Mexico raises minimum wage by 20%
‘We’ll never accept US inspectors’
MEXICO CITY, Dec 18, (AP): Mexico raised its national minimum wage 20% Monday, but it still doesn’t amount to even $1 an hour.
The Labor Department said the lowest legal wage will be 123.22 pesos a day starting Jan 1, or about $6.50 at current exchange rates.
That is a boost from the 120.68-peso minimum wage prevailing this year.
While the increase well above the 3% annual inflation rate, it is barely enough to keep one person over the poverty line, even though Mexico’s constitution says it should be enough to support a worker and his family.
The minimum wage in a narrow stretch of territory along the border with the United States is higher than in the rest of the country, due to higher living costs. Starting next year the border minimum will rise about 5%, to $9.75 a day.
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador appeared at a ceremony to announce the increase, accompanied by business leaders.
“I am aware that we still have a long way to go, because we feel behind,” López Obrador said, referring to decades in which the purchasing power of the minimum wage declined in real terms.
López Obrador acknowledged that minimum wages “cannot be decided by decree,” and he thanked business leaders for supporting the decision to raise the minimum.
The head of the Business Coordinating Council, Carlos Lomelín, called the increase “great news for Mexico.”
Mexico has been the object of criticism for keeping wages artificially low, something critics say has been used to lure auto assembly and manufacturing jobs from the United States.
But the country’s domestic economy has also suffered from a lack of internal demand because of low wages.
Meanwhile, Mexico’s trade negotiator for North America said Sunday that Mexico categorically opposes allowing foreign labor inspectors to operate in the country, saying that was not contemplated in the recent agreement with Washington and Ottawa on the USMCA pact to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Jesús Seade was flying to Washington to meet with US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and US lawmakers to express his country’s “surprise and concern” over language in implementation legislation introduced Friday in the US Congress calling for the posting of up to five labor attaches to monitor Mexico’s labor reform.
Seade, an undersecretary in the Foreign Relations Department, said on Twitter that while the proposed attaches exact functions are not yet clear, “Mexico will NEVER accept them if it is in any way about disguised inspectors, for one simple reason: Mexican law prohibits it.”