios in Veracruz but not enough to warrant including an I-statistic as a regressor. Global spatial autocorrelation is found especially literacy at the macro-regional level which is an area for further research beyond this study.[228]

Improved literacy bolsters both the informal and formal economies in Veracruz indicating policies designed to further literacy are vital for growing the regional economy. While indigenous people are relatively poor, little evidence was found that the informal economy is a higher percentage of total economic activity in a municipio with a high share of indigenous people. While the formal economy might have been expanding relative to the informal economy in 2000, by 2006 this process had been reversed with growing informality. While rural municipios have smaller economies, they are not different than urban municipios in the share of the economy that is informal. Programs in the past that might move economic activity from the informal to the formal sector have not succeeded, suggesting public finance issues such as tax evasion will continue to plague the state with low government revenues.[228]

Trade Edit

International trade
 
World Trade Center in Mexico City
Exports US $248.8 billion f.o.b. (2006)
Imports US $253.1 billion f.o.b. (2006)
Current account   US $400.1 million (2006)
Export partners US 90.9%, Canada 2.2%, Spain 1.4%, Germany 1.3%, Colombia 0.9% (2006)
Import partners US 53.4%, China 8%, Japan 5.9% (2005)
 
A proportional representation of Mexico exports, 2019

Mexico is a trade-oriented economy, with imports and exports totaling a 78% share of the GDP in 2019.[229] It is an important trade power as measured by the value of merchandise traded, and the country with the greatest number of free trade agreements.[230] In 2020, Mexico was the world's eleventh largest merchandise exporter and thirteenth largest merchandise importer, representing 2.4% and 2.2% of world trade, respectively (and those rankings increased to 7th and 9th if the EU is considered a single trading entity).[231] From 1991 to 2005, Mexican trade increased fivefold.[232] Mexico is the biggest exporter and importer in Latin America; in 2020, Mexico alone exported US$417.7 billion, roughly equivalent to the sum of the exports of the next 5 largest exporters (Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Peru, and Colombia).[231]

Mexican trade is fully integrated with that of its North American partners: as of 2019, approximately 80% of Mexican exports and 50% of its imports were traded with the United States and Canada.[233] Nonetheless, NAFTA has not produced trade diversion.[49] While trade with the United States increased 183% from 1993 to 2002, and that with Canada 165%, other trade agreements have shown even more impressive results: trade with Chile increased 285%, with Costa Rica 528% and Honduras 420%.[51] Trade with the European Union increased 105% over the same time period.[51]

Free trade agreements Edit

Mexico joined the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1986, and today is an active and constructive participant of the World Trade Organization. Fox's administration promoted the establishment of a Free Trade Area of the Americas; Puebla served as temporary headquarters for the negotiations, and several other cities are now candidates for its permanent headquarters if the agreement is reached and implemented.

Mexico has signed 12 free trade agreements with 44 countries:

 
Countries with which Mexico has signed an FTA
  • Free Trade Agreement with Chile (1998);
  • Free Trade Agreement with the European Union (2000);
  • Free Trade Agreement with Israel (2000);
  • Northern Triangle Free Trade Agreement (2000), with Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras; superseded by the 2011 integrated Free Trade Agreement with the Central American countries;
  • Free Trade Agreement with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), integrated by Iceland, Norway, Liechtenstein and Switzerland (2001);
  • Free Trade Agreement with Uruguay (2003);
  • Free Trade Agreement with Japan (2004);
  • Free Trade Agreement with Peru (2011);
  • The integrated Free Trade Agreement with Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua (2011);
  • Free Trade Agreement with Panama (2014); and
  • The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) (2018).

Mexico has shown interest in becoming an associate member of Mercosur.[234] The Mexican government has also started negotiations with South Korea, Singapore and Peru,[235] and also wishes to start negotiations with Australia for a trade agreement between the two countries.

North American Trade Agreement and the USMCA Agreement Edit

 
The NAFTA emblem

The 1994 North American Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is by far the most important Trade Agreement Mexico has signed both in the magnitude of reciprocal trade with its partners as well as in its scope. Unlike the rest of the Free Trade Agreements that Mexico has signed, NAFTA is more comprehensive in its scope and was complemented by the North American Agreement for Environmental Cooperation (NAAEC) and the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC). An updating of the 1994 NAFTA, the U.S., Mexico, Canada (USMCA) is pending in early 2020, awaiting the ratification by Canada; the U.S. and Mexico have ratified it.

The NAAEC agreement was a response to environmentalists' concerns that companies would relocate to Mexico or the United States would lower its standards if the three countries did not achieve a unanimous regulation on the environment. The NAAEC, in an aim to be more than a set of environmental regulations, established the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation (NACEC), a mechanism for addressing trade and environmental issues, the North American Development Bank (NADBank) for assisting and financing investments in pollution reduction and the Border Environmental Cooperation Commission (BECC). The NADBank and the BECC have provided economic benefits to Mexico by financing 36 projects, mostly in the water sector. By complementing NAFTA with the NAAEC, it has been labeled the "greenest" trade agreement.[236]

The NAALC supplement to NAFTA aimed to create a foundation for cooperation among the three members for the resolution of labor problems, as well as to promote greater cooperation among trade unions and social organizations in all three countries, in order to fight for the improvement of labor conditions. Though most economists agree that it is difficult to assess the direct impact of the NAALC, it is agreed that there has been a convergence of labor standards in North America. Given its limitations, however, NAALC has not produced (and in fact was not intended to achieve) convergence in employment, productivity and salary trend in North America.[237]

The agreement fell short in liberalizing movement of people across the three countries. In a limited way, however, immigration of skilled Mexican and Canadian workers to the United States was permitted under the TN status. NAFTA allows for a wide list of professions, most of which require at least a bachelor's degree, for which a Mexican or a Canadian citizen can request TN status and temporarily immigrate to the United States. Unlike the visas available to other countries, TN status requires no sponsorship, but simply a job offer letter.

 
Outgoing Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, U.S. President Donald Trump, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sign the agreement during the G20 summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on November 30, 2018.

The overall benefits of NAFTA have been quantified by several economists, whose findings have been reported in several publications like the World Bank's Lessons from NAFTA for Latin America and the Caribbean,[237] NAFTA's Impact on North America,[238] and NAFTA revisited by the Institute for International Economics.[49] They assess that NAFTA has been positive for Mexico, whose poverty rates have fallen, and real income salaries have risen even after accounting for the 1994–1995 economic crisis. Nonetheless, they also state that it has not been enough, or fast enough, to produce an economic convergence nor to reduce the poverty rates substantially or to promote higher rates of growth. Beside this the textile industry gain hype with this agreement and the textile industry in Mexico gained open access to the American market, promoting exports to the United States. The value of Mexican cotton and apparel exports to the U.S. grew from $3 billion in 1995 to $8.4 billion in 2002, a record high of $9.4 billion in 2000. At the same time, the share of Mexico's cotton textile market the U.S. has increased from 8 percent in 1995 to 13 percent in 2002.[citation needed] Some have suggested that in order to fully benefit from the agreement Mexico should invest in education and promote innovation as well as in infrastructure and agriculture.[237]

Contrary to popular belief, the maquiladora program existed far before NAFTA, dating to 1965. A maquiladora manufacturer operates by importing raw materials into Mexico either tariff free (NAFTA) or at a reduced rate on a temporary basis (18 months) and then using Mexico's relatively less expensive labor costs to produce finished goods for export. Prior to NAFTA maquiladora companies importing raw materials from anywhere in the world were given preferential tariff rates by the Mexican government so long as the finished good was for export. The US, prior to NAFTA, allowed Maquiladora manufactured goods to be imported into the US with the tariff rate only being applied to the value of non US raw materials used to produce the good, thus reducing the tariff relative to other countries. NAFTA has eliminated all tariffs on goods between the two countries, but for the maquiladora industry significantly increased the tariff rates for goods sourced outside of NAFTA.[citation needed]

Given the overall size of trade between Mexico and the United States, there are remarkably few trade disputes, involving relatively small dollar amounts. These disputes are generally settled in WTO or NAFTA panels or through negotiations between the two countries. The most significant areas of friction involve trucking, sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, and a number of other agricultural products.[90]

Mexican trade facilitation and competitiveness Edit

 
Polanco has one of the most expensive streets in the Americas Avenida Presidente Masaryk. The buildings to the left of the Scotiabank tower are not in Polanco, they are in Lomas de Chapultepec.

A 2008 research brief published by the World Bank[239] as part of its suggested that Mexico had the potential to substantially increase trade flows and economic growth through trade facilitation reform. The study examined the potential impacts of trade facilitation reforms in four areas: port efficiency, customs administration, information technology, and regulatory environment (including standards).

