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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 YearsUS Mexico Chamber of CommerceNovember 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 • Other issues (demography, employment, border crossing, security, education) • Changes in Mexico
Integration of US and Mexican Economies • Trade: Amount and Quality • Investment • Tourism • Population Movement
Quality of Trade: US “Vertical Integration” with Major Trading Partners
Intra-Industry Trade: Biggest US imports and exports with Mexico, 2012 (billions of dollars)
Intra-Industry Trade: Biggest US imports and exports with China, 2012 (billions of dollars)
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
In Some Industries, China’s Share Growing, but Mexico’s Share Growing Too
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
Other Issues • Tourism • Demography • Education: major factor in long term growth
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)
Education: Average Years of Schooling for Population over 15
Productivity Trends: Changes in Gaps with US, 1980-2011, Annual Average (Source: OECD)
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
But Mexico today very different from Mexico of the past • Composition of Exports • Macroeconomic Conditions • Inflation • Exchange Rate • Debt Service • Interest Rate