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Mexican Military Up to 1930, military leaders dominated Mexican politics. PRI era instituted a civilian- controlled military. Today, military is heavily involved in drug wars. Some concern about corruption Does not intervene in Mexican politics

Mexican Military Up to 1930, military leaders dominated Mexican politics. PRI era instituted a civilian-controlled military. Today, military is heavily

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Mexican Military

• Up to 1930, military leaders dominated Mexican politics.

• PRI era instituted a civilian-controlled military.

• Today, military is heavily involved in drug wars.– Some concern about corruption

• Does not intervene in Mexican politics

Mexico: What Type of Regime?

Authoritarian in 20th century under PRI.

Which of the following apply to Mexico TODAY?RATE MEXICO IN THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES (1=Excellent; 5=Poor)

• Political Rights and Civil Liberties• Competitive Elections• Rule of Law• Civil Society• Civic Culture• Capitalism• Independent Judiciary• Civilian-controlled Military

EMERGING/TRANSITIONAL DEMOCRACY

Mexican Economic Development: 1940-2006

“The Mexican Miracle”

• 1940-1980– Remarkable growth– Annual Avg. GDP Growth=6.5%

• Reasons for Success– Government stability – Oil Revenue– Emphasis on Industrialization

• Subsidies for domestic industries

– Import Substitution• High tariffs

– Nationalization of industry.• Oil, railroad, electricity, & thousands of companies.

Parastatal

• Company or agency owned (or partially owned) by the government.

• Usually private sector companies in the U.S.• By 1980, the government controlled

over 1,000 firms.

• PEMEX (Mexican Petroleum)– Net worth of $415 billion– Employs approx 140,000

Mexican Debt Crisis, 1980s-90s

• Heavy borrowing to industrialize– Gambled on high oil prices– 1980s: Prices DROPPED

• Import Substitution=Industrial inefficiency– Uncompetitive in global market

• Runaway Inflation: 1987=159%

Total Debt1970=6 billion 1982=80 billion1976=26 billion 1987=107 billion

(70% of GNP)

Bailout of 1995

• International investors withdrew $5 billion from Mexican market.

• Lacked ability to pay debt.– Borrowed $50 billion from IMF and the U.S.

PRI Becomes Market-Oriented

New policies of Late ‘80s through ‘90s.1. Debt Reduction2. Austerity Measures– Cut deficit in half in 3 years.– Raised taxes– Reduced social services

3. Privatization– Sold parastatals– Only about 100 left today.

4. Opening Up the Economy

• Protectionism to neoliberalism• Import substitution to structural adjustment – Allow FDI.

• 1986: Joined General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)– Precursor to WTO.– Diversified exports (not just oil)

• 1992: Signed North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

• United States, Mexico and Canada• Eliminate tariff barriers• Greatly reduce

other barriers (i.e., licensing fees and quotas for foreign companies)

Maquiladoras

• Foreign-owned factories in Mexico.

• Goods are imported to Mexico.

• Made in Mexico.• Then exported.• Largely located in

North

Zapatistas

• State of Chiapas• Indigenous Mayan farmers

Concerns• Abject poverty• Few elite controlled arable

land (seized ejidos)• NAFTA

– Ended ejidos

• PRI “Democracy”• No self-rule

– Elite land owners and PRI

Zapatistas• Zapatista Army of National

Liberation (EZLN)• Subcomandante Marcos• January 1, 1994 (NAFTA

enacted)– EZLN seized 6 towns

• Mexican army clashed with EZLN

• Cease fire after 12 days– Approx. 200-400 died.

• 2001: 400,000 marched on Mexico City

• Few goals realized