The study projected overall increments from domestic reforms to be on the order of $31.8 billion, equivalent to 22.4 percent of total Mexican manufacturing exports for 2000–03. On the imports side, the corresponding figures are $17.1 billion and 11.2 percent, respectively. Increases in exports, including textiles, would result primarily from improvements in port efficiency and the regulatory environment. Exports of transport equipment would be expected to increase by the greatest increment from improvements in port efficiency, whereas exports of food and machinery would largely be the result of improvements in the regulatory environment. On the imports side, Mexican improvements in port efficiency would appear to be the most important factor, although for imports of transport equipment, improvements in service sector infrastructure would also be of relative importance.[239]

Major trade partners Edit

The following table shows the largest trading partners for Mexico in 2021 by total trade value in billions of USD.[240]

Country Trade Value Import Value Export Value Balance
  United States 609.67 221.31 388.36 167.05
  China 120.16 101.02 19.14 -81.88
  Canada 37.93 11.22 26.71 15.49
  South Korea 26.85 18.96 7.89 -11.08
  Germany 26.50 17.21 9.29 -7.93
  Japan 22.85 17.08 5.78 -11.30
  Brazil 13.49 8.72 4.77 -3.95
  Malaysia 12.95 12.39 0.556 -11.83
  Spain 10.10 4.58 5.52 0.935
  India 10.06 5.92 4.14 -1.78

