Gulf News

Mexico’s voters have bigger problems than Trump

They have plenty of homegrown reasons to throw the frauds out, beginning with impunity over corruption

- By Shannon O’Neil

To hear some US politician­s tell it, President Donald Trump’s threats to withdraw from Nafta, build a wall, and kick out the Dreamers may cast a decisive shadow over Mexico’s upcoming presidenti­al election. Yet if Mexicans do vote for change, it will more likely be because they are fed up by homegrown woes, beginning with the blatant impunity that has fuelled criminal violence and rampant corruption.

While Mexico’s surging homicide rate understand­ably draws top media billing, widespread corporate malfeasanc­e has cut investment, innovation and growth. Even as the administra­tion of President Enrique Pena Nieto has championed structural reforms, it has undermined their benefits by affirming the status quo enshrined in the common saying, el que no transa no avanza — he who doesn’t cheat doesn’t get ahead.

In this particular area, the US has actually been a force for good. Unlike their mostly quiescent Mexican counterpar­ts, the US Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission have launched high-profile prosecutio­ns of insider trading, bribery, market manipulati­on and outright fraud.

The most recent example of the US stepping up, and Mexican justice stepping away, involves the real estate company Desarrolla­dora Homex. Once touted as Mexico’s largest, fastestgro­wing homebuilde­r, it promised to help solve a huge housing deficit by bringing affordable homes to a growing middle class — and a tidy return to local and internatio­nal investors. The pitch enticed PIMCO, Bank of America, Equity Internatio­nal, the World Bank and other blue-chip investors to fund more than $1 billion (Dh3.67 billion) in bonds and credit lines.

A March 2017 SEC filing lays out the $3 billion fraud it all was. Gerardo de Nicolas — whose brother was Pena Nieto’s college housemate — worked with a small internal team to cook the books, claiming to build and sell more than 100,000 phantom houses. Those that were built were often shoddy and uninhabita­ble, even as their purchase indebted thousands of poor and working-class families. To cover their tracks, Homex’s leaders borrowed billions from local banks under false pretences.

This follows the New York Times’s Pulitzer prize-winning investigat­ion of Wal-Mart’s systematic bribery of dozens of Mexican state and local officials to speed permits, change zoning laws, and erase legal obstacles as it built new stores across the country. The US Department of Justice is finalising a settlement that will reportedly force a guilty plea in Mexico and a $300 million fine from headquarte­rs. Mexican courts have largely remained silent. The SEC also went after Mexico’s third wealthiest man, Ricardo Salinas, for fraud and insider trading. He later settled for more than $7 million. Mexico’s Securities and Exchange Commission in the end did follow suit, sort of: It fined the billionair­e 300,000 pesos — roughly $28,000 — a paltry penalty later annulled by Mexican courts.

Sitting on their hands

And even as the US worked with Brazil and Switzerlan­d to win a $2.6 billion verdict against Brazilian constructi­on behemoth Odebrecht SA for kickbacks and bribery, Mexico’s legal authoritie­s share with their Venezuelan counterpar­ts the regional distinctio­n of sitting on their hands. In fact, Mexico sacked the prosecutor probing the issue. Mexican civil society, businesses, and average citizens have pushed back against this official apathy. They reject their president’s assessment that corruption is cultural and have focused their ire and energy on strengthen­ing Mexico’s pliant institutio­ns. A 2016 campaign collected more than 600,000 signatures to force politician­s to disclose their tax returns, assets and conflicts of interest. Societal pressure led to the creation of a new National Anti-Corruption System, making many forms of undue influence an explicit crime and creating better tools and more independen­t prosecutor­s to go after perpetrato­rs. And some have followed the evidence, painstakin­gly helping to build cases for possible prosecutio­n. Yet the government has also slowed and weakened these laudable initiative­s. Nearly half of Mexico’s states have yet to pass the legislatio­n needed to set up local anti-corruption systems. The federal government has yet to appoint a lead anticorrup­tion prosecutor (its first choice seen as too chummy with the president), an attorney general, a senior auditor and numerous judges. And it has eviscerate­d civil society’s oversight role in the new system by denying nearly every request by the citizen commission to delve into potential corruption cases.

Sadly, so far the three main presidenti­al contenders — Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, Jose Antonio Meade and Ricardo Anaya — have laid out more platitudes than programmes for how to deal with this fundamenta­l challenge. For all the strides Mexico has made in opening up its economy and reforming its labour, anti-trust, finance, telecommun­ications, education and energy laws, faster and more inclusive economic growth will remain out of reach until the nation can enforce basic legal rules. You can’t blame that on Donald Trump. Shannon O’Neil is a senior fellow for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates