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NAFTA at 20 Years US Mexico Chamber of Commerce November 7, 2013

NAFTA at 20 Years US Mexico Chamber of Commerce November 7, 2013. Animesh Ghoshal DePaul University. North America as a Competitor on the Global Stage. Mexico in 1982 Integration of US and Mexican Economies Concerns about China

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NAFTA at 20 Years US Mexico Chamber of Commerce November 7, 2013

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  1. NAFTA at 20 YearsUS Mexico Chamber of CommerceNovember 7, 2013 Animesh Ghoshal DePaul University

  2. North America as a Competitor on the Global Stage • Mexico in 1982 • Integration of US and Mexican Economies • Concerns about China • Other issues (demography, employment, border crossing, security, education) • Changes in Mexico

  3. Economic Situation in Mexico, 1982

  4. Integration of US and Mexican Economies • Trade: Amount and Quality • Investment • Tourism • Population Movement

  5. Integration of US and Mexican Economies: GDP Growth Rates

  6. Growth of Trade, 1985-2012

  7. US Imports from Canada, China, Mexico

  8. Quality of Trade: US “Vertical Integration” with Major Trading Partners

  9. Intra-Industry Trade: Biggest US imports and exports with Mexico, 2012 (billions of dollars)

  10. Intra-Industry Trade: Biggest US imports and exports with China, 2012 (billions of dollars)

  11. Growth in Bilateral Investment: US FDI in Mexico

  12. Growth in Bilateral Investment: Mexican FDI in US

  13. FDI Flows in Mexico, 1992-2011

  14. Overall FDI Inflows into Mexico • Dependence on US has actually decreased since advent of NAFTA • FDI inflows in 2011: • Total, from OECD: $19.6 billion • US: $10.6 b • Spain: $3.3 b • Netherlands: $1.5 b • Switzerland: $1.2 b

  15. Mexican Concerns about Competition from China

  16. In some industries, Mexican exports displaced by China

  17. In others, no evidence of displacement

  18. In Some Industries, China’s Share Growing, but Mexico’s Share Growing Too

  19. Mexican Concerns about Competition from China (cont) • China joined WTO in 2001 • Faced reduced trade barriers (MFN) • Very low labor costs • In 2003, hourly labor cost in China $0.62, in Mexico $5.06 • Many maquiladoras shut down or moved to China, but… • Labor costs in China have risen rapidly In 2008, hourly labor cost in China $1.36 in Mexico $6.12 Since 2008, wages in China have increased 10-20 percent a year

  20. “Labor Arbitrage” and Manufacturing Costs

  21. Production Advantages, China vs. Mexico

  22. Role of Distance: Travel Time to Northern US

  23. Role of Distance: Travel Time to Major World Ports

  24. Other Issues • Tourism • Demography • Education: major factor in long term growth

  25. Tourism and Population Movement • Tourism: • Mexico #1 destination for US residents in 2011 • Mexico 20.1m, Canada 11.6m, UK 2.4m • Mexico #2 source of tourists to US in 2011 • Canada 21.3m, Mexico 13.5m, UK 2.4m • Population Movement and Social Networks • US: 12 m residents born in Mexico, 32 m of Mexican origin • Mexico: I m American residents (20% of total)

  26. US: Ageing Population:Demographic Challenge

  27. Mexico: Younger Population“Demographic Window”

  28. Education: Average Years of Schooling for Population over 15

  29. Productivity Trends: Changes in Gaps with US, 1980-2011, Annual Average (Source: OECD)

  30. Mexico’s Economy Has Some Problems • Extremely high dependence on US, with 80% of exports going to one country • Trade agreements with many countries, but rules of origin make export diversification difficult • Lack of competition in many industries • Concerns about violence

  31. But Mexico today very different from Mexico of the past • Composition of Exports • Macroeconomic Conditions • Inflation • Exchange Rate • Debt Service • Interest Rate

  32. Composition of Mexico’s Exports, 1982 and 2010

  33. Economic Situation in Mexico, 1982 and 2011

  34. Macroeconomic Conditions in 2012, US and Mexico

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