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "World Economic Outlook Database, April 2019". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
  2. ^ "World Bank Country and Lending Groups". datahelpdesk.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "The World Factbook". CIA.gov. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d "World Economic Outlook Database, April 2023". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "The outlook is uncertain again amid financial sector turmoil, high inflation, ongoing effects of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and three years of COVID". International Monetary Fund. April 11, 2023.
  6. ^ "Mexico Historical Inflation Rates - 1969 to 2022".
  7. ^ a b "POBREZA EN MÉXICO" (PDF). coneval.org.mx. National Council for the Evaluation of Social Development Policy (CONEVAL). Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  8. ^ "Poverty headcount ratio at $5.50 a day (2011 PPP) (% of population) - Mexico". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  9. ^ "EL INEGI DA A CONOCER LOS RESULTADOS DE LA ENCUESTA NACIONAL DE INGRESOS Y GASTOS DE LOS HOGARES (ENIGH) 2020" (PDF). www.inegi.org.mx (in Spanish). National Institute of Statistics and Geography. July 28, 2021. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  10. ^ "Human Development Index (HDI)". hdr.undp.org. HDRO (Human Development Report Office) United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  11. ^ "Inequality-adjusted HDI (IHDI)". hdr.undp.org. UNDP. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  12. ^ "Labor force, total - Mexico". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  13. ^
economy, mexico, economy, mexico, developing, mixed, market, economy, 14th, largest, world, nominal, terms, 13th, largest, purchasing, power, parity, according, international, monetary, fund, since, 1994, crisis, administrations, have, improved, country, macro. The economy of Mexico is a developing mixed market economy 22 It is the 14th largest in the world in nominal GDP terms and the 13th largest by purchasing power parity according to the International Monetary Fund 23 Since the 1994 crisis administrations have improved the country s macroeconomic fundamentals Mexico was not significantly influenced by the 2002 South American crisis and maintained positive although low rates of growth after a brief period of stagnation in 2001 However Mexico was one of the Latin American nations most affected by the 2008 recession with its gross domestic product contracting by more than 6 in that year Economy of MexicoMexico City the financial center of MexicoCurrencyMexican peso MXN Mex Fiscal yearcalendar yearTrade organizationsG20 APEC CPTPP USMCA OECD and WTOCountry groupDeveloping Emerging 1 Upper middle income economy 2 Newly industrialized countryStatisticsPopulation128 649 565 2020 est 3 GDP 1 663 trillion nominal 2023 4 3 125 trillion PPP 2023 4 GDP rank14th nominal 2023 13th PPP 2023 GDP growth3 1 2022 5 1 8 2023f 5 1 6 2024f 5 GDP per capita 12 673 nominal 2023 4 23 819 PPP 2023 4 GDP per capita rank69th nominal 2023 71st PPP 2023 GDP by sectoragriculture 3 6 industry 31 9 services 64 5 2017 est 3 Inflation CPI 8 7 August 2022 6 Population below poverty line41 9 in poverty 2018 7 7 4 in extreme poverty 2018 7 23 0 on less than 5 50 day 2018 8 Gini coefficient41 5 medium 2020 9 Human Development Index0 758 high 2021 10 86th 0 621 medium IHDI 2021 11 Labor force57 558 589 2019 12 57 6 employment rate 2018 13 Labor force by occupationagriculture 13 4 industry 24 1 services 61 9 2011 3 Unemployment5 3 2020 est 14 3 5 September 2019 15 Average gross salaryMex 2 821 732 monthly 16 2022 Main industriesFood processingbeersoft drinksautocomponentsautomobileselectronicschemicalsironsteelpetroleumminingtextilesclothingmotor vehiclesconsumer durablestourismEase of doing business rank60th easy 2020 17 ExternalExports 491 6 billion 2019 est 3 Export goodsmanufactured goods electronics vehicles and auto parts oil and oil products silver plastics fruits vegetables coffee cottonMain export partners United States 80 3 Canada 2 7 China 1 5 Spain 1 5 Brazil 1 2 2019 est 18 Imports 467 2 billion 2019 est 3 Import goodsmetalworking machines steel mill products agricultural machinery electrical equipment automobile parts for assembly and repair aircraft aircraft parts plastics natural gas and oil productsMain import partners United States 49 0 China 16 6 Japan 4 4 Germany 3 4 South Korea 3 4 2019 est 18 FDI stock 554 3 billion 31 December 2017 est 3 Abroad 243 8 billion 31 December 2017 est 3 Current account 19 35 billion 2017 est 3 Gross external debt 445 8 billion 31 December 2017 est 3 Public financesGovernment debt54 3 of GDP 2017 est 3 Budget balance 1 1 of GDP 2017 est 3 Revenues261 4 billion 2017 est 3 Expenses273 8 billion 2017 est 3 Economic aid 189 4 million 2008 Credit ratingStandard amp Poor s 19 20 A Domestic BBB Foreign A T amp C Assessment Outlook Negative Moody s 20 Baa1 Outlook Negative Fitch 20 BBB Outlook StableForeign reserves 196 917 billion September 2022 21 Main data source CIA World Fact Book All values unless otherwise stated are in US dollars The Mexican economy has had unprecedented macroeconomic stability which has reduced inflation and interest rates to record lows In spite of this significant gaps persist between the urban and the rural population the northern and southern states and the rich and the poor 24 Some of the unresolved issues include the upgrade of infrastructure the modernization of the tax system and labor laws and the reduction of income inequality Tax revenues altogether 19 6 percent of GDP in 2013 were the lowest among the then 34 OECD countries 25 As of 2022 the OECD 38 has members 26 The economy contains rapidly developing modern industrial and service sectors with increasing private ownership Recent administrations have expanded competition in ports railroads telecommunications electricity generation natural gas distribution and airports with the aim of upgrading infrastructure As an export oriented economy more than 90 of Mexican trade is under free trade agreements FTAs with more than 40 countries including the European Union Japan Israel and much of Central and South America The most influential FTA is the United States Mexico Canada Agreement USMCA which came into effect in 2020 and was signed in 2018 by the governments of the United States Canada and Mexico In 2006 trade with Mexico s two northern partners accounted for almost 90 of its exports and 55 of its imports 27 Recently Congress approved important tax pension and judicial reforms clarification needed Reform to the oil industry is currently being debated In 2016 Mexico had 16 companies in the Forbes Global 2000 list of the world s largest companies 28 Mexico s labor force consisted of 52 8 million people as of 2015 29 The OECD and WTO both rank Mexican workers as the hardest working in the world in terms of the number of hours worked yearly Pay per hours worked remains low 30 31 32 33 34 Contents 1 History 2 Macroeconomic financial and welfare indicators 2 1 Main indicators 2 2 Poverty 2 2 1 Income inequality 2 3 Remittances 2 4 Regional economies 3 Economic sectors 3 1 Agriculture 3 1 1 History 3 1 2 Crops 3 1 2 1 Potatoes 3 1 2 2 Avocado 3 1 2 3 Sugar cane 3 2 Mining 4 Industry 4 1 Electronics 4 1 1 Televisions 4 1 2 Computers 4 1 3 OEM and ODM manufacturing 4 1 4 Engineering and design 4 1 5 Joint production 4 1 6 Domestic industry 4 2 Oil 4 3 Energy 4 4 Manufacturing 4 4 1 Automobiles 5 Retailing 6 Services 6 1 Tourism 6 2 Finance 6 2 1 Banking system 6 2 2 Securities market 7 Government 7 1 Monetary and financial system and regulation 7 1 1 Banco de Mexico 7 1 2 Currency policy 7 1 3 Monetary system 7 2 Business regulation 7 2 1 Corruption 8 Trade 8 1 Free trade agreements 8 1 1 North American Trade Agreement and the USMCA Agreement 8 2 Mexican trade facilitation and competitiveness 8 3 Major trade partners 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditMain article Economic history of Mexico Porfirio Diaz 1876 1911 in whose presidency rapid industrialization took place in foreign capital The Porfiriato brought unprecedented economic growth during the last quarter of the nineteenth century 35 This growth was accompanied by foreign investment and European immigration the development of railroad networks and the exploitation of the country s natural resources Annual economic growth between 1876 and 1910 averaged 3 3 36 Large scale ownership made considerable progress while foreign land companies accumulated millions of hectares At the end of Porfirio Diaz s dictatorship 97 of arable land belonged to 1 of the population and 95 of peasants were landless becoming farmworkers in huge haciendas or forming an impoverished urban proletariat whose revolts were crushed one by one 37 Political repression and fraud as well as huge income inequalities exacerbated by the land distribution system based on latifundios in which large haciendas were owned by a few but worked by millions of impoverished peasants living in precarious conditions led to the Mexican Revolution 1910 1920 an armed conflict that drastically transformed Mexico s political social cultural and economic structure during the twentieth century The war itself left a harsh toll on the economy and population which decreased over the 11 year period between 1910 and 1921 38 The reconstruction of the country was to take place in the following decades The period from 1940 to 1970 has been dubbed by economic historians as the Mexican Miracle a period of economic growth that followed the end of the Mexican Revolution and the resumption of capital accumulation during peacetime During this period Mexico adopted an import substitution industrialization ISI model which protected and promoted the development of national industries Mexico experienced an economic boom through which industries rapidly expanded their production 39 Important changes in the economic structure included free land distribution to peasants under the concept of ejido the nationalization of the oil and railroad companies the introduction of social rights into the 1917 Constitution the birth of large and influential labor unions and the upgrading of infrastructure While population doubled from 1940 to 1970 GDP increased sixfold during the same period 40 President Jose Lopez Portillo 1976 1982 during whose administration the economy soared with the discovery of oil and then crashed when the price dropped Growth while under the ISI model had reached its peak in the late 1960s During the 1970s the presidential administrations of Luis Echeverria 1970 76 and Jose Lopez Portillo 1976 82 tried to include social development in their policies an effort that entailed increased public spending With the discovery of vast oil fields during a period of oil price increases and low international interest rates the government borrowed from international capital markets to invest in the state owned oil company Pemex which in turn seemed to provide a long run income source to promote social welfare This produced a remarkable growth in public expenditure 39 and president Lopez Portillo announced that the time had come to manage prosperity 41 as Mexico multiplied its oil production to become the world s fourth largest exporter 42 Average annual GDP growth by period1900 1929 3 4 1929 1945 4 2 1945 1972 6 5 1972 1981 5 5 1981 1995 1 5 1983 Debt Crisis 4 2 1995 Peso Crisis 6 2 1995 2000 5 1 2001 US Recession 0 2 2009 Great Recession 6 5 Sources 43 39 44 45 In the period of 1981 1982 the international panorama changed abruptly oil prices plunged and interest rates rose In 1982 Lopez Portillo just before ending his administration suspended payments of foreign debt devalued the peso and nationalized the banking system along with many other industries that were severely affected by the crisis among them the steel industry While import substitution had contributed to Mexican industrialization by the 1980s protracted protection of Mexican companies had led to an uncompetitive industrial sector with low productivity gains 39 President Miguel de la Madrid 1982 88 was the first of a series of presidents that implemented neoliberal policies After the crisis of 1982 lenders were unwilling to return to Mexico and in order to keep the current account in balance the government resorted to currency devaluations which sparked unprecedented inflation 39 reaching an annual record of 139 7 in 1987 46 One of the first steps toward trade liberalization was Mexico s signature of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT in 1986 under President de la Madrid During the administration of Carlos Salinas de Gortari 1988 94 many state owned companies were privatized The telephone company Telmex a government monopoly became a private monopoly sold to Carlos Slim 47 Also not opened to private investors were the government oil company Pemex or the energy sector Furthermore the banking system that had been nationalized in the waning hours of the Lopez Portillo administration in 1982 were privatized but with the exclusion of foreign banks 47 Salinas pushed for Mexico s inclusion in the North American Free Trade Agreement expanding it from a U S Canada agreement The expanded NAFTA was signed in 1992 after the signature of two additional supplements on environments and labor standards it