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2006 News Releases
For immediate release:
October 18, 2006
Media contact:
James Hoard
Phone: (214) 922-5307
e-mail: james.hoard@dal.frb.org
Texas Border Microfinance,
RFID Boom and Mexico’s Apparel Exports Focus of
Dallas Fed Publication
DALLAS—The latest issue
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas’ Southwest
Economy examines microfinance in the Texas border
region, Texas’ RFID boom and the effects of trade
policy on Mexico’s apparel exports.
In “Incubating Microfinance:
The Texas Border Experience,” assistant economist
Laila Assanie and economic analyst Raghav Virmani find
that the Texas border region is prime for microfinance
initiatives.
“Despite its minimalist
approach, microfinance can play a significant role in
economic development and complement the larger-scale
efforts in promoting education, infrastructure development
and business investment in the Texas–Mexico border
region,” the authors write.
The number of single-person microenterprises
along the Texas border grew by 113 percent between 1992
and 2002, according to the article.
Microfinance groups such as Acción
Texas are finding success in the area, increasing its
portfolio with a 90 percent loan repayment rate.
The importance of microfinance
to development was recognized last week with the awarding
of the Nobel Peace Prize to the movement's pioneers—Bangladesh
economist Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank, which he
founded in 1976.
Former Dallas Fed board member
Julie England—vice president and general manager
of Texas Instruments’ radio frequency identification
(RFID) business—discusses the expanding RFID industry
in “Charting the Course for RFID.”
The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex
has emerged as a major player in the RFID industry with
more than 121 companies working on some aspect of the
technology, according to England.
RFID allows companies to increase
efficiency in supply chains and lower labor costs. Future
applications include the imbedding of RFID chips in
a cell phone antenna to act as an electronic payment
device.
“We’re going to want
to take our payment instruments and use them when we
travel anywhere in the world,” England says. “So
consumers will join retailers as future drivers of RFID-enabled
functions.”
In “NAFTA, Trade Diversion
and Mexico’s Textiles and Apparel Boom and Bust,”
vice president and senior economist William C. Gruben
discusses how U.S.–Mexico apparel trade has been
affected by changes in U.S. trade policy with respect
to other apparel exporters, such as China and the Central
American countries.
As Gruben explains, NAFTA gave
Mexico special trade privileges that facilitated its
apparel exports to the United States. He argues that
other apparel exporters to the U.S. could have undercut
Mexican prices had they shared these privileges. At
the start of the current decade, some of these other
countries began to receive trade privileges for their
own apparel exports.
Once the United States opened
more fully to other apparel exporters, NAFTA’s
special benefits were no longer special. Responding
to the oft-made allegation that China began to undercut
Mexican prices, Gruben notes that China had the lion’s
share of the U.S. apparel market before NAFTA went into
effect.
He argues that the real question
is not how or why China undercut Mexico in the present
decade but what allowed Mexico to undercut China in
the previous decade.
Find the September/October issue
of Southwest Economy online at www.dallasfed.org.
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