Mexico Industry

Displaying 79 - 84 of 87

 

The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) jumpstarted Mexico’s textiles and garments industries in 1994, when suddenly raw materials like cotton were allowed to flow freely from, and finished goods into, the US market. By 2000, Mexico had become the largest exporter of clothing to the US.

 

Over much of the past decade, Mexico has been one of the most attractive targets for foreign direct investment (FDI) in aerospace. Since 2006 the industry has grown at an average annual rate of 18%, and exports have tripled from $2bn to an estimated $6.1bn in 2013. FDI has focused on the traditional northern industrial giants, including Baja...

 

With a track record dating back to Ford’s first assembly plant in 1925, Mexico’s automotive manufacturing has emerged as a key driver of industrial growth. It accounted for one-sixth of economic growth in the first quarter of 2013, according to PwC México estimates. The world’s eighth-largest producer and fourth-biggest exporter of vehicles,...

Chapter | Research & Innovation from The Report: Mexico 2014

As the government attempts to open strategic sectors of the economy to competition and attract more foreign direct investment (FDI), much is also being done to improve science and research as a means to spur innovation. Increased spending, coupled with changes in regulation, is expected to fuel the growth of start-ups and make the business environment more dynamic. The current government has...

Chapter | Industry & Mining from The Report: Mexico 2014

At 17% of GDP, manufacturing is a pillar of the Mexican economy. More than at any point in the past 15 years, Mexican industry is today able to compete with China as a low-cost manufacturing alternative and with other high-income markets as a viable location for outsourcing sophisticated manufacturing. This is perhaps the most promising time for Mexican manufacturing since NAFTA was...

The second-largest economy in Latin America, Mexico seems poised to enter a new growth phase as the government of Enrique Peña Nieto implements radical changes in a number of sectors across the economy. The reforms, aimed at raising the competitiveness of the Mexican economy, have the potential to establish Mexico’s position as a regional powerhouse. 

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