came into effect on January 1 1994 48 Salinas also introduced strict price controls and negotiated smaller minimum wage increments with the labor union movement under the aging Fidel Velazquez with the aim of curbing inflation 47 While his strategy was successful in reducing inflation growth averaged only 2 8 percent a year 39 By fixing the exchange rate the peso became rapidly overvalued while consumer spending increased causing the current account deficit to reach 7 of GDP in 1994 The deficit was financed through tesobonos a type of public debt instrument that reassured payment in dollars 49 The January 1994 Chiapas uprising and the assassinations of the ruling party s presidential candidate in March 1994 Luis Donaldo Colosio and the Secretary General of the party and brother of the Assistant Attorney General Jose Francisco Ruiz Massieu in 1994 reduced investor confidence Public debt holders rapidly sold their tesobonos depleting the Central Bank s reserves 49 while portfolio investments which had made up 90 of total investment flows left the country as fast as they had come in 39 This unsustainable situation eventually forced the entrant Zedillo administration to adopt a floating exchange rate The peso sharply devalued and the country entered into an economic crisis in December 1994 50 The boom in exports as well as an international rescue package crafted by U S president Bill Clinton 1993 2001 helped cushion the crisis In less than 18 months the economy was growing again and annual rate growth averaged 5 1 percent between 1995 and 2000 39 More critical interpretations argue that the crisis and subsequent public bailout preserved renewed and intensified the structurally unequal social relations of power and class characteristic of finance led neoliberal capitalism in forms institutionally specific to Mexican society with GDP growth spurred by one time privatizations 50 Per capita economic growth in the 2000s was low 38 President Ernesto Zedillo 1994 2000 and President Vicente Fox 2000 06 of the National Action Party Mexico the first opposition party candidate to win a presidential election since the founding of the precursor of the Institutional Revolutionary Party in 1929 continued with trade liberalization During Fox s administrations several FTAs were signed with Latin American and European countries Japan and Israel and both strove to maintain macroeconomic stability Thus Mexico became one of the most open countries in the world to trade and the economic base shifted accordingly Total trade with the United States and Canada tripled and total exports and imports almost quadrupled between 1991 and 2003 51 The nature of foreign investment also changed with a greater share of foreign direct investment FDI over portfolio investment Macroeconomic financial and welfare indicators Edit Mexico inflation rate 1970 2022 Mexico bonds 30 year 10 year 1 year 3 monthMain indicators Edit A portion of the port of VeracruzGDP per capita PPP US 16 900 2012 15 GNI per capita PPP US 16 500 2012 15 Inflation CPI 3 7 February 2021 Gini index 43 4 World Bank 2016 Unemployment 4 5 January 2021 HDI 0 779 2020 Labor force 78 4 million 2011 Pop in poverty 13 8 Mexico s Gross Domestic Product GDP in purchasing power parity PPP was estimated at US 2 143 499 billion in 2014 and 1 261 642 billion in nominal exchange rates 43 It is the leader of the MINT group Its standard of living as measured in GDP in PPP per capita was US 16 900 The World Bank reported in 2009 that Mexico s Gross National Income in market exchange rates was the second highest in Latin America after Brazil at US 1 830 392 billion 52 which lead to the highest income per capita in the region at 14 400 53 As such Mexico established itself as an upper middle income country After the slowdown of 2001 the country has recovered and has grown 4 2 3 0 and 4 8 percent in 2004 2005 and 2006 54 even though it is considered to be well below Mexico s potential growth 49 The Mexican peso is the currency ISO 4217 MXN symbol One peso is divided into 100 centavos cents MXN replaced MXP in 1993 at a rate of 1000 MXP per 1 MXN The exchanged rate remained stable between 1998 and 2006 oscillating between 10 20 and 11 3 50 MXN per US The Mexican peso parity decreased under president Enrique Pena Nieto lost in a single year 19 87 of its value Archived March 29 2017 at the Wayback Machine reaching an exchange rate of 20 37 per dollar in 2017 Interest rates in 2007 were situated at around 7 percent 55 having reached a historic low in 2002 below 5 percent Inflation rates are also at historic lows the inflation rate in Mexico in 2006 was 4 1 percent and 3 percent by the end of 2007 Compared against the US Dollar Mexican Peso has devalued over 7 500 since 1910 citation needed Unemployment rates are the lowest of all OECD member countries at 3 2 percent However underemployment is estimated at 25 percent 27 Mexico s Human Development Index was reported at 0 829 in 2008 56 comprising a life expectancy index of 0 84 an education index of 0 86 and a GDP index of 0 77 ranking 52 in the world within the group of high development DevelopmentThe following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980 2021 with IMF staff stimtates in 2022 2027 Inflation below 5 is in green 57 Year GDP in Bil US PPP GDP per capita in US PPP GDP in Bil US nominal GDP per capita in US nominal GDP growth real Inflation rate in Percent Unemployment in Percent Government debt in of GDP 1980 404 3 5 984 8 228 6 3 383 7 9 5 26 5 1 2 n a1981 480 3 6 934 4 293 6 4 238 8 8 5 28 0 0 9 n a1982 507 4 7 148 6 213 1 3 002 2 0 5 59 1 4 2 n a1983 508 8 7 001 9 173 7 2 390 4 3 5 101 8 6 1 n a1984 545 2 7 331 8 204 9 2 755 0 3 4 65 4 5 6 n a1985 574 7 7 559 2 217 4 2 859 2 2 2 57 8 4 4 n a1986 568 3 7 314 4 150 5 1 937 4 3 1 86 4 4 3 n a1987 592 3 7 465 9 165 1 2 080 4 1 7 132 0 3 9 n a1988 621 1 7 670 6 201 9 2 493 8 1 3 113 5 3 5 n a1989 671 9 8 137 0 246 1 2 979 9 4 1 19 9 2 9 n a1990 733 2 8 710 7 290 4 3 450 2 5 2 26 7 2 7 n a1991 789 9 9 212 0 348 1 4 060 0 4 2 22 6 2 7 n a1992 836 5 9 580 9 403 7 4 624 0 3 5 15 5 2 8 n a1993 879 8 9 902 0 500 8 5 636 4 2 7 9 8 3 4 n a1994 943 0 10 435 6 527 8 5 841 0 4 9 7 0 3 7 n a1995 902 2 9 823 1 360 1 3 920 7 6 3 35 1 6 2 n a1996 980 9 10 514 4 411 0 4 405 1 6 8 34 4 5 5 44 7 1997 1 066 2 11 256 0 500 4 5 283 1 6 8 20 6 3 7 40 9 1998 1 133 9 11 796 6 526 5 5 477 9 5 2 15 9 3 2 42 0 1999 1 181 5 12 120 0 600 2 6 157 2 2 8 16 6 2 5 43 8 2000 1 268 0 12 835 7 707 9 7 166 1 4 9 9 5 2 2 40 3 2001 1 291 3 12 899 4 756 7 7 559 0 0 4 6 4 2 8 39 3 2002 1 310 9 12 916 1 772 1 7 607 4 0 0 5 0 3 0 41 9 2003 1 356 1 13 180 1 729 3 7 088 5 1 4 4 6 3 4 44 2 2004 1 447 1 13 878 1 782 2 7 501 9 3 9 4 7 3 9 40 8 2005 1 526 9 14 450 1 877 5 8 304 0 2 3 4 0 3 5 38 5 2006 1 644 8 15 349 7 975 4 9 102 5 4 5 3 6 3 5 37 4 2007 1 728 0 15 890 1 1 052 7 9 680 4 2 3 4 0 3 6 37 2 2008 1 781 2 16 133 6 1 110 0 10 053 7 1 1 5 1 3 9 42 5 2009 1 697 9 15 146 9 900 0 8 029 3 5 3 5 3 5 3 43 7 2010 1 806 3 15 879 3 1 057 8 9 299 5 5 1 4 2 5 3 42 0 2011 1 911 3 16 567 2 1 180 5 10 232 4 3 7 3 4 5 2 42 9 2012 2 012 8 17 212 6 1 201 1 10 271 4 3 6 4 1 4 9 42 7 2013 2 064 5 17 428 6 1 274 4 10 759 0 1 4 3 8 4 9 45 9 2014 2 173 2 18 119 8 1 315 4 10 967 1 2 9 4 0 4 8 48 9 2015 2 230 6 18 382 2 1 171 9 9 657 1 3 3 2 7 4 3 52 8 2016 2 383 4 19 422 1 1 078 5 8 788 6 2 6 2 8 3 9 56 7 2017 2 472 6 19 933 5 1 158 9 9 342 9 2 1 6 0 3 4 54 0 2018 2 587 2 20 643 6 1 222 4 9 753 7 2 2 4 9 3 3 53 6 2019 2 628 3 20 764 0 1 269 0 10 025 5 0 2 3 6 3 5 53 3 2020 2 445 6 19 137 4 1 089 8 8 528 1 8 1 3 4 4 4 60 1 2021 2 669 1 20 694 8 1 297 7 10 061 5 4 8 5 7 4 1 57 6 2022 2 919 9 22 440 1 1 424 5 10 948 0 2 1 8 0 3 4 56 8 2023 3 058 7 23 307 8 1 476 4 11 250 5 1 2 6 3 3 7 58 7 2024 3 178 5 24 023 7 1 527 1 11 541 8 1 8 3 9 3 7 59 0 2025 3 306 9 24 798 2 1 586 4 11 896 6 2 1 3 3 3 8 59 3 2026 3 441 0 25 609 4 1 650 4 12 283 1 2 1 3 1 3 8 59 6 2027 3 580 7 26 449 1 1 718 6 12 694 3 2 1 3 0 3 8 59 9 Poverty Edit Main article Poverty in Mexico Poverty headcount ratio at 5 50 a day 2011 PPP of population Based on World Bank data ranging from 1998 to 2018 Poverty in Mexico is measured under parameters such as nutrition clean water shelter education health care social security quality and basic services in the household income and social cohesion as defined by social development laws in the country 58 It is divided in two categories Moderate poverty and Extreme poverty While less than 2 of Mexico s population lives below the international poverty line set by the World Bank as of 2013 Mexico s government estimates that 33 of Mexico s population lives in moderate poverty and 9 lives in extreme poverty 59 which leads to 42 of Mexico s total population living below the national poverty line 60 The gap might be explained by the government s adopting the multidimensional poverty method as a way to measure poverty so a person who has an income higher than the international poverty line or well being income line set by the Mexican government might fall in the moderate poverty category if he or she has one or more deficiencies related to social rights such as education did not complete studies nutrition malnutrition or obesity or living standards including elemental such as water or electricity and secondary domestic assets such as refrigerators Extreme poverty is defined by the Mexican government as persons who have deficiencies in both social rights and an income lower than the well being income line 61 Additional figures from SEDESOL Mexico s social development agency estimates that 6 7 4 million people live in extreme poverty and suffer from food insecurity 62 Recently extensive changes in government economic policy 63 and attempts at reducing government interference through privatization of several sectors 64 for better 65 or worse 66 allowed Mexico to remain the biggest economy in Latin America 67 dubious discuss until 2005 when it became the second largest 68 and a so called trillion dollar club member 69 Despite these changes Mexico continues to suffer great social inequality and lack of opportunities 70 The Pena Nieto s administration made an attempt at reducing poverty in the country to provide more opportunities to its citizens such as jobs 71 education and the installation of universal healthcare 72 73 Income inequality Edit The GDP per capita of Mexican States in USD 2012 A single person in Mexico Carlos Slim 74 has a net worth equal to six percent of GDP Additionally only ten percent of Mexicans represent 25 of Mexican GDP A smaller group 3 5 represent 12 5 of Mexican GDP 75 According to the OECD Mexico is the country with the second highest degree of economic disparity between the extremely poor and extremely rich after Chile although this gap has been diminishing over the last decade The bottom ten percent on the income rung disposes of 1 36 of the country s resources whereas the upper 10 dispose of almost 36 OECD also notes that Mexico s budgeted expenses for poverty alleviation and social development is only about a third of the OECD average both in absolute and relative numbers 76 According to the World Bank in 2004 17 6 of Mexico s population lived in extreme poverty while 21 lived in moderated poverty 77 Remittances Edit Mexico was the fourth largest receiver of remittances in the world in 2017 Remittances or contributions sent by Mexicans living abroad mostly in the United States to their families at home in Mexico comprised 28 5 billion in 2017 78 In 2015 remittances overtook oil to become the single largest foreign source of income for Mexico larger than any other sector 79 The growth of remittances have more than doubled since 1997 80 Recorded remittance transactions exceeded 41 million in 2003 of which 86 percent were made by electronic transfer 81 The Mexican government cognizant of the needs of migrant workers began issuing an upgraded version of the Matricula Consular de Alta Seguridad MACS High Security Consular Identification an identity document issued at Mexican consulates abroad This document is now accepted as a valid identity card in 32 US states as well as thousands of police agencies hundreds of cities and counties as well as banking institutions 81 The main states receiving remittances in 2014 were Michoacan Guanajuato Jalisco the State of Mexico and Puebla which jointly captured 45 of total remittances in that year 82 Several state governments with the support of the federal government have implemented programs to use part of the remittances to finance public works This program called Dos por Uno Two for every one is designed in a way that for each peso contributed by migrants from their remittances the state and the federal governments will invest two pesos in building infrastructure at their home communities 83 Regional economies Edit Further information List of Mexican states by GDP and List of Mexican states by GDP per capita Mexican States by Human Development Index 2015 Regional disparities and income inequality are a feature of the Mexican economy While all constituent states of the federation have a Human Development Index HDI higher than 0 70 medium to high development the northern and central states have higher levels of HDI than the southern states Nuevo Leon Jalisco and the Federal District have HDI levels similar to European countries whereas that of Oaxaca and Chiapas is similar to that of China or