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LatinFocus - The Leading Source for Latin American Economies incl. Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela
 

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Mexico:  Booming Economy

The Mexican economy is booming ahead, assisted by robust U.S. growth, historically high oil prices and a strong peso.  Exports, consumption and investment show resilient growth and only the anticipated slowdown in the United States dampens the growth prospects for the coming year.  Meanwhile, inflation surprised on the upside and the trade deficit continues to widen.

Economic Briefing September 2000                                                                    Archive

Second quarter growth comes in strong.  On 15 August, the National Institute of Statistics (INEGI) announced that GDP increased by 7.6% in real terms in the second quarter of 2000 compared to the same period last year.  The strong quarterly result was well above market expectations of 6.6%.  After first quarter growth of 7.9%, the economy expanded 7.8% in the first half of the year compared with the same period in 1999. 

Services lead growth.  According to INEGI, all sectors contributed evenly to economic growth in the second quarter: agriculture increased 7.4%, industry 7.1% and services 7.8%.  Within the industrial sector, manufacturing was the fasted growing sub-sector, with a 7.2% expansion, closely followed by the construction industry, which expanded 7.1% year-over-year.  Electricity, gas and water grew 6.7% and mining activity, when compared to the first quarter, more than doubled its growth rate, expanding by 6.5%.  Within the services sector, retail, restaurants and hotels continued the strong first quarter performance, adding 13.2% year-over-year, trailed by transport, storage and communications, which grew 12.0%. 

The healthy second quarter performance was driven by a number of factors, including: 

- Strong US growth.  Unrelenting US growth has been key to pulling the Mexican economy out of the sluggish 3.7% expansion last year and continues to drive a surprisingly strong economic performance.  Buoyant US demand for Mexican products has boosted growth in the manufacturing industry, particularly in the so-called maquiladora industry (in-bond manufacturing), which also drove Mexico’s exports up by 21.8% in the second quarter over the same period last year.  

- High oil prices.  The economy is also benefiting from soaring oil prices.  In June, the average price for the Mexican oil mix reached US$ 26.5 per barrel, 85.6% above the June 1999 level.  The oil windfall profits have enabled the government to fund an 8% increase in spending in the second quarter compared to last year, while simultaneously incurring a fiscal surplus.   

- Strong peso.  Higher oil prices have also served to bolster the peso, which has been the strongest currency in the world against the US$ this year.  The peso strength has helped to lower consumer price increases and therefore bring down interest rates, which, in turn, has boosted consumption and investment. 

If the economy keeps up the pace, it will register the fastest GDP expansion in 19 years.  Some observers have raised concerns that the fast pace could drive up consumer prices and widen the trade deficit to unsustainable levels and have called on the Central Bank and the government to apply the necessary anticipatory brakes to cool off the economy.  While the interest rate has reacted to the Central Bank’s tightening on 31 July (see last month’s Consensus Forecast) the ability of the reduction in available credit to stem the current expansion is limited, since Mexican consumers have learned to live without bank loans ever since the 1994 Peso Crisis dried up consumer credits.  Also, indirectly, the tightening may even have the contrary effect since higher interest rates will attract foreign capital, thus strengthening the peso, which, in turn, may further boost the growing trade deficit (since the last Consensus Forecast the peso has strengthened further to 9.3 per US$ on 8 September and panellists have revised their forecasts to a year-end rate of 9.8).  Therefore, Central Bank officials as well as private economists have called on the government to tighten its belt.  The Finance Ministry, however, claims that spending cuts are not necessary, since its spending program remains on target thanks to the surplus incurred in the second quarter.   

The strong dynamism of the Mexican economy also further drove down unemployment.  Open unemployment dropped from 2.11% of the economically active population in June to 2.03% in July.  The July rate was the lowest unemployment rate ever registered for the month of July and was only slightly above December 1999, when seasonal hiring brought down unemployment to 2.00%.   

In the light of the recent positive news, panellists have further revised their projections for 2000 economic growth upward.  Nevertheless, as a result of the anticipated slowdown in the United States, economic growth is anticipated to slow next year – the only country among the seven major Latin American economies to experience slower growth than this year.   

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