Arab Times

Mexico’s budget keeps ‘expectatio­ns’ in check

Aims to boost crude output

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MEXICO CITY, Dec 16, (Agencies): Mexico’s new leftist government presented a first budget aimed at calming nervous markets while honoring pledges to increase welfare spending, saying it would run a bigger surplus next year once interest payments on debt were excluded.

Finance Minister Carlos Urzua presented the budget on Saturday evening, setting out plans to find more money for both the elderly and unemployed youngsters by slimming down several government ministries and through forecasts of higher tax revenues.

The budget is a major test of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s economic credibilit­y, which was shaken when he said on Oct 29 he was scrapping a partly-built $13 billion new Mexico City airport on the basis of a referendum that was widely panned as illegitima­te.

Lopez Obrador took office on Dec 1, and much of the new spending covered pledges made during the election campaign.

Markets might even be somewhat buoyed by the fact the spending plan is more or less what was expected, said Raul Feliz, an economist at the CIDE think tank in Mexico City. “As a sort of relief that there’s no really crazy stuff in it,” he said.

The plan, which is due to by approved by Congress before the end of the year, forecasts a slight slowdown in economic growth to about 2 percent next year from an estimated 2.3 percent in 2018.

The package also targets a 2019 primary budget surplus – a figure which strips out payments on existing debts – of 1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). That would be better than the 0.7 percent primary surplus estimated for 2018.

Signal

That was an important signal, analysts said.

“The new government’s 2019 budget proposal is fiscally responsibl­e both on the cover and in the details,” Gabriel Casillas, chief economist at bank Banorte, said on Twitter.

Still, markets are likely to monitor the progress of the budget well into next year to see if Urzua can meet his targets.

Investors soured on Lopez Obrador following his announceme­nt cancelling the airport, dumping Mexican bonds, stocks and the peso. He argued the project was too costly and tainted by corruption, though he has not produced evidence to support this.

Since then, the government has been trying to craft a deal with the holders of bonds that were issued to finance the airport. Although the two sides have been moving closer, the dispute remains a factor of uncertaint­y, said the CIDE’s Feliz.

Markets are also keeping tabs on the financial health of heavily-indebted state oil firm Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, which Lopez Obrador has pledged to revive. The budget envisions an increase of some 14 percent in funding for the company.

To find extra cash, the plan prescribes substantia­l budget cuts to a number of ministries and the judiciary, with whom Lopez Obrador has been at odds since the Supreme Court this month froze a law mandating public sector pay reductions. Urzua told a news conference that only the top layers of government bureaucrac­y would have their pay cut. Lower level civil servants would get raises, he said.

Mexican President

detailed plans Saturday to “rescue” the national oil industry by boosting crude production at the state-owned oil company by 45 percent before 2025. Speaking from

a Gulf coast city 50 miles (85 kilometers) from an oil field that sustained Mexican public finances for decades, Lopez Obrador said the goal is for Petroleos Mexicanos to raise crude output to 2.4 million barrels per day, from the current 1.65 million barrels per day.

“We are going to invest where we know there’s petroleum and where it costs us less to extract it,” he told a jubilant crowd of oil workers. Lopez Obrador previously announced plans to invest 75 billion pesos ($3.65 billion) of savings from a government austerity program into Pemex.

The company has struggled to come up with funds in recent years amid mounting pension obligation­s, high tax rates, rampant fuel theft and inefficien­cies.

The president shared an anecdote about once chatting with a man on a plane to Ciudad del Carmen who was delivering a $1 million watch to a customer in the city, suggesting that the watch was a symbol of corruption and theft in the oil industry. “This is why the country is sinking,” he said, vowing to root out pilfering of the state entity.

Lopez Obrador described his plan to “rescue” the oil industry as “realistic” and reiterated a pledge to move Pemex’s headquarte­rs from the capital to Ciudad del Carmen.

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