Vietnam 84 At the municipal level economic disparities are even greater Benito Juarez borough in Mexico City has an HDI similar to that of Germany or New Zealand whereas Metlatonoc in Guerrero would have an HDI similar to that of Malawi The majority of the federal entities in the north have a high development higher than 0 80 as well as the entities Colima Jalisco Aguascalientes the Federal District Queretaro and the southeastern states of Quintana Roo and Campeche The less developed states with medium development in terms of HDI higher than 0 70 are located along the southern Pacific coast In terms of share of the GDP by economic sector in 2004 the largest contributors in agriculture are Jalisco 9 7 Sinaloa 7 7 and Veracruz 7 6 the greatest contributors in industrial production are the Federal District 15 8 State of Mexico 11 8 and Nuevo Leon 7 9 the greatest contributors in the service sector are also the Federal District 25 3 State of Mexico 8 9 and Nuevo Leon 7 5 85 Since the 1980s the economy has slowly become less centralized the annual rate of GDP growth of the Federal District from 2003 to 2004 was the smallest of all federal entities at 0 2 with drastic drops in the agriculture and industrial sectors Nonetheless it still accounts for 21 8 of the nation s GDP The states with the highest GDP growth rates are Quintana Roo 9 0 Baja California 8 9 and San Luis Potosi 8 2 86 In 2000 the federal entities with the highest GDP per capita in Mexico were the Federal District US 26 320 Campeche US 18 900 and Nuevo Leon US 30 250 the states with the lowest GDP per capita were Chiapas US 3 302 Oaxaca US 4 100 and Guerrero US 6 800 87 Economic sectors Edit Hacienda of San Antonio Coapa by Jose Maria Velasco Gomez Gross Domestic Product GDP in purchasing power parity PPP in 2022 was estimated at US 2 89 trillion and GDP per capita in PPP at US 22 216 23 The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 70 5 followed by the industrial sector at 25 7 2006 est Agriculture represents only 3 9 of GDP 2006 est Mexican labor force is estimated at 38 million of which 18 is occupied in agriculture 24 in the industry sector and 58 in the service sector 2003 est Mexico s largest source of foreign income is remittances 88 Agriculture Edit Further information Agriculture in Mexico Agriculture as a percentage of total GDP has been steadily declining and now resembles that of developed nations in that it plays a smaller role in the economy In 2006 agriculture accounted for 3 9 of GDP 27 down from 7 in 1990 89 and 25 in 1970 90 Given the historic structure of ejidos it employs a considerably high percentage of the work force 18 in 2003 27 mostly of which grows basic crops for subsistence compared to 2 5 in developed nations in which production is highly mechanized History Edit Food and agriculture Farmers in PueblaProduct Quantity Tm World Rank1Avocados 1 040 390 1Onions and chayote 1 130 660 1Limes and lemons 1 824 890 1Sunflower seed 212 765 1Dry fruits 95 150 2Papaya 955 694 2Chillies and peppers 1 853 610 2Whole beans 93 000 3Oranges 3 969 810 3Anise badian fennel 32 500 3Chicken meat 2 245 000 3Asparagus 67 247 4Mangoes 1 503 010 4Corn 20 000 000 41Source FAO 91 After the Mexican Revolution Mexico began an agrarian reform based on the 27th article of the Mexican Constitution than included transfer of land and or free land distribution to peasants and small farmers under the concept of the ejido 92 This program was further extended during President Cardenas administration during the 1930s 93 and continued into the 1960s at varying rates 94 The cooperative agrarian reform which guaranteed small farmers a means of subsistence livelihood also caused land fragmentation and lack of capital investment since commonly held land could not be used as collateral In an effort to raise rural productivity and living standards this constitutional article was amended in 1992 to allow for the transfer of property rights of the communal lands to farmers cultivating it 95 With the ability to rent or sell it a way was open for the creation of larger farms and the advantages of economies of scale Large mechanized farms are now operating in some northwestern states mainly in Sinaloa However privatization of ejidos continues to be very slow in the central and southern states where the great majority of peasants produce only for subsistence citation needed Until the 1980s the government encouraged the production of basic crops mainly corn and beans by maintaining support prices and controlling imports through the National Company for Popular Subsistence CONASUPO With trade liberalization however CONASUPO was gradually dismantled and two new mechanisms were implemented Alianza and Procampo Alianza provides income payments and incentives for mechanization and advanced irrigation systems Procampo is an income transfer subsidy to farmers This support program provides 3 5 million farmers who produce basic commodities mostly corn and which represent 64 of all farmers with a fixed income transfer payment per unit of area of cropland This subsidy increased substantially during president Fox s administration mainly to white corn producers in order to reduce imports from the United States This program has been successful and in 2004 roughly only 15 of corn imports are white corn the one used for human consumption and the type that is mostly grown in Mexico as opposed to 85 of yellow and crashed corn the one use for feeding livestock and which is barely produced in Mexico 96 Crops Edit In spite of corn as being a staple in the Mexican diet Mexico s comparative advantage in agriculture is not in corn but in horticulture tropical fruits and vegetables Negotiators of NAFTA expected that through liberalization and mechanization of agriculture two thirds of Mexican corn producers would naturally shift from corn production to horticultural and other labor intensive crops such as fruits nuts vegetables coffee and sugar cane 97 While horticultural trade has drastically increased due to NAFTA it has not absorbed displaced workers from corn production estimated at 600 000 96 Corn production has remained stable at 20 million metric tons arguably as a result of income support to farmers or a reluctance to abandon a millenarian tradition in Mexico not only have peasants grown corn for millennia corn originated in Mexico Mexico is the seventh largest corn producer in the world 91 Potatoes Edit The area dedicated to potatoes has changed little since 1980 and average yields have almost tripled since 1961 Production reached a record 1 7 million tonnes in 2003 Per capita consumption of potato in Mexico stands at 17 kg a year very low compared to its maize intake of 400 kg 98 On average potato farms in Mexico are larger than those devoted to more basic food crops Potato production in Mexico is mostly for commercial purposes the production for household consumption is very small 99 Avocado Edit Mexico is the world s leading producer of avocados as of 2020 supplying nearly 30 of the global harvest in that year Mexico is by far the world s largest avocado growing country producing several times more than the second largest producer In 2013 the total area dedicated to avocado production was 188 723 hectares 466 340 acres and the harvest was 2 03 million tonnes in 2017 The states that produce the most are Mexico Morelos Nayarit Puebla and Michoacan accounting for 86 of the total citation needed Sugar cane Edit Approximately 160 000 medium sized farmers grow sugar cane in 15 Mexican states currently there are 54 sugar mills around the country that produced 4 96 million tons of sugar in the 2010 crop compared to 5 8 million tons in 2001 100 Mexico s sugar industry is characterized by high production costs and lack of investment Mexico produces more sugar than it consumes 101 Sugar cane is grown on 700 000 farms in Mexico with a yield of 72 metric tons per farm 102 Mining Edit Mexico is the world s leading producer of silver The former Acosta mine now a museum in HidalgoMain article Mining in Mexico In 2019 the country was the world s largest producer of silver 103 9th largest producer of gold 104 the 8th largest producer of copper 105 the world s 5th largest producer of lead 106 the world s 6th largest producer of zinc 107 the world s 5th largest producer of molybdenum 108 the world s 3rd largest producer of mercury 109 the world s 5th largest producer of bismuth 110 the world s 13th largest producer of manganese 111 and the 23rd largest world producer of phosphate 112 It is also the 8th largest world producer of salt 113 In April 2022 the Senate passed a law that nationalizes the lithium mining industry in the country The federal government will have a monopoly on all new lithium mines in the country but existing operations will be allowed to continue in private hands 114 Critics of the move argue that the constitution already does this 114 and that the government lacks the technical capacity to mine the major reserves which are mostly in clay deposits that are difficult to mine The government made a similar failed attempt to nationalize uranium mining in the 1980s 115 Industry EditIndustrial productionMain industries Aircraft automobile industry petrochemicals cement and construction textiles food and beverages mining consumer durables tourismIndustrial growth rate 3 6 2006 Labor force 29 of total labor forceGDP of sector 25 7 of total GDP Grupo BimboThe industrial sector as a whole has benefited from trade liberalization in 2000 it accounted for almost 50 of all export earnings 51 A Cemex plant on the outskirts of Monterrey Among the most important industrial manufacturers in Mexico is the automotive industry whose standards of quality are internationally recognized The automobile sector in Mexico differs from that in other Latin American countries and developing nations in that it does not function as a mere assembly manufacturer The industry produces technologically complex components and engages in some research and development activities an example of that is the new Volkswagen Jetta model with up to 70 of parts designed in Mexico 51 116 The Big Three General Motors Ford and Chrysler have been operating in Mexico since the 1930s while Volkswagen and Nissan built their plants in the 1960s 117 Later Toyota Honda BMW and Mercedes Benz have also participated Given the high requirements of North American components in the industry many European and Asian parts suppliers have also moved to Mexico in Puebla alone 70 industrial part makers cluster around Volkswagen 51 The relatively small domestic car industry is represented by DINA Camiones a manufacturer of trucks busses and military vehicles which through domestic production and purchases of foreign bus manufacturers has become the largest bus manufacturer in the world Vehizero that builds hybrid trucks 118 and the new car companies Mastretta design that builds the Mastretta MXT sports car and Autobuses King that plans to build 10000 microbuses by 2015 119 120 121 nevertheless new car companies are emerging among them CIMEX that has developed a sport utility truck the Conin and it is to be released in September 2010 in Mexico s national auto show 122 And the new electric car maker Grupo Electrico Motorizado 123 Some large industries of Mexico include Cemex the world s largest construction company and the third largest cement producer 124 the alcohol beverage industries including world renowned players like Grupo Modelo conglomerates like FEMSA which apart from being the largest single producer of alcoholic beverages and owning multiple commercial interests such OXXO convenience store chain is also the second largest Coca Cola bottler in the world Gruma the largest producer of corn flour and tortillas in the world and Grupo Bimbo Telmex Televisa among many others In 2005 according to the World Bank high tech industrial production represented 19 6 of total exports 125 Cuauhtemoc Moctezuma Brewery in Monterrey Mexico This company was established in 1889 Today it still operates as a brewery and lodges two museums Maquiladoras manufacturing plants that take in imported raw materials and produce goods for domestic consumption and export on behalf of foreign companies have become the landmark of trade in Mexico This sector has benefited from NAFTA in that real income in the maquiladora sector has increased 15 5 since 1994 though from the non maquiladora sector has grown much faster 49 Contrary to popular belief this should be no surprise since maquiladora s products could enter the US duty free since a 1960s industry agreement Other sectors now benefit from the free trade agreement and the share of exports from non border states has increased in the last 5 years while the share of exports from maquiladora border states has decreased Currently Mexico is focusing in developing an aerospace industry and the assembly of helicopter and regional jet aircraft fuselages is taking place Foreign firms such as MD Helicopters 126 Bell 127 Cessna 128 and Bombardier 129 build helicopter aircraft and regional jets fuselages in Mexico Although the Mexican aircraft industry is mostly foreign as is its car industry Mexican firms have been founded such as Aeromarmi 130 which builds light propeller airplanes and Hydra Technologies which builds Unmanned Aerial Vehicles such as the S4 Ehecatl other important companies are Frisa Aerospace that manufactures jet