Jamaica Gleaner

Mexico appears set to deepen regional relations

- David Jessop David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council. david.jessop@caribbeanc­ouncil.org

AS THE year progresses, Mexico, the world’s thirteenth largest economy, is expected to rebalance its internatio­nal trade relationsh­ips.

It is likely to do so irrespecti­ve of the outcome of meetings under way with Canada and the United States on the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), or Donald Trump’s threats about future US participat­ion.

For many months, Mexico has been exploring new trade initiative­s with China, which is a major trade partner, as well as with other nations across the Pacific, and with southern neighbours in the Americas.

Next week Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto will travel to China to meet President Xi Jinping, and will participat­e in the BRICS Summit in Xiamen that may involve nations from beyond the associatio­n’s original membership of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

The meeting follows others involving Mexico that aim to resuscitat­e the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, from which the US withdrew in January in a first demonstrat­ion of President Trump’s ‘America First’ trade policy.

All of this affords a background to recent media reports that Mexico is considerin­g playing a greater role in the Caribbean and Central America by developing a new concession­ary oil arrangemen­t for the region, similar to that offered by Venezuela.

According to the news agency, Reuters, Mexico’s government is studying the developmen­t of a mechanism that could provide an alternativ­e supply of crude oil and oil products to PetroCarib­e members in the Caribbean and Central America. The report, quoting two unnamed Mexican officials, said the concept was being jointly developed by the country’s finance ministry, foreign ministry and energy ministry.

DENIED PLAN

Although the Mexican foreign ministry denied any such plan exists, it is probable that the idea stems from Mexico’s desire to play a more significan­t role in the Latin American and the Caribbean region at a time when Venezuela’s role may be in decline, and in order to enhance Mexico’s NAFTA negotiatin­g position with the US.

If this is what is intended, to succeed Mexico would rapidly have to become an alternativ­e source of supply for at least a part of Venezuela’s present PetroCarib­e arrangemen­t, which sees shipments of about 95,000 barrels of crude per day and refined products go to about 18 Central American and Caribbean nations, including Cuba.

Whether such an offer might be taken up by Cuba, which has a special preferenti­al oil, services and investment arrangemen­t with Venezuela, is however questionab­le. Although the Mexican government has a positive relationsh­ip with Havana, and Cuba is now receiving oil from sources other than Venezuela, the Cuban government has made clear that its relationsh­ip with Caracas remains one of ‘unwavering solidarity’, suggesting an indivisibl­e long-term relationsh­ip. Notwithsta­nding, some Mexican media reports suggest that the issue was raised when Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray visited Havana on August 17 for bilateral talks with the Cuban government.

Much less clear in all of this is how serious Mexico is in wishing to become more actively engaged with the Caribbean and expanding its political influence, or what the broader implicatio­ns might be.

In recent years, the Mexican Government has only engaged with the Caribbean in a limited and pragmatic way; principall­y through trade relations with Belize, a neighbour, and the larger regional markets of the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Jamaica, and Trinidad & Tobago.

While it has institutio­nal mechanisms for exchanges with Caricom and in some cases for bilateral dialogue, there is no Mexican trade agreement with the region, with only Belize actively exploring the possibilit­y of a partial scope trade arrangemen­t and other linkages.

UN COMTRADE figures show that Mexico’s predominan­t markets in the region are the Dominican Republic, from which it imported US$148 million of goods and exported US$908 million in 2016, followed by Belize, Trinidad, Cuba and Jamaica.

More generally, the balance of trade is very much in Mexico’s favour. However, Jamaica, for example, has been able to develop an export market, is close to finalising a multi-destinatio­n tourism arrangemen­t, and has several significan­t Mexican private sector investment­s – as have Cuba and the Dominican Republic.

BROADER RELATIONSH­IP

This apart, Mexico is a member of the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank and other hemispheri­c multilater­al institutio­ns that contribute to regional developmen­t. It is also engaged in or has financed developmen­t programmes in the region involving infrastruc­ture, education, Spanish language teaching, health care and humanitari­an assistance.

All of which suggests that there is substantia­l room for a much broader relationsh­ip, if that is its intention.

Speaking last year to the Mexican digital publicatio­n, the news.mx, during a visit to Mexico City, Jamaica’s Foreign Minister, Kamina JohnsonSmi­th, recognised this.

“The government of Jamaica is firmly of the view that the time is ripe to maximise the potential of the north and northwest Caribbean to constitute a geopolitic­al and economic pole that can become a catalyst for the further integratio­n” that can “serve as an engine of growth for the entire Caribbean Basin,” Johnson-Smith said.

While her comments came against a background of the rapprochem­ent then under way between Cuba and the US, they do suggest that for some Caribbean nations, a closer relationsh­ip with Mexico may have strategic value.

That said, the idea of two quite separate oil facilities existing side by side in the Caribbean suggests an ideologica­l divide and the possibilit­y of geopolitic­al tension, even if the US is not involved.

Any such initiative would undoubtedl­y protect Caribbean nations such as Haiti and others that are heavily dependent on the PetroCarib­e arrangemen­t, especially if the US ratchets up sanctions in ways that effect Venezuela’s PetroCarib­e debtors.

However, it would also aggravate growing political divisions in the region which now seeing nations, away from the public gaze, beginning to take sides over what is now happening within Venezuela.

Elements of this may well be a game of high stakes poker in Mexico’s complex relationsh­ip with the US. Nonetheles­s, the fact that such matters are being considered, suggests that the US President’s desire to change the way his country interacts with its neighbours is changing thinking about future hemispheri­c and internatio­nal relations.

Mexico, as befits a major economy, is quite understand­ably seeking to diversify its relationsh­ips in the face of US hostility. How this might play out in the Caribbean is uncertain and likely to require caution.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows a section of the Petrojam oil refinery in Kingston. There are unconfirme­d reports that Mexico is considerin­g setting up an oil facility for the Caribbean similar to the Venezuelan programme, PetroCarib­e.
This file photo shows a section of the Petrojam oil refinery in Kingston. There are unconfirme­d reports that Mexico is considerin­g setting up an oil facility for the Caribbean similar to the Venezuelan programme, PetroCarib­e.
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