The Pak Banker

Mexico to hike daily minimum wage by 20pc

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The Mexican government agreed to raise the daily minimum wage by 20%, the second consecutiv­e major increase, but experts said a large hike could make it challengin­g for the central bank to keep core inflation under control.

"We continue to gradually recover the value that the minimum salary has lost over time without creating instabilit­y, without creating inflation," Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said. "This is an important increase." The daily minimum wage will be 123.22 pesos ($6.36) in 2020; in the northern border region, where it was raised by 5%, it will be 185.56 pesos. Nearly 11 million Mexican workers earn the equivalent of a minimum wage.

Lopez Obrador, a leftist who took office in December 2018, has vowed to close the wage gap in a country where almost half of the population lives in poverty. Mexico increased the minimum wage by 16% this year, during which inflation eased to 2.97% in November, just below the central bank's target of 3%. But, core inflation, which strips out some volatile elements, was higher last month at 3.65%.

"In the past, real wage growth had been generally aligned with productivi­ty," economists at JPMorgan wrote in a note issued ahead of the decision. "The new wage policy has opened a significan­t wedge between the two, which eventually will likely create economic imbalances." The central bank, known as Banxico, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. In its most recent minutes, some Banxico members raised uncertaint­y around changes to the minimum wage.

However, experts said a significan­t change to the minimum wage could put the breaks on the central bank's trend of cutting interest rates, which were cut from 8.25% at the end of last year to 7.50%. Banxico will likely cut interest rates again on Thursday, to 7.25%, according to a Reuters poll of 16 analysts. At the end of 2020, the rate could be at 6.50%. Experts also said that a significan­t increase of the minimum wage would put pressure on salaries in the formal economy, a dynamic called a "lighthouse effect" that is difficult to calculate but usually drives up inflation.

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