engine parts for the new Mitsubishi Regional jet and supplies Prat amp whittney and Rolls Royce jet engine manufacturers of casings for jet engines 131 132 133 and Kuo Aerospace that builds parts for aircraft landing gear and Supplies bombardier plant in Queretaro 134 As compared with the United States or countries in Western Europe a larger sector of Mexico s industrial economy is food manufacturing which includes several world class companies but the regional industry is undeveloped There are national brands that have become international and local Mom and Pop producers but little manufacturing in between citation needed Electronics Edit A tablet PC and touch screen computer television made by Mexican MeeboxThe electronics industry of Mexico has grown enormously within the last decade Mexico has the sixth largest electronics industry in the world after China United States Japan South Korea and Taiwan Mexico is the second largest exporter of electronics to the United States where it exported 71 4 billion worth of electronics in 2011 135 The Mexican electronics industry is dominated by the manufacture and OEM design of televisions displays computers mobile phones circuit boards semiconductors electronic appliances communications equipment and LCD modules The Mexican electronics industry grew 20 between 2010 and 2011 up from its constant growth rate of 17 between 2003 and 2009 135 Currently electronics represent 30 of Mexico s exports 135 Televisions Edit The design and manufacture of flat panel plasma LCD and LED televisions is the single largest sector of the Mexican electronics industry representing 25 of Mexico s electronics export revenue 135 In 2009 Mexico surpassed South Korea and China as the largest manufacturer of televisions 136 137 with Sony 138 Toshiba 139 Samsung 140 Sharp through Semex 141 142 Zenith 143 LG 144 Lanix 145 TCL 146 RCA 147 Phillips 148 Elcoteq 149 Tatung 150 Panasonic 151 and Vizio 141 152 manufacturing CRT LCD LED and Plasma televisions in Mexico Due to Mexico s position as the largest manufacturer of television it is known as the television capital of the world 141 in the electronics industry Computers Edit Mexico is the third largest manufacturers of computers in the world with both domestic companies such as Lanix 153 Texa 154 Meebox 155 Spaceit 156 Kyoto 157 and foreign companies such as Dell 158 159 Sony HP 160 Acer 161 Compaq 162 Samsung and Lenovo 163 164 manufacturing various types of computers across the country Most of the computers manufactured in Mexico are from foreign companies Mexico is Latin America s largest producer of electronics and appliances made by domestic companies OEM and ODM manufacturing Edit A Lanix LT10 1 high definition LCD assembled under OEM contract by Lanix for use in a Sharp LCD television Mexico is also home to a large number of OEM and ODM manufactures both foreign and domestic Among them include Foxconn 165 Celestica Sanmina SCI 166 167 Jabil 168 Elcoteq 169 170 Falco 171 Kimball International Compal 172 Benchmark Electronics 173 Plexus Lanix 174 and Flextronics 175 176 These companies assemble finished electronics or design and manufacture electronic components on behalf of larger companies such as Sony or Microsoft using locally sourced components for example the ODM Flextronics manufactures Xbox video games systems in Guadalajara Mexico 177 178 for Microsoft using components such as power systems and printed circuit boards from a local company Falco Electronics which acts as the OEM Engineering and design Edit The success and rapid growth of the Mexican electronics sector is driven primarily by the relatively low cost of manufacturing and design in Mexico its strategic position as a major consumer electronics market coupled with its proximity to both the large North American and South American markets whom Mexico shares free trade agreements with government support in the form of low business taxes simplified access to loans and capital for both foreign multinational and domestic startup tech based firms and a very large pool of highly skilled educated labor across all sectors of the tech industry For example German multinational engineering and electronics conglomerate Siemens has a significant Mexican base which also serves as its business and strategy hub for Central American countries and the Caribbean region 179 The Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education is one of Mexico s most prestigious technology and engineering universities and is ranked one of the leading engineering institutions in Latin America 180 There are almost half a million 451 000 students enrolled in electronics engineering programs 181 with an additional 114 000 electronics engineers entering the Mexican workforce each year 135 and Mexico had over half a million 580 000 certified electronic engineering professionals employed in 2007 137 From the late 1990s the Mexican electronics industry began to shift away from simple line assembly to more advanced work such as research design and the manufacture of advanced electronics systems such as LCD panels semiconductors printed circuit boards microelectronics microprocessors chipsets and heavy electronic industrial equipment and in 2006 the number of certified engineers being graduated annually in Mexico surpassed that of the United States 182 Many Korean Japanese and American appliances sold in the US are actually of Mexican design and origin but sold under the OEM s client names 183 184 In 2008 one out of every four consumer appliances sold in the United States was of Mexican design 185 Joint production Edit While many foreign companies like Phillips Vizio and LG simply install wholly owned factories in Mexico a number of foreign companies have set up semi independent joint venture companies with Mexican businesses to manufacture and design components in Mexico These companies are independently operated from their foreign parent companies and are registered in Mexico These local companies function under Mexican law and retain a sizable portion of the revenue These companies typically function dually as in company OEM development and design facilities and manufacturing centers and usually produce most components needed to manufacture the finished products An example would by Sharp which has formed Semex 186 Semex was founded as a joint venture between Sharp and Mexican investors which acts as an autonomous independent company which Sharp only maintains partial control over The company manufactures whole products such televisions and designs individual components on behalf of Sharp such as LCD modules and in return Semex is granted access to Sharp capital technology research capacity and branding Notable foreign companies which have set up joint venture entities in Mexico include Samsung which formed Samex 187 a local designer and manufacturer of finished televisions white goods and individual electronic components like printed circuit boards LCD panels and semiconductors 188 Toshiba who formed Toshiba de Mexico S A de C V an administratively autonomous subsidiary which produces electronics parts televisions and heavy industrial equipment 189 Some of these subsidiaries have grown to expand into multiple branches effectively becoming autonomous conglomerates within their own parent companies Sony for example started operations in Mexico in 1976 with a group of Mexican investors and founded the joint venture Sony de Mexico 190 which produces LED panels LCD modules automotive electronics appliances and printed circuit boards amongst other products for its Japanese parent company Sony KG Sony de Mexico has research facilities in Monterrey and Mexico City designs many of the Sony products manufactured in Mexico and has now expanded to create its own finance music and entertainment subsidiaries which are Mexican registered and independent of their Japanese parent corporation 191 Domestic industry Edit Lanix W10 Ilium tablet PC Although much of Mexico s electronics industry is driven by foreign companies Mexico also has a sizeable domestic electronics industry and a number of electronics companies including Mabe a major appliance manufacturer and OEM which has been functioning since the nineteen fifties and has expanded into the global market Meebox a designer and manufacturer desktop and tablet computers solar power panels and electronics components Texa which manufactures computers laptops and servers Falco a major international manufacturer of electronic components such as printed circuitboards power systems semiconductors gate drives and which has production facilities in Mexico India and China and Lanix Mexico s largest electronics company which manufactures products such as computers laptops smartphones LED and LCDs flash memory tablets servers hard drives RAM optical disk drives and printed circuitboards and employs over 11 000 people in Mexico and Chile and distributes its products throughout Latin America 192 193 194 Another area being currently developed in Mexico is Robotics Mexico s new Mexone robot has been designed with the idea that in future years develop a commercial application for such advanced robots 195 Oil Edit Further information Petroleum industry in Mexico A Pemex offshore oil platform just off the coast of Ciudad del Carmen Mineral resources are public property by constitution As such the energy sector is administered by the government with varying degrees of private investment Mexico is the fourteenth largest oil producer in the world with 1 710 303 barrels per day 271 916 4 m3 d 196 Pemex the state owned company in charge of administering research exploration and sales of oil is the largest company in Mexico and the second largest in Latin America after Brazil s Petrobras 197 Pemex is heavily taxed of almost 62 per cent of the company s sales a significant source of revenue for the government 39 Without enough money to continue investing in finding new sources or upgrading infrastructure and being protected constitutionally from private and foreign investment some have predicted the company may face institutional collapse 39 While the oil industry is still relevant for the government s budget its importance in GDP and exports has steadily fallen since the 1980s 198 In 1980 oil exports accounted for 61 6 of total exports by 2000 it was only 7 3 51 Energy Edit Further information Electricity sector in Mexico Mexico s installed electricity capacity in 2008 was 58 GW Of the installed capacity 75 is thermal 19 hydro 2 nuclear and 3 renewable other than hydro 199 The general trend in thermal generation is a decline in petroleum based fuels and a growth in natural gas and coal Since Mexico is a net importer of natural gas higher levels of natural gas consumption i e for power generation will likely depend upon higher imports from either the United States or via liquefied natural gas LNG 200 Manufacturing Edit Further information Manufacturing in Mexico A maquiladora assembly plant in Mexico Manufacturing in Mexico grew rapidly in the late 1960s with the end of the US farm labor agreement known as the bracero program This sent many farm laborers back into the Northern border region with no source of income As a result the US and Mexican governments agreed to The Border Industrialization Program which permitted US companies to assemble products in Mexico using raw materials and components from the US with reduced duties The Border Industrialization Program became known popularly as The Maquiladora Program or shortened to The Maquila Program Over the years simple assembly operations in Mexico have evolved into complex manufacturing operations including televisions automobiles industrial and personal products While inexpensive commodity manufacturing has flown to China Mexico attracts U S manufacturers that need low cost solutions near by for higher value end products and just in time components Automobiles Edit Further information Automotive industry in Mexico Mastretta MXT lgThe automotive sector accounts for 17 6 of Mexico s manufacturing sector General Motors Chrysler Ford Motor Company Nissan Fiat Renault Honda Toyota and Volkswagen produce 2 8 million vehicles annually at 20 plants across the country mostly in Puebla 201 Mexico manufactures more automobiles of any North American nation 202 The industry produces technologically complex components and engages in research and development 51 The Big Three General Motors Ford and Chrysler have been operating in Mexico since the 1930s while Volkswagen and Nissan built their plants in the 1960s 117 In Puebla 70 industrial part makers cluster around Volkswagen 51 In the 2010s expansion of the sector was surging In 2014 more than 10 billion in investment was committed in the first few months of the year Kia Motors in August 2014 announced plans for a 1 billion factory in Nuevo Leon At the time Mercedes Benz and Nissan were already building a 1 4 billion plant near Aguascalientes while BMW was planning a 1 billion assembly plant in San Luis Potosi Additionally Audi began building a 1 3 billion factory at San Jose Chiapa near Puebla in 2013 203 Retailing Edit OXXO store in Cancun Quintana Roo Grupo Sanborns is a large chains of stores that began in the early 20th centuryMexico has a MXN 4 027 trillion retail sector 2013 about US 300 billion at the 2013 exchange rate 204 including an estimated US 12 billion 2015 in e commerce 205 The largest retailer