Los Angeles Times

Mexico is raising its minimum pay

Pay hike comes after an earlier increase of 16%. But the hourly rate is still less than $1.

- By Juan Pablo Spinetto, Nacha Cattan and Eric Martin

Workers are getting a 20% boost in the minimum wage, on top of an earlier hike of 16%.

Economists debating the effect of a minimum wage on inequality, inflation and the jobless rate are about to get a ton of new evidence from Mexico.

The country is boosting its minimum wage 20% starting Jan. 1, to 123.22 pesos per day, or $6.50. (The minimum is higher in northern border territorie­s; there it rises 5%, to $9.75 a day.)

That latest increase is seven times faster than inflation, and it comes on top of a 16% jump this year.

The leftist government of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador is using the wage as a tool to fight poverty and inequality. This is a stark break from Mexico’s recent policies, when increases to the minimum salary barely topped inflation to help exporters to the U.S. keep costs down.

Before Lopez Obrador took office, Mexico’s minimum wage was the second lowest among more than 30 countries in a study by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t as a proportion of what an average worker made. Only the U.S. was lower. Mexico’s new daily minimum still amounts to less than $1 an hour. Economists are split on whether increases in the minimum wage hurt job creation.

Harvard University’s Gregory Mankiw, who used to chair the U.S. Council of

Economic Advisors, has argued that it reduces job opportunit­ies for unskilled workers. Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman says there’s no evidence that raising the minimum wage costs jobs.

The increase comes as policymake­rs are debating how to reduce social disparitie­s amid mass protests in Latin American countries.

So how is Mexico’s experiment going?

Despite the warnings of Mexico’s central bank, the 16% increase to the minimum salary this year hasn’t stoked inflation — at least not yet. The inflation rate has fallen to about 3% from 4.8% a year ago. Core inflation, which aims to track underlying price trends by excluding the most volatile goods such as food and energy, has hardly budged.

Some economists also point to strong consumer demand as a benefit of workers’ higher spending power.

Banxico board member Gerardo Esquivel, an appointee of Lopez Obrador and a dovish member of the famously hawkish central bank, celebrated the additional wage increase, saying it was “fair and necessary.”

Other economists have warned that the cumulative effect of two double-digit hikes will inf luence prices far more in 2020 and will force the central bank to slow its series of interest rate cuts.

“We’re starting to see some effect of high minimum wage increases on inflation in the form of higher core inflation, and that will make the central bank more prudent,” said Ernesto Revilla, head of Latin America economics at Citigroup Inc. in New York. “It will make Banxico go slowly in the easing cycle.”

In addition, Mexico created 30% fewer formal jobs through November compared with last year. The central bank had said in an August note that the wage hike at the start of the year contribute­d to that job creation slowdown.

Banxico, which is forecast to cut its key interest rate by a quarter of a point on Thursday, didn’t reply to a request for comment on the effect of this week’s increase on jobs and prices.

Mexican salaries are rising across the board, which, along with higher remittance­s, will allow consumer spending to grow faster than the rest of the economy next year, according to Bank of America’s Carlos Capistran.

The latest minimum wage adjustment is “very good for the country, very good for businesses and especially good for workers,” Gustavo de Hoyos, who heads Coparmex, one of Mexico’s largest business chambers, said in a video posted on his Twitter account. This is the “biggest increase in real terms since 1988,” he said.

Mexico’s minimum wage is soaring so rapidly that it now will cover a much larger number of workers, amplifying its effect.

This year’s minimum wage hike boosted only about 1% of salaries in the formal economy. Next year, that figure may reach 10%, as more workers are earning less than the new income floor, according to Jose Luis de la Cruz, director of the Industrial Developmen­t and Economic Growth Institute in Mexico City.

“The positive impacts, as well as the challenges for inflation and for companies, will be greater,” he said.

Spinetto, Cattan and Martin write for Bloomberg.

 ?? Pedro Pardo AFP/Getty Images ?? WORKERS in San Luis Potosi. Mexico’s minimum wage will rise to $6.50 a day.
Pedro Pardo AFP/Getty Images WORKERS in San Luis Potosi. Mexico’s minimum wage will rise to $6.50 a day.

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