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Public Policy: Mexico . Discredited Disaster Policy Undermines Political Regime . Post World War II Policy Making Aimed at PROMOTING ECONOMIC GROWTH. Massive public investment Elite consensus on state’s role in economy Prevailed until 1970’s State facilitated private capital accumulation
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Public Policy: Mexico Discredited Disaster Policy Undermines Political Regime
Post World War II Policy Making Aimed at PROMOTING ECONOMIC GROWTH • Massive public investment • Elite consensus on state’s role in economy • Prevailed until 1970’s • State facilitated private capital accumulation • State was nation’s largest entrepreneur • State served as guiding force (rector) • Mexican economic miracle (1950’s to 1970’s) • By late 1970’s Mexico at upper end of World Bank’s list of semi-industrialized countries
Early 1980’s: Exhaustion of ISI model forces change • 1976-82 • Term begins with petroleum fueled economic boom • Corruption • Technology advances bypass many ISI industries • Oil prices plummet • Jose Lopez Portillo
Before the Change: Distributive Policy of PRI controlled State Reduced Poverty • Benefits did trickle down to the poor • 1950-80: poverty in absolute terms declined • Illiteracy dropped from 35% to 15% of the population
Dark Side to PRI Economic Successes • Ownership of land and capital increasingly concentrated • Personal income inequality increased • 1977- poorest 70% of Mexicans families received only 24 % of all disposable income • Richest 30% of families received 76% of income
Other Social Indicators of the “Dark Side” • 25% of children under five years of age malnourished (as of 1990) • Only 54% of those starting primary school finished • 57 %of dwellings had no sewerage connections • 51% had no piped water inside • 70% population (classified by government) as living in “extreme poverty”
Populist Policies & Debt Crisis (oil boom of 1970’s ends ) • Central government revenues expands and contracts • Public spending for health and social security remained constant (in real per-capita terms) • 1982 debt crisis forces changes • Made it impossible to maintain existing spending levels for health and social programs • 1986 – debt service consuming over half federal government budget
Shift to Neo-liberalism (1982 -1993 • Alternative to state socialism and ISI • Rate of economic growth pushed upwards • Rectorship of economy not completely given up by technical elite residing in Mexico City • 1993 – signing of NAFTA Treaty signals ascendancy of neo-liberalism
Consequences of neo-liberalism • Macro-economic indicators show increase in growth rate • Inequality problems exacerbated because of distributive policies • Job creation anemic • Influx of foreign capital purchases machinery • Over half of investment ended up in financial instruments – rather than in job-creating, direct investment projects
Overall Evaluation • Neo-liberalism facilitated macro-economic growth • By itself appears incapable of necessary job creation • Government needs to invest in upgrading worker skills • Danger that gains from NAFTA will bypass the largest segment of the population
Extractive Policy and the Financing of Development • For most of post-World War II period Mexico’s tax effort (rate of taxation and performance in collecting taxes) was among lowest in world • Even after tax reform of Salinas administration (1988-94) • Over sixty percent of revenue from socially regressive taxes • Income tax rates for wealthiest Mexicans reduced
Special Extractive Factor : Oil Policy in Mexico • 1911: Mexico begins to export oil • 1917: Article 27 of the Constitution gives the Mexican government a right to all subsoil resources • 1921: Peak of oil production in Mexico, due to increased demand from WWI • 1920s: Mexico is second only to the U.S. in petroleum output
U. S. Acquiesces to Nationalization of Petroleum Fields • Nationalization of oil (Lazaro Cardenas) • 1944: Mexico pays U.S. oil companies $24 million, plus interest at 3 percent, as compensation • Mexican and U.S. officials develop a 20-year plan to expand Mexican oil industry
Mexico Finds More Oil (1974 – 75) • Crude-petroleum deposits discovered in the states of Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco, and Veracruz • Provide an economic boost amidst rising inflation • Mexican oil production more than doubles • USA – most important market for Mexican oil
PEMEX Receives US$12.6 billion in International Credit • Money used to construct and operate offshore drilling platforms, • build onshore processing facilities, • enlarge its refineries • engage in further exploration • purchase capital goods from abroad
Decreased income from sale of oil • 1980s • Oil prices fall • Mexico is blocked out of the market by refusing to lower their prices • Increase in debt reduces economic activity • 1981 • Foreign banks acquire 87% of PEMEX assets • Recession stimulates capital flight • Devaluation of the peso
Mexican Petroleum Industry: Late 1980’s Attempts to Modernize President Salinas Gortari (Harvard trained economist) • PEMEX inefficiency makes for decreasing competitiveness • Salinas breaks the power of oil workers’ union • Efficiency of PEMEX increases • Production levels continue decline
Program for Redevelopment and Restructuring of Energy Structure 1996 Investment by 2000 250 billion pesos (at 1995 prices) 49 billion from private sector • Goal – increase energy exports • Improve competitiveness in international market • Stimulate more regional development inside of Mexico
PEMEX Today • Despite the $77 billion in revenue earned each year, PEMEX is forced to pay extremely high taxes to the government that keep PEMEX in incessant debt. • In order to keep their company going, PEMEX has borrowed an excess of money and is now $42.5 billion in debt. • With the record breaking oil prices starting in 2005, resulting partially from the Iraqi war, PEMEX has seen a rise in revenue.
Impact of Shortcomings within Policy Functions: Problem of Implementation • Despite increased profits during President Fox’s administration, few debts have been retired • Unexpected income has been used to pay the salary of bureaucrats and current costs. • Production capacity continues to decline
Current Mexican Oil Production • Average oil production decreased by 500,000 barrels per day (2005-07) • Political conflict over who should invest in the oil industry
Consequences of Policy: Developmental gap persists between urban North, and rural, mostly indigenous South
Current Challenges(Economic Policy) • Economy that produces too few jobs to accommodate the number of people entering the job market • Educational system in need of modernization • Growing impoverished population • Half of Mexicans live below the official poverty line • Highly unequal distribution of income • Acute environmental problems
More Policy Challenges: Economic • Must catch up to its international trade partners/competitors • Modernize its agricultural sector • Renovate energy sector • Expand the tax base • Corruption
Government Performance: Challenge of Security and Crime • Establishing the rule of law • Greatest failure of all • Cannot deal with street crime • ¾’s of crimes go unreported; why? Citizens’ low expectations that the perpetrators will be caught and punished. • Real progress only by addressing underlying causes
Drug Trafficking Cartels often more powerful than the government
Mexico’s Political Future • State of the political system • Elections – more democratic and transparent than in most of Latin America • Talk of weakening the presidency and strengthening Congress • Classification: a democracy