is Walmart while the largest Mexico based retailers are Soriana super hypermarkets FEMSA incl its OXXO convenience stores Coppel department store Liverpool department stores Chedraui super hypermarkets and Comercial Mexicana super hypermarkets 204 Services Edit Camino Real HotelsIn 2013 the tertiary sector was estimated to account for 59 8 of Mexico s GDP 27 In 2011 services employed 61 9 of the working population 27 This section includes transportation commerce warehousing restaurant and hotels arts and entertainment health education financial and banking services telecommunications as well as public administration and defense Mexico s service sector is strong and in 2001 replaced Brazil s as the largest service sector in Latin America in dollar terms 206 Tourism Edit Further information Tourism in Mexico The beach in Cancun Mexico Tourism is one of the most important industries in Mexico It is the fourth largest source of foreign exchange for the country 81 Mexico is the eighth most visited country in the world with over 20 million tourists a year 207 Finance Edit Banking system Edit BBVA Bancomer TowerAccording to the IMF the Mexican banking system is strong in which private banks are profitable and well capitalized 208 The financial and banking sector is increasingly dominated by foreign companies or mergers of foreign and Mexican companies with the notable exception of Banorte The acquisition of Banamex one of the oldest surviving financial institutions in Mexico by Citigroup was the largest US Mexico corporate merger at US 12 5 billion 209 The largest financial institution in Mexico is Bancomer associated to the Spanish BBVA 210 The process of institution building in the financial sector in Mexico has evolved hand in hand with the efforts of financial liberalization and of inserting the economy more fully into world markets 211 Over the recent years there has been a wave of acquisitions by foreign institutions such as US based Citigroup Spain s BBVA and the UK s HSBC Their presence along with a better regulatory framework has allowed Mexico s banking system to recover from the 1994 95 peso crisis Lending to the public and private sector is increasing and so is activity in the areas of insurance leasing and mortgages 212 However bank credit accounts for only 22 of GDP which is significantly low compared to 70 in Chile 213 Credit to the Agricultural sector has fallen 45 5 in six years 2001 to 2007 and now represents about 1 of total bank loans 214 Other important institutions include savings and loans credit unions known as cajas populares 215 government development banks non bank banks bonded warehouses bonding companies and foreign exchange firms 216 A wave of acquisitions has left Mexico s financial sector in foreign hands Their foreign run affiliates compete with independent financial firms operating as commercial banks brokerage and securities houses insurance companies retirement fund administrators mutual funds and leasing companies Securities market Edit The Mexican Stock ExchangeMexico has a single securities market the Mexican Stock Exchange Bolsa Mexicana de Valores known as the Bolsa The market has grown steadily with its main indices increasing by more than 600 in the last decade It is Latin America s second largest exchange after Brazil s The total value of the domestic market capitalization of the BMV was calculated at US 409 billion at the end of 2011 and raised to US 451 billion by the end of February this year 217 Pacific Alliance Logo Since 2014 it is part of the Mercado Integrado Latinoamericano as part of a unified bag of The Pacific Alliance The Indice de Precios y Cotizaciones IPC the general equities index is the benchmark stock index on the Bolsa In 2005 the IPC surged 37 8 to 17 802 71 from 12 917 88 backed by a stronger Mexican economy and lower interest rates It continued its steep rise through the beginning of 2006 reaching 19 272 63 points at end March 2006 The stockmarket also posted a record low vacancy rate according to the central bank Local stockmarket capitalisation totalled US 236bn at end 2005 up from US 170 bn at end 2004 As of March 2006 there were 135 listed companies down from 153 a year earlier Only a handful of the listed companies are foreign Most are from Mexico City or Monterrey companies from these two cities compose 67 of the total listed companies The IPC consists of a sample of 35 shares weighted according to their market capitalisation The largest companies include America Telecom the holding company that manages Latin America s largest mobile company America Movil Telmex Mexico s largest telephone company Grupo Bimbo world s biggest baker and Wal Mart de Mexico a subsidiary of the US retail company The makeup of the IPC is adjusted every six months with selection aimed at including the most liquid shares in terms of value volume and number of trades Mexico s stock market is closely linked to developments in the US Thus volatility in the New York and Nasdaq stock exchanges as well as interest rate changes and economic expectations in the US can steer the performance of Mexican equities This is both because of Mexico s economic dependence on the US and the high volume of trading in Mexican equities through American Depositary Receipts ADRs Currently the decline in the value of the dollar is making non US markets including Mexico s more attractive Despite the recent gains investors remain wary of making placements in second tier initial public offerings IPOs Purchasers of new issues were disappointed after prices fell in numerous medium sized companies that made offerings in 1996 and 1997 IPO activity in Mexico remains tepid and the market for second tier IPOs is barely visible There were three IPOs in 2005 218 Government EditMonetary and financial system and regulation Edit Banco de Mexico Edit Financial indicators Banco de Mexico headquartersCurrency exchange rate 23 83 MXN per US 1 31 03 2020 Reserves US 176 579 billion 2013 219 Government budget US 196 5 billion revenues Public debt 20 7 of GDP 2006 External debt US 178 3 billion 2006 Bank funding rate 5 25 5 15 2009 Banco de Mexico is Mexico s central bank an internally autonomous public institution whose governor is appointed by the president and approved by the legislature to which it is fully responsible Banco de Mexico s functions are outlined in the 28th article of the constitution and further expanded in the Monetary Law of the United Mexican States 220 Banco de Mexico s main objective is to achieve stability in the purchasing power of the national currency It is also the lender of last resort Currency policy Edit National AuditoriumMexico has a floating exchange rate regime The floating exchange originated with reforms initiated after the December 1994 peso crash which had followed an unsustainable adherence to a short band Under the new system Banco de Mexico now makes no commitment to the level of the peso exchange rate although it does employ an automatic mechanism to accumulate foreign reserves It also possesses tools aimed at smoothing out volatility The Exchange Rate Commission sets policy it is made up of six members three each from the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit Secretaria de Hacienda y Credito Publico SHCP and the central bank with the SHCP holding the deciding vote In August 1996 Banco de Mexico initiated a mechanism to acquire foreign reserves when the peso is strong without giving the market signals about a target range for the exchange rate The resulting high levels of reserves mostly from petroleum revenues have helped to improve the terms and conditions on debt Mexico places on foreign markets However there is concern that the government relies too heavily on oil income in order to build a healthy base of reserves According to the central bank international reserves stood at US 75 8 billion in 2007 221 In May 2003 Banco de Mexico launched a program that sells U S dollars via a monthly auction with the goal of maintaining a stable but moderate level of reserves From April 1 1998 through April 1 2008 the Peso traded around a range varying from 8 46 MXN per US 1 00 on April 21 1998 to 11 69 MXN per US 1 00 on May 11 2004 a 10 year peak depreciation of 38 18 between the two reference date extremes before recovering After the onset of the US credit crisis that accelerated in October 2008 the Peso had an exchange rate during October 1 2008 through April 1 2009 fluctuating from lowest to highest between 10 96 MXN per US 1 00 on October 1 2008 to 15 42 MXN per US 1 00 on March 9 2009 a peak depreciation ytd of 28 92 during those six months between the two reference date extremes before recovering From the 11 69 rate during 2004 s low to the 15 42 rate during 2009 s low the peso depreciated 31 91 in that span covering the US recession coinciding Iraq War of 2003 and 2004 to the US amp Global Credit Crisis of 2008 Some experts including analysts at Goldman Sachs who coined the term BRIC in reference to the growing economies of Brazil Russia India and China for marketing purposes believe that Mexico is going to be the 5th or 6th biggest economy in the world by the year 2050 behind China United States India Brazil and possibly Russia Monetary system Edit Old hall of the Treasury at the National Palace Mexico s monetary policy was revised following the 1994 95 financial crisis when officials decided that maintaining general price stability was the best way to contribute to the sustained growth of employment and economic activity As a result Banco de Mexico has as its primary objective maintaining stability in the purchasing power of the peso It sets an inflation target which requires it to establish corresponding quantitative targets for the growth of the monetary base and for the expansion of net domestic credit The central bank also monitors the evolution of several economic indicators such as the exchange rate differences between observed and projected inflation the results of surveys on the public and specialists inflation expectations revisions on collective employment contracts producer prices and the balances of the current and capital accounts A debate continues over whether Mexico should switch to a US style interest rate targeting system Government officials in favor of a change say that the new system would give them more control over interest rates which are becoming more important as consumer credit levels rise citation needed Until 2008 citation needed 222 Mexico used a unique system amongst the OECD countries 212 to control inflation in a mechanism known as the corto lit shortage a mechanism that allowed the central bank to influence market interest rates by leaving the banking system short of its daily demand for money by a predetermined amount If the central bank wanted to push interest rates higher it increased the corto If it wished to lower interest rates it decreased the corto In April 2004 the Central Bank began setting a referential overnight interest rate as its monetary policy citation needed Business regulation Edit Corruption Edit Further information Corruption in Mexico Facade of the former convent and current Interactive Museum of Economics on Tacuba StreetPetty corruption based on exercise of administrative discretion in matters of zoning and business permits is endemic in Mexico 223 adding about 10 to the cost of consumer goods and services 224 An April 2012 article in The New York Times reporting payment of bribes to officials throughout Mexico in order to obtain construction permits information and other favors 225 resulted in investigations in both the United States and Mexico 226 227 Using relatively recent night light data and electricity consumption in comparison with Gross County Product the informal sector of the local economy in Veracruz state is shown to have grown during the period of the Fox Administration though the regional government remained PRI The assumption that the informal economy of Mexico is a constant 30 of total economic activity is not supported at the local level The small amount of local spatial autocorrelation that was found suggests a few clusters of high and low literacy rates amongst municipios in Veracruz but not enough to warrant including an I statistic as a regressor Global spatial autocorrelation is found especially literacy at the macro regional level which is an area for further research beyond this study 228 Improved literacy bolsters both the informal and formal economies in Veracruz indicating policies designed to further literacy are vital for growing the regional economy While indigenous people are relatively poor little evidence was found that the informal economy is a higher percentage of total economic activity in a municipio with a high share of indigenous people While the formal economy might have been expanding relative to the informal economy in 2000 by 2006 this process had been reversed with growing informality While rural municipios have smaller economies they are not different than urban municipios in the share of the economy that is informal Programs in the past that might move economic activity from the informal to the formal sector have not succeeded suggesting public finance issues such as tax evasion will continue to plague the state with low government revenues 228 Trade EditInternational trade World Trade Center in Mexico CityExports US 248 8 billion f o b 2006 Imports