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Latin America and the Caribbean
An Honest Look at Mexican Economic Growth in the NAFTA EraCEPR Co-Director Mark Weisbrot examines how the Mexican economy has fared under 20 years of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), in a new column in The Guardian. The answer is summed up well in Mark’s original title, “Twenty Years Since NAFTA: Mexico Could Have Done Worse, But It’s Not Clear How.”
Mark writes:
Well if we look at the past 20 years, it’s not a pretty picture. The most basic measure of economic progress, especially for a developing country like Mexico, is the growth of income (or GDP) per person. Out of 20 Latin American countries (South and Central America plus Mexico), Mexico ranks 18, with growth of less than 1 percent annually since 1994. It is of course possible to argue that Mexico would have done even worse without NAFTA, but then the question would be, why?
From 1960-1980 Mexico’s GDP per capita nearly doubled. This amounted to huge increases in living standards for the vast majority of Mexicans. If the country had continued to grow at this rate, it would have European living standards today. And there was no natural barrier to this kind of growth: this is what happened in South Korea, for example. But Mexico, like the rest of the region, began a long period of neoliberal policy changes that …put an end to the prior period of growth and development. The region as a whole grew just 6 percent per capita from 1980-2000; and Mexico grew by 16 percent – a far cry from the 99 percent of the previous 20 years.
He also notes that – unsurprisingly considering how little growth there has been, that “Mexico’s national poverty rate was 52.3 percent in 2012, basically the same as it was in 1994 (52.4 percent).”
CEPR / January 07, 2014
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Note to NYT on Coverage of UK Austerity: Economies Ordinarily GrowDean Baker / January 07, 2014
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How Change Takes Place in the United States: The Minimum WageMark Weisbrot / January 06, 2014
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CEPR and / January 06, 2014
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What Can Mayor de Blasio Do?Dean Baker
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Truthout, January 6, 2014
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Thomas Friedman Tells Readers that "Compromise" Is Not a 4-Letter Word, Readers Tell Thomas Friedman That "Homework" Is Not EitherDean Baker / January 05, 2014
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Cómo se da el cambio en los Estados Unidos: El salario mínimoMark Weisbrot / January 05, 2014
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NYT Tells Readers About Shortage of Skilled Workers in Europe Without Ever Mentioning WagesDean Baker / January 04, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
A veinte años del TLCAN: A México le pudo haber ido peor, pero no está claro cómoMark Weisbrot
The Guardian (RR.UU), 4 de enero 2014
Mark Weisbrot / January 04, 2014
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Twenty Years Since NAFTA: Mexico Could Have Done Worse, But It’s Not Clear HowMark Weisbrot / January 04, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
US Government Misled Public on Critical Role in Colombia’s 2008 Illegal Cross-border AttackAlexander Main / January 03, 2014