Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta México. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta México. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 21 de julio de 2009

Did Globalization Fail Mexico?

Did Globalization Fail Mexico?
Over at the immigration website VDARE, Edwin Rubenstein has an interesting post about immigration and Mexican economic trends. One particular graph caught my eye:




The ratio of per-capita GDP between the U.S. and Mexico has risen slightly since 1995--despite NAFTA and despite the very large outflows of legal and illegal immigrants. Does this mean that even a huge dose of globalization cannot overcome the structural problems with the Mexican economy? Where did the economic models go wrong?

lunes, 20 de julio de 2009

Globalization and Poverty in Mexico

"Incomes fared relatively poorly in the parts of Mexico that experienced little of the effects of globalization when compared to the so-called high exposure states of northern Mexico whose export-oriented industries have been magnets for foreign investors."

With all the talk these days about globalization and its discontents, the tendency is to focus on the alleged damage suffered by people with the greatest exposure to its most common manifestations, such as lower trade barriers and relaxed rules for foreign investment. But what about people who have been largely bypassed by globalization?

In Mexico, it appears that people living in areas with the least exposure to globalization -- regions that are not attracting foreign investment and are lacking in industries that serve international markets -- are lagging behind those residing in regions that have felt its full force. In Globalization, Labor Income, and Poverty in Mexico (NBER Working Paper No. 11027) NBER Research Associate Gordon Hanson asserts that in the 1990s, incomes fared relatively poorly in parts of Mexico that experienced little of the effects of globalization when compared to the so-called "high exposure" states of northern Mexico whose export-oriented industries have been magnets for foreign investors.

Hanson finds that average labor earnings decreased by 10 percent for "low exposure" states, which are located mainly in the south, relative to high exposure states. In addition, during the 1990s, the low exposure areas saw a comparative increase in workers who could not earn enough to keep their families out of poverty. "This is further evidence that during Mexico's globalization decade individuals born in states with high-exposure to globalization have done relatively well in terms of their labor earnings," he states.

Hanson acknowledges that incomes traditionally have been higher in the northern states than in the south. However, prior to the mid-1980s, when Mexico began dropping barriers to trade and investment, income differences between the two regions were actually narrowing. "The process of income convergence in Mexico came to a halt in 1985, coinciding with the onset of trade liberalization," he writes. "Since 1985, regional incomes have diverged in the country. The pattern of income growth I uncover does not appear to have been evident in the early 1980s or before."

The benefits of liberalization also helped northern states weather economic crisis. While incomes in both regions suffered during the peso collapse of the mid-1990s, Hanson finds that "the deterioration was much less severe" in the northern tier, as it occurred during the banking crisis and a subsequent nationwide downturn in economic activity.

Mexico has become a popular tableau for the study of the effects of globalization. According to Hanson, that's because the country has been so aggressive at opening up its economy to the rest of the world. Mexico started in 1985 by unilaterally cutting tariffs and eliminating other restrictions on trade. It then acted in 1989 to end many restrictions on foreign investment, and culminated the liberalization process in 1994 with the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Hanson observes that, "partly as a result of these policy changes, the share of international trade in Mexico's GDP has nearly tripled, rising from 11 percent in 1980 to 32 percent in 2002."

Hanson notes that there could be several interpretations of his findings. One is the simple fact that when barriers to trade and investment fall, incomes will rise in areas that are most adept at participating in the global economy.


But Hanson says that others may view the income growth in the north and its relative stagnation in the south as unrelated to globalization. For example, some observers might associate the income gains in the northern states with the privatization and deregulation of Mexican industry and the reform of Mexico's land-tenure system. Hanson says that these changes actually should be of more benefit to the less unionized and more agrarian southern states and ultimately do not offer an alternative explanation for his findings.

Still, Hanson reports that while there is much evidence that globalization, or, in the south, the lack thereof, has a strong association with income levels, he observes that one has to be cautious about forcefully stating cause and effect. "In the end, we can only say that I find suggestive evidence that globalization has increased relative incomes in Mexican states that are more exposed to global markets," he writes.

Also, if this is in fact the case, Hanson points out that it's still not clear how governments should respond to such a connection. "The policy implications are un

clear," Hanson concludes, "as I leave unanswered the question of how one goes about increasing regional exposure.

-- Matthew Davis

lunes, 29 de junio de 2009

Mexico and Chile

Check this out, it´s an example of the globalization, Mexico has an important participation:


Visita de Bachelet refuerza intercambio con MéxicoDesde 1990, el comercio con Chile creció notoriamente

José Goñi Carrasco*El UniversalLunes 19 de marzo de 2007


La visita de Estado de la presidenta Michelle Bachelet a México, los días 20 y 21 de marzo próximo -la primera de un jefe de Estado desde que asumió el gobierno el presidente Felipe Calderón-, viene a rubricar el excelente estado de las relaciones diplomáticas que mantienen nuestros países, ratificada en la reciente cumbre del Grupo de Río.

En el plano económico, desde 1990, año en que México y Chile reanudaron sus relaciones diplomáticas, el intercambio comercial ha crecido de manera espectacular.
El comercio bilateral, que en 1990 no alcanzaba los 160 millones de dólares, tuvo un crecimiento de 2,000%. En 2006, casi superamos 3 mil 300 millones de dólares.
Dicho intercambio se ha visto fuertemente incentivado con la puesta en vigencia del Tratado de Libre Comercio, TLC, en 1999 (ver cuadro).

El TLC ha sido reconocido por muchos especialistas como el más exitoso, en especial por la diversificación en la comercialización de productos y servicios; por la institucionalidad que genera un diálogo permanente y fluido entre las partes; por la participación de las pequeñas y medianas empresas en el comercio y por el gran crecimiento gracias a la desgravación existente, que significa que 99.7% de los envíos está totalmente liberado del pago de aranceles.

En materia de inversiones, México supera los 870 millones de dólares en inversión acumulada en Chile. Esto convierte a México en el principal inversionista latinoamericano en nuestro país y el undécimo inversionista a escala mundial en Chile. Entre las empresas que destacan tenemos a Telmex, Bancomext, Bimbo y Editorial Televisa.

Por su parte, las inversiones de nuestro país en México se mueven en un rango de entre 400 y 600 millones de dólares y entre ellos figuran Molymet, SAAM, Farmacias Benavides, MASISA, Sonda y CMPC. Estimamos que estas inversiones son sólo el inicio de un proceso. Consideremos que las inversiones de empresas chilenas en el extranjero son del orden de los 34 mil millones de dólares en países como Argentina, Brasil, Uruguay, Perú, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia y Australia.

No dudamos que tanto en comercio como en inversiones se dispone de enormes espacios para el crecimiento de nuestras relaciones. Los límites a este incremento están, fundamentalmente, en un desconocimiento mutuo de las realidades y potencialidades que ofrecen una y otra economía.