AMLO border focus a welcome development
On Jan. 6, I was invited to a speech by Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in Juárez. AMLO was traveling through Mexico’s northern border region to promote the Jan. 1 launching of his northern border zone program, which he calls his “border free zone.” The elements of this program, which covers 43 border municipalities, include doubling the minimum wage in the region to the equivalent of $9 per day, decreasing the cost of fuel to the same as the cost in the U.S. border region and cutting the value-added tax from 16 percent to 8 percent. A major goal is to attract new investment to Mexico’s border region, and the tool that will be used to do this is decreasing the corporate tax on the border from 30 percent to 20 percent.
AMLO was welcomed by a delegation that included Chihuahua Gov. Javier Corral, and Juárez Mayor Armando Cabada. He was accompanied on his trip by Graciela Márquez Colín, the Mexican minister of the economy. I was curious to see how AMLO would be received, given tthat he is of a different political party than Corral, and some public differences have been noted.
Corral spoke first, highlighting his state’s importance to the Mexican economy and emphasizing that Chihuahua needs infrastructure funding to keep growing. He noted that for every peso the state collects in taxes and sends to Mexico City, it receives only 42 centavos back in funding. He called for a better distribution of taxes between the federal and state governments. Corral also thanked AMLO for launching his new border program but was concerned that few details were in place. He ended his speech by saying that despite different ideologies, political stances, or even the way that each leader views democracy, they need to collaborate.
Márquez Colín spoke next, telling the audience that raising productivity, developing local advantages, and more and better employment opportunities were the goals of the border free zone. Through a series of slides, she highlighted how important Mexico’s northern border, and particularly the state of Chihuahua, is to AMLO’s administration. Of the six Mexican border states, Chihuahua accounts for 12.7 percent of Foreign Direct Investment. Its eight municipalities directly on the border account for 32.5 percent of the exports generated by Mexico’s northern border region, and Chihuahua is Mexico’s No. 1 exporting state. Márquez Colín emphasized that Mexico has to take advantage of the economic advantages of the U.S. border region,
and that the border region in general has advantages not found anywhere else in the world.
AMLO followed and started by praising Juárez’s role in Mexican history. He then discussed how certain regions such as the southern part of Mexico have historically been neglected. His administration is focused on developing a transportation route to develop commercial opportunities across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in southern Mexico, which connects the Pacific and Atlantic oceans by a 124-mile-wide land strip. AMLO also said that under the country’s energy reform, Mexico was promised an increase in its oil production, which has not transpired, and the country continues to import refined fuel. He was adamant that this will change.
AMLO argued that reducing taxes and fuel costs will allow employers in the border region will to pay their workers more than the minimum wage and that disequilibrium (i.e. inflation) will not occur in the border economy. He received strong applause when he said that Mexico had demanded during the NAFTA renegotiations that the agreement be reviewed every six years instead of the two years that the Trump administration was proposing. And unlike his counterpart in the U.S., “I come from a country in which there is universal suffrage and no re-election. Therefore, I do not have to worry about being re-elected.”
As to workers’ salaries, although in border cities such as Juárez workers typically earn more than Mexico’s minimum wage, he questions why Mexican workers in general are paid so much less than counterparts in places such as the U.S. He argued that for workers to be able to earn more money, GDP has to rise from 3 percent to 6 percent. He said that there has to be a focus on the economy so that Mexicans do not feel that they have to leave their country and their families to seek opportunities elsewhere.
In response to Gov. Corral’s concern about the details of AMLO’s border plan still not being available, he said that very shortly the elements will be clarified. He agreed with Corral’s remark that in spite of existing differences, a strong dialogue needs to take place for the good of the nation. He concluded by stating, “We will be back in three months to see how you are doing.”
From the viewpoint of a U.S. businessman who works on the border, AMLO’s remarks bode well for the border region. I am encouraged that the new Mexican president has made border development and the effort to attract more investment here a priority. The U.S. side of the border can benefit by supplying new industry in Mexico. I am still concerned that raising wages, cutting taxes, decreasing energy costs and starting major projects could cause inflation, which would derail AMLO’s efforts. However, the very fact that he is taking time to focus on the border is welcome news.