US 253 1 billion f o b 2006 Current account US 400 1 million 2006 Export partners US 90 9 Canada 2 2 Spain 1 4 Germany 1 3 Colombia 0 9 2006 Import partners US 53 4 China 8 Japan 5 9 2005 A proportional representation of Mexico exports 2019Mexico is a trade oriented economy with imports and exports totaling a 78 share of the GDP in 2019 229 It is an important trade power as measured by the value of merchandise traded and the country with the greatest number of free trade agreements 230 In 2020 Mexico was the world s eleventh largest merchandise exporter and thirteenth largest merchandise importer representing 2 4 and 2 2 of world trade respectively and those rankings increased to 7th and 9th if the EU is considered a single trading entity 231 From 1991 to 2005 Mexican trade increased fivefold 232 Mexico is the biggest exporter and importer in Latin America in 2020 Mexico alone exported US 417 7 billion roughly equivalent to the sum of the exports of the next 5 largest exporters Brazil Chile Argentina Peru and Colombia 231 Mexican trade is fully integrated with that of its North American partners as of 2019 update approximately 80 of Mexican exports and 50 of its imports were traded with the United States and Canada 233 Nonetheless NAFTA has not produced trade diversion 49 While trade with the United States increased 183 from 1993 to 2002 and that with Canada 165 other trade agreements have shown even more impressive results trade with Chile increased 285 with Costa Rica 528 and Honduras 420 51 Trade with the European Union increased 105 over the same time period 51 Free trade agreements Edit Mexico joined the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT in 1986 and today is an active and constructive participant of the World Trade Organization Fox s administration promoted the establishment of a Free Trade Area of the Americas Puebla served as temporary headquarters for the negotiations and several other cities are now candidates for its permanent headquarters if the agreement is reached and implemented Mexico has signed 12 free trade agreements with 44 countries The North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 1992 later United States Mexico Canada Agreement USMCA 2019 with the United States and Canada Grupo de los tres Group of the three countries or G 3 1994 with Colombia and Venezuela the latter decided to terminate the agreement in 2006 Free Trade Agreement with Costa Rica 1994 superseded by the 2011 integrated Free Trade Agreement with the Central American countries Free Trade Agreement with Bolivia 1994 terminated in 2010 Free Trade Agreement with Nicaragua 1997 superseded by the 2011 integrated Free Trade Agreement with the Central American countries Countries with which Mexico has signed an FTAFree Trade Agreement with Chile 1998 Free Trade Agreement with the European Union 2000 Free Trade Agreement with Israel 2000 Northern Triangle Free Trade Agreement 2000 with Guatemala El Salvador and Honduras superseded by the 2011 integrated Free Trade Agreement with the Central American countries Free Trade Agreement with the European Free Trade Association EFTA integrated by Iceland Norway Liechtenstein and Switzerland 2001 Free Trade Agreement with Uruguay 2003 Free Trade Agreement with Japan 2004 Free Trade Agreement with Peru 2011 The integrated Free Trade Agreement with Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras and Nicaragua 2011 Free Trade Agreement with Panama 2014 and The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans Pacific Partnership CPTPP 2018 Mexico has shown interest in becoming an associate member of Mercosur 234 The Mexican government has also started negotiations with South Korea Singapore and Peru 235 and also wishes to start negotiations with Australia for a trade agreement between the two countries North American Trade Agreement and the USMCA Agreement Edit Main articles North American Free Trade Agreement and USMCA The NAFTA emblemThe 1994 North American Trade Agreement NAFTA is by far the most important Trade Agreement Mexico has signed both in the magnitude of reciprocal trade with its partners as well as in its scope Unlike the rest of the Free Trade Agreements that Mexico has signed NAFTA is more comprehensive in its scope and was complemented by the North American Agreement for Environmental Cooperation NAAEC and the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation NAALC An updating of the 1994 NAFTA the U S Mexico Canada USMCA is pending in early 2020 awaiting the ratification by Canada the U S and Mexico have ratified it The NAAEC agreement was a response to environmentalists concerns that companies would relocate to Mexico or the United States would lower its standards if the three countries did not achieve a unanimous regulation on the environment The NAAEC in an aim to be more than a set of environmental regulations established the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation NACEC a mechanism for addressing trade and environmental issues the North American Development Bank NADBank for assisting and financing investments in pollution reduction and the Border Environmental Cooperation Commission BECC The NADBank and the BECC have provided economic benefits to Mexico by financing 36 projects mostly in the water sector By complementing NAFTA with the NAAEC it has been labeled the greenest trade agreement 236 The NAALC supplement to NAFTA aimed to create a foundation for cooperation among the three members for the resolution of labor problems as well as to promote greater cooperation among trade unions and social organizations in all three countries in order to fight for the improvement of labor conditions Though most economists agree that it is difficult to assess the direct impact of the NAALC it is agreed that there has been a convergence of labor standards in North America Given its limitations however NAALC has not produced and in fact was not intended to achieve convergence in employment productivity and salary trend in North America 237 The agreement fell short in liberalizing movement of people across the three countries In a limited way however immigration of skilled Mexican and Canadian workers to the United States was permitted under the TN status NAFTA allows for a wide list of professions most of which require at least a bachelor s degree for which a Mexican or a Canadian citizen can request TN status and temporarily immigrate to the United States Unlike the visas available to other countries TN status requires no sponsorship but simply a job offer letter Outgoing Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto U S President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sign the agreement during the G20 summit in Buenos Aires Argentina on November 30 2018 The overall benefits of NAFTA have been quantified by several economists whose findings have been reported in several publications like the World Bank s Lessons from NAFTA for Latin America and the Caribbean 237 NAFTA s Impact on North America 238 and NAFTA revisited by the Institute for International Economics 49 They assess that NAFTA has been positive for Mexico whose poverty rates have fallen and real income salaries have risen even after accounting for the 1994 1995 economic crisis Nonetheless they also state that it has not been enough or fast enough to produce an economic convergence nor to reduce the poverty rates substantially or to promote higher rates of growth Beside this the textile industry gain hype with this agreement and the textile industry in Mexico gained open access to the American market promoting exports to the United States The value of Mexican cotton and apparel exports to the U S grew from 3 billion in 1995 to 8 4 billion in 2002 a record high of 9 4 billion in 2000 At the same time the share of Mexico s cotton textile market the U S has increased from 8 percent in 1995 to 13 percent in 2002 citation needed Some have suggested that in order to fully benefit from the agreement Mexico should invest in education and promote innovation as well as in infrastructure and agriculture 237 Contrary to popular belief the maquiladora program existed far before NAFTA dating to 1965 A maquiladora manufacturer operates by importing raw materials into Mexico either tariff free NAFTA or at a reduced rate on a temporary basis 18 months and then using Mexico s relatively less expensive labor costs to produce finished goods for export Prior to NAFTA maquiladora companies importing raw materials from anywhere in the world were given preferential tariff rates by the Mexican government so long as the finished good was for export The US prior to NAFTA allowed Maquiladora manufactured goods to be imported into the US with the tariff rate only being applied to the value of non US raw materials used to produce the good thus reducing the tariff relative to other countries NAFTA has eliminated all tariffs on goods between the two countries but for the maquiladora industry significantly increased the tariff rates for goods sourced outside of NAFTA citation needed Given the overall size of trade between Mexico and the United States there are remarkably few trade disputes involving relatively small dollar amounts These disputes are generally settled in WTO or NAFTA panels or through negotiations between the two countries The most significant areas of friction involve trucking sugar high fructose corn syrup and a number of other agricultural products 90 Mexican trade facilitation and competitiveness Edit Polanco has one of the most expensive streets in the Americas Avenida Presidente Masaryk The buildings to the left of the Scotiabank tower are not in Polanco they are in Lomas de Chapultepec A 2008 research brief published by the World Bank 239 as part of its Trade Costs and Facilitation Project suggested that Mexico had the potential to substantially increase trade flows and economic growth through trade facilitation reform The study examined the potential impacts of trade facilitation reforms in four areas port efficiency customs administration information technology and regulatory environment including standards The study projected overall increments from domestic reforms to be on the order of 31 8 billion equivalent to 22 4 percent of total Mexican manufacturing exports for 2000 03 On the imports side the corresponding figures are 17 1 billion and 11 2 percent respectively Increases in exports including textiles would result primarily from improvements in port efficiency and the regulatory environment Exports of transport equipment would be expected to increase by the greatest increment from improvements in port efficiency whereas exports of food and machinery would largely be the result of improvements in the regulatory environment On the imports side Mexican improvements in port efficiency would appear to be the most important factor although for imports of transport equipment improvements in service sector infrastructure would also be of relative importance 239 Major trade partners Edit The following table shows the largest trading partners for Mexico in 2021 by total trade value in billions of USD 240 Country Trade Value Import Value Export Value Balance United States 609 67 221 31 388 36 167 05 China 120 16 101 02 19 14 81 88 Canada 37 93 11 22 26 71 15 49 South Korea 26 85 18 96 7 89 11 08 Germany 26 50 17 21 9 29 7 93 Japan 22 85 17 08 5 78 11 30 Brazil 13 49 8 72 4 77 3 95 Malaysia 12 95 12 39 0 556 11 83 Spain 10 10 4 58 5 52 0 935 India 10 06 5 92 4 14 1 78See also Edit Money portalSmall and medium enterprises in Mexico List of companies of Mexico List of largest Mexican companies List of hotels in Mexico List of Mexican brands Index of Mexico related articles Mexico and the World Bank Poverty in MexicoReferences Edit World Economic Outlook Database April 2019 IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved September 29 2019 World Bank Country and Lending Groups datahelpdesk worldbank org World Bank Retrieved September 29 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m The World Factbook CIA gov Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved May 1 2019 a b c d World Economic Outlook Database April 2023 IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved April 23 2023 a b c The outlook is uncertain again amid financial sector turmoil high inflation ongoing effects of Russia s invasion of Ukraine and three years of COVID International Monetary Fund April 11 2023 Mexico Historical Inflation Rates 1969 to 2022 a b POBREZA EN MEXICO PDF coneval org mx National Council for the Evaluation of Social Development Policy CONEVAL Retrieved January 12 2020 Poverty headcount ratio at 5 50 a day 2011 PPP of population Mexico data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved March 21 2020 EL INEGI DA A CONOCER LOS RESULTADOS DE LA ENCUESTA NACIONAL DE INGRESOS Y GASTOS DE LOS HOGARES ENIGH 2020 PDF www inegi org mx in Spanish National Institute of Statistics and Geography July 28 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 Human Development Index HDI hdr undp org HDRO Human Development Report Office United Nations Development Programme Retrieved October 9 2022 Inequality adjusted HDI IHDI hdr undp org UNDP Retrieved October 9 2022 Labor force total Mexico data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved November 2 2019 link hre, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.