Friday, January 16, 2026

AMLO, business leader agree on apprenticeship program

President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador met today with the influential Business Coordinating Council (CCE) and won its support for a new apprenticeship program.

López has proposed paid apprenticeships for young people called “Youths building the future.”

The program is intended to guarantee access to education and employment opportunities. “[Youths] will be hired as apprentices and will be working for businesses . . . and will be paid a salary,” said López.

The program is to be coordinated with business owners who will assume the role of mentors and be in charge of the youths’ training.

“Through a simple mechanism, the government will transfer funds to cover the youths’ salaries,” explained the president-elect.

López has estimated that some 110 billion pesos (US $5.7 billion) is needed to guarantee access to public or private universities, as well as to pay for the apprenticeship program.

Today, CCE president Juan Pablo Castañón agreed with the plan, which both parties will sign once election authorities officially ratify the election results.

A 2016 study by the World Bank identified youths who neither studied nor worked (ninis, in Spanish, for ni estudian, ni trabajan) as a growing problem in Mexico, particularly among young men. It is a problem throughout Latin America and youths aged 19 to 24 are those who are most affected.

They leave school to go to work but find few job opportunities. So they are recruited by organized crime, said the report, entitled Ninis in Latin America: 20 Million Youths Searching for Opportunities.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexican peso bills and coins with a wallet

Mexican peso hits its strongest level against the dollar in over a year

1
The peso closed at 17.65 to the dollar on Thursday, its strongest position in over 18 months.
US soldiers look out over an arid valley

NYT: US is pressuring Mexico to allow US troops to fight cartels

12
New reports show that post-Venezuela, the US is ramping up pressure on Mexico to allow US military action — even as some US lawmakers seek to block such actions.
Valeria Palacios

Veracruz student Valeria Palacios wins the World Education Medal

1
With artifical intelligence and robotics, the 19-year-old college student from Veracruz tackled a range of social and environmental problems facing her community.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity