|
Issue 5, September/October 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Is Mexico Ready to Roar?
Mexico has become a much more open economy
over the past 20 years. And since the 1994 financial crisis,
Mexican authorities have shown a commitment to macroeconomic
discipline.
Given this progress, many observers
are enthusiastic about the country's prospects. Some, in fact,
wonder whether Mexico is about to take off and become the
world's next economic tiger. The evidence suggests, however,
that much work remains to be done before Mexico can catch
up to First World nations the way countries such as Singapore
and South Korea did in the last few decades.
Until the early 1980s, like most developing
nations, Mexico sharply restricted foreign investment and
trade in hopes of expanding domestic production capacity.
But a severe financial crisis in 1982 prompted a change of
tactics. Foreign investment limits were lifted in 1983 in
some sectors. In 1985, Mexico announced it would join the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and did so the following
year. Between 1985 and 1990, the country's maximum tariff
fell from 100 percent to 20 percent. Most sectors were opened
to foreign investment in 1989, paving the way for a successful
wave of privatizations. By 1994, 80 percent of state-owned
firms had been privatized. The icing on the cake came in the
early 1990s with the implementation of NAFTA, which secured
Mexico's access to North American markets.
 |
Mexico's Transformation Triggers Foreign
Investment and TradeThis open policy has paid off. Among developing
nations today, only China and Brazil receive more foreign
investment. In the past 20 years, foreign investment—most
of it from the United States—has exploded (Chart 1).
Today, firms that receive foreign direct
investment account for over 20 percent of all employment in
Mexico. Naturally, not all regions have benefited equally.
In border states like Chihuahua and Baja California, this
employment share exceeds 50 percent. But southern states like
Chiapas and Oaxaca have been largely left out. In terms of
economic sectors, manufacturing leads in foreign investment,
followed by financial services. Within manufacturing, the
maquiladora sector accounts for a third of all foreign investment.
Exports have surged as well. Mexico's
exports-to-GDP ratio has tripled since 1980, with manufacturing
exports—fueled by foreign investment—accounting for most of
the boom (Chart 2). Manufactured goods have replaced
primary resources as Mexico's main export.
The United States continues to account
for the bulk of Mexico's exports and investment inflows. It
is the destination of almost 90 percent of Mexico's exports
and the source of three-quarters of all foreign investment.
As a result, Mexico's economic performance depends more than
ever on U.S. economic activity. Between 1994 and 2000, the
U.S. expansion enabled Mexico to grow faster than any other
Latin American economy. When U.S. manufacturing began slowing
in fall 2000, Mexico's six-year expansion ended in synchronicity.
Still Not a Success Story
Despite the recent slowdown, Mexico
is now Latin America's largest economy in U.S. dollar terms,
suggesting that the foreign trade and investment boom is translating
into higher economic growth. In light of all the good news,
it is tempting to ask whether Mexico is on the brink of becoming
the next development success story.
Unfortunately, Mexico's performance
since 1994 can't hide the fact that much work remains before
it catches up with First World economies. Real GDP per capita
almost doubled between 1965 and 1982, and the country was
described as an economic miracle. But the downturn in oil
prices and a series of financial crises brought the miracle
period to an end. Mexico's real GDP per capita today is roughly
what it was 20 years ago.
Why haven't the sweeping policy changes
of the past 20 years enabled Mexico to pick up where it left
off in 1982?
Long-run growth requires an expansion
of production capacity. Nations accomplish this by mobilizing
more physical and human resources and becoming more productive
by, for instance, allocating resources better. Several East
Asian countries that were very poor in the 1960s caught up
with the industrialized nations in about two generations by
doing this. These economic tigers include small countries
like Singapore and fairly large ones like South Korea.
Consider South Korea. In 1965, its income
per capita was half of Mexico's (Chart 3). By the
late '80s, however, Korea had overtaken Mexico and is now
about twice as rich as its Latin American counterpart. As
with the other tigers, Korea experienced an export boom, and
its exports-to-GDP ratio has quadrupled since 1970 (Chart
4). Manufactured goods accounted for most of the trade
expansion, as was the case for all the tigers. In this respect,
at least, Mexico does look like a tiger.
But the key to development, and the
area where Mexico falls short, is finding a way to quickly
expand production capacity. MIT economist Alwyn Young is credited
with establishing that on a basic level, the tigers' economic
performance is no mystery.[1] The East Asian tigers, he showed,
grew the way they did because they mobilized physical and
human resources at a mind-boggling rate.
Again, consider South Korea. Its investment-to-GDP
ratio reached almost 40 percent in the late '80s, very high
by international standards (Chart 5). Interestingly,
foreign investment did not play a big role in this. The investment
surge was financed through exceptionally high private and
public domestic savings. By contrast, Mexico's investment
rate, in spite of the recent influx of foreign money, has
hovered around 20 percent for most of the past 30 years.
South Korea's fastest growing resource
has been human capital. In 1960, almost half the working population
lacked a primary school education (Chart 6). Today,
70 percent of working Koreans have at least some secondary
education. Mexico's achievements in this area remain dismal.
A third of the working population has not completed primary
school, and the country today stands roughly where Korea did
40 years ago.
Making a Tiger Out of Mexico
As Nobel Prize economist Robert
Lucas once wrote, "If we know what an economic miracle
is, we ought to be able to make one." Why can't Mexico
replicate what Korea did?
