
Mexican Economic Information
Mexico has a free market economy that recently entered the trillion
dollar class. It contains a mixture of modern and outmoded industry
and agriculture, increasingly dominated by the private sector.
Recent administrations have expanded competition in seaports,
railroads, telecommunications, electricity generation, natural
gas distribution, and airports. Per capita income is one-fourth
that of the US; income distribution remains highly unequal. Trade
with the US and Canada has tripled since the implementation of
NAFTA in 1994. Mexico has 12 free trade agreements with over 40
countries including, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, the European
Free Trade Area, and Japan, putting more than 90% of trade under
free trade agreements. The new Felipe CALDERON administration
that took office in December 2006 faces many of the same challenges
that former President FOX tried to tackle, including the need
to upgrade infrastructure, modernize the tax system and labor
laws, and allow private investment in the energy sector. CALDERON
has stated that his top priorities include reducing poverty and
creating jobs. The success of his economic agenda will depend
on his ability to garner support from the opposition.
| Economic
Variable |
Result |
| GDP (purchasing power parity): |
$1.149 trillion (2006 est.) |
| GDP - real growth rate: |
4.8% (2006 est.) |
| GDP - composition by sector: |
agriculture: 3.9%
industry: 26.7%
services: 69.4% (2006 est.) |
| Labor force: |
44.51 million (2006 est.) |
| Unemployment rate: |
3.2% plus underemployment of perhaps 25% (2006 est.) |
| Popn. below poverty line: |
17.6% (2004) |
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