Thursday, March 5, 2026

Realtors welcome decentralization, anticipate boost for sector

The real estate industry has welcomed federal government plans to decentralize some of its departments.

Three federal secretariats will move their offices from Mexico City. two to the southeast and one to the north. Tourism Secretariat headquarters will be in Chetumal, Quintana Roo, the Secretariat of the Environment and Natural Resources will operate from Mérida, Yucatán, and the Economy Secretariat will be headquartered in Monterrey, Nuevo León.

The president of the Mexican Association of Real Estate Professionals (AMPI) said decentralization had been proposed several times in the past, but faced several bureaucratic obstacles.

“Finally, it looks like there’s a willful determination to make this happen,” said Alejandro Kuri Pheres, who expects the process will give a boost to the real estate sector and be good for the states’ economies.

Yucatán and Quintana Roo are good choices for the two departments, he said, because the Mexican Caribbean draws nearly 40% of all Mexico’s foreign tourism and Yucatán hosts a large part of the rainforests that still exist.

The vice-president of the Caribbean chapter of the Business Coordinating Council (CCE) agreed.

Ángel Lemus Mateos explained that decentralization will have a positive impact on real estate through the leasing of office space and the construction of new space.

It will also provide a stimulus to business tourism.

Lemus said moving the Tourism Secretariat to Chetumal will consolidate the city’s economy, where the workforce has depended for years on job opportunities within the state government.

AMPI president Kuri told a press conference earlier this week that moving a government department into a new location is like installing a large business, an industrial plant or even an airport.

He also observed that corruption is costly to the real estate industry because of the many permits, licenses, procedures, gifts and rewards that must be paid, and add 14-16% to the total cost, and welcomes the new government’s campaign promise to address it.

For another real estate professional the limitations on foreign ownership of land on the coast is an issue she would like to see addressed.

María Tayde Favila Soriano, head of the Cancún AMPI chapter, told the newspaper El Economista that her organization plans to discuss constitutional reform that would eliminate the constraints on foreigners buying land in the coastal zone. At present they can only do so with a bank trust or through a corporation.

Source: El Economista (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
tar on a beach in Veracruz

Pemex denies responsibility in Veracruz oil spill

0
First detected off the coast of Pajapan on Monday, the spill has since spread to the municipalities of Tatahuicapan, Mecayapan, Coatzacoalcos and Cárdenas, Tabasco, affecting at least 150 km of coastline.
Attacks on Isfahan, Iran, on Wednesday.

With war on Iran intensifying, 279 Mexicans have been evacuated from the Middle East

0
Evacuation has been complicated by the number of countries in the region that have closed their airspace, and by the need to identify safe land routes.
Container yard at the port of Manzanillo, showing stacked shipping containers, cargo trucks, and heavy equipment in operation. Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico, May 2, 2025.

Mexico’s export revenue was up 8% in January

0
Reported by the national statistics agency INEGI last Friday, the year-over-year increase was the largest for the month of January since 2023, when export revenue surged 25.6%.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity