Mexico Lagged the Rest of Latin America in the NAFTA Era, Report Finds

Washington, DC ― Despite President Trump’s suggestions to the contrary, Mexico has not fared well during the 23 years it has been party to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). An updated report from the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) finds that poverty in Mexico went up under NAFTA, while per capita economic growth lagged the rest of Latin America. Real wages have hardly risen since NAFTA’s implementation in 1994. Almost five million family farmers were displaced. All these factors contributed to a post-NAFTA surge in emigration to the United States.

[Dean Baker| March 29, 2017 |Center for Economic and Policy Research]

“Many people think that since American workers lost out from NAFTA, Mexicans must have benefited, but the data show that this is not true,” CEPR Co-Director and economist Mark Weisbrot said. “The Mexican economy has performed poorly since NAFTA went into effect, as compared with the rest of Latin America or with its own past; and more than 20 million additional people are below the poverty line.” 

The paper notes that Mexican national statistics show that the poverty rate of 55.1 percent in 2014 was higher than the 52.4 rate in 1994, the year NAFTA took effect ― meaning that there were 20.5 million more people in poverty in 2014. Data from the UN Economic Commission on Latin America shows that the rest of Latin America did far better in reducing poverty than Mexico did during the NAFTA era.

“The very poor performance of the Mexican economy contributed to a surge in emigration to the United States,” the report states. “From 1994 to 2000, the annual number of Mexicans emigrating to the United States soared by 79 percent. The number of Mexican-born residents living in the United States more than doubled from 4.5 million in 1990 to 9.4 million in 2000.”

The report recognizes that “NAFTA was just one variable among others that could account for Mexico’s poor economic performance over the past 23 years,” but that it appears related to others that have contributed to Mexico’s subpar economic experience since 1994.

Notably, Mexico competes heavily with China for access to the US import market, putting Mexican workers in competition with their counterparts in China where wages have been lower. In China, state intervention in the economy, including in currency markets and in the banking sector has given China a considerable advantage over Mexico ― where the banking system is not only private but majority foreign owned.

“As the US and Mexico consider renegotiating NAFTA, there should be a serious discussion of what went wrong for Mexico, as well as for the United States,” Weisbrot said.

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