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Economy
above
expectations in June
In June, economic activity
increased
5.1% over the same month last year, according to the global indicator for
economic activity (IGAE, Indicador Global de la Actividad Económica).
The actual reading was well above expectations, which had the economy
growing at an annual 4.3% pace and was also above the 3.2% annual growth
rate recorded in May. A month-on-month comparison, confirms the
strong reading. According to seasonally adjusted data, the economy
expanded a strong 0.50% over the preceding month, following on flat growth
in May. Moreover, the clear upward trend remains intact. In
June, the annual average growth rate inched up 0.3 percentage points from
2.4% in May to 2.7%, the eighth consecutive increase.
June
boost lifts second quarter growth above estimates
Owing to the
better-than-expected June reading, second quarter gross domestic product (GDP)
growth of 3.9% came in a notch ahead of market expectations of 3.8%.
The second quarter pace was almost unchanged from the 3.7% annual growth
rate observed in the first quarter of the year. According to
seasonally adjusted data, the economy expanded at a more vigorous rate
than suggested by the annual data, as the National Statistical Institute (INEGI)
reported strong 1.19% growth over the preceding quarter, following on
1.35% quarterly growth in the first quarter, the third consecutive
quarterly increase.
Industrial
sector continues recovery
Following on
the sharp rebound of 3.2% growth in the first quarter, the industrial
sector expanded by a robust 3.8% in the second quarter and thus continued
the upward trend observed since the second quarter last year, when the
sector was mired in recession. The fourth consecutive acceleration
raises hopes that the positive momentum will persist and lift the sector
from past sluggishness. Not all sub-sectors that constitute the
industrial sector improved over the first quarter. In fact, mining,
construction and electricity, gas and water actually decelerated compared
to the first quarter. Mining slowed from an annual expansion of 6.5%
to 2.4%; construction growth dropped from 4.9% to 4.4% while electricity,
gas and water added only 0.8% over the second quarter last year, following
on 1.4% growth observed in the first quarter.
Manufacturing
continues acceleration trend amid strong rebound of maquiladora industry
However,
industrial manufacturing, which constitutes the key sector for the economy,
as the country is emerging from lacklustre growth, continued to quicken
its pace. Since the second quarter last year, when the sector was
deeply entrenched in recession, industrial manufacturing has quickly
gained speed from a 4.6% contraction to 2.9% growth in the first quarter.
In the second quarter of this year, growth accelerated further to 4.0%,
the fastest growth observed since the final quarter 2000. In the
past year, the lagging recovery of the Mexican manufacturing industry, in
spite of record growth in the United States, had
raised concerns, as it suggested that the Mexican economy had lost a
larger than expected market share in the United States to Asian
competitors. Within manufacturing, the so-called maquiladora
industry (in-bond manufacturing), is particularly important since it
directly serves the U.S. market and thus acts as a good indicator for
measuring to what extent the rebound in the United States is finally being
transmitted to the Mexican economy. In the second quarter, activity
in the maquiladora industry grew 9.0%, following on 3.7% growth in the
first quarter, also the highest reading since the last quarter of 2000.
Services
grow at quicker pace than in the fourth quarter
Services
expanded 4.1% in the second quarter over the same quarter last year,
unchanged from the first quarter. Commerce, restaurants and hotels
expanded 4.0%, which was a little above the 3.8% expansion observed in the
first quarter. The slight acceleration was mainly due to higher
sales volumes related to the external sector. Growth in the
transport, storage and communications sector slowed from the exuberant
9.5% registered in the first quarter but remained robust with an 8.2%
expansion. According to INEGI, the sector profited from strong
growth of fixed line and cellular telephone services. Growth in
financial services and real estate, in contrast, accelerated from 4.3% in
the first quarter to 5.0%. |