Several factors that contributed to
the success of the East Asian tigers may be impossible to
replicate. For instance, the savings rates they achieved may
not be attainable or even desirable for most emerging nations.
Nevertheless, all developing nations
can learn from the East Asian experience. The tigers provided
several conditions conducive to the accumulation of physical
resources. In most cases, they committed early on to monetary
and fiscal discipline and provided predictable macroeconomic
conditions for investors. They also provided fairly efficient,
stable institutions, such as well-functioning legal systems.
As for human capital, the tigers made a major effort to supply
basic education and health services during early stages of
their catch-up period. Mexico has much work to do in all these
areas.
Fiscal Uncertainty
Since its 1994 financial crisis,
Mexico has made progress in macroeconomic discipline, bringing
inflation down to its lowest in 30 years and fiscal deficits
to below 1 percent of GDP. But the government continues to
depend on unpredictable oil sales for more than a third of
its revenues. The government has been able to trim spending
recently, but in the long run, a credible commitment to fiscal
and monetary discipline demands that Mexico reduce its dependence
on oil revenues. Bond prices plunged recently when Finance
Minister Francisco Gil Diaz likened Mexico's fiscal situation
to Argentina's. The administration has since tried to reassure
financial markets, but Gil Diaz's words struck a sensitive
chord.
Why is it so difficult for Mexico to
find more reliable sources of public revenues? Although tax
rates are not low by international standards, many individuals
and corporations avoid income taxes altogether, making the
tax base small. In Mexico, the informal sector accounts for
an amazing 50 percent of employment. As a result, Mexico's
tax-to-GDP ratio is markedly below Korea's and the United
States'. In fact, it's low even by Latin American standards.
Inefficient Institutions
Ill-functioning institutions add
to the unpredictability of Mexico's business environment.
The biggest problem is that property rights are not effectively
enforced because of an inefficient legal system. According
to recent estimates, collecting on a bad check takes five
times longer in Mexico than in the United States. Resolving
more complicated contractual disputes can take several years.
 |
This poor legal environment has many
negative consequences. Maybe the most detrimental for growth,
and a key reason investment has stagnated, is the impact on
the financial sector. Mexican banks are very hesitant to lend
in an environment where contracts are not properly enforced.
Chart 7 shows the ratio of loans to the private sector to
GDP in the past 40 years in Mexico, Korea and the United States.
Mexico's financial sector is very small and, if anything,
getting smaller. In a recent World Bank survey, over half
of Mexican firms described their access to financing as severely
limited, compared with 15 percent of U.S. firms. In Singapore
(Korea wasn't surveyed), only 10 percent of firms reported
that they face the same situation.
To make matters worse, even when they
can secure financing, Mexican entrepreneurs face burdensome
regulations and a notoriously inefficient bureaucracy. For
example, it takes more than 65 days on average to register
a firm in Mexico, compared with four days in the United States.
On the education front, Mexico's poor
performance is not due to low spending but to its failure
to emphasize basic education. Korea made an early commitment
to basic education, and in 1970, two-thirds of the country's
educational spending was allocated to preprimary and primary
education (Chart 8). As recently as 10 years ago,
only a third of Mexico's education budget was allocated to
preprimary and primary education. This share has increased
to one half in recent years, but it will take a generation
for these efforts to begin paying off.
Toward Long-Term Growth
So what will it take for Mexico
to start growing like a tiger?
First, the government must find a way
to diminish its reliance on oil revenues, perhaps by emphasizing
consumption taxation, since income taxation has failed to
generate sufficient revenue. Consumption taxation has already
shown great potential in Mexico. When a limited value-added
tax (VAT) was introduced in 1978, the tax-to-GDP ratio increased
by 5 percentage points in two years. President Fox's attempts
to expand the VAT base failed last year because he was unable
to assuage concerns that the reform would hurt the poor. Increased
welfare spending may prove necessary to pass the fiscal reform
Mexico needs.[2]
Second, Mexico must improve the country's
institutions. Mexico can learn from the tigers, which made
civil servants' recruitment and promotion merit-based and
their pay competitive with the private sector's. As for the
judiciary, research suggests that simply devoting more resources
to the sector does little to reduce court delays. On the other
hand, devoting a larger share of resources to the reduction
of procedural times can prove very effective, as Peru demonstrated
in 1995.[3]
Third, Mexico must continue fighting
its human capital deficit by targeting basic education.
Daunting as they may sound, these are
only some of the steps needed to achieve long-term development.
As with many other Latin American nations, Mexico direly needs
labor market and energy sector reforms. But although much
work remains to be done, the potential benefits are enormous.
—Erwan Quintin
 |
| About the Author
Quintin is a senior economist
in the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas. Notes
The author thanks Eric Millis
for his research assistance.
- Alwyn Young (1995), "The Tyranny of Numbers:
Confronting the Statistical Realities of the
East Asian Growth Experience," The
Quarterly Journal of Economics (110): August,
pp. 641–80.
- Erwan Quintin (2002), "Mexico's Lawmakers
Begin to Confront a Taxing Issue," The
Dallas Morning News, Jan. 22, p. 27A.
- Maria Dakolias (1999), "Court Performance
Around the World: A Comparative Perspective,"
World Bank Technical Paper no. 430.
About Southwest
Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
 |
|
|