Monday, June 23, 2025

Mexico’s tight grip on finances means a low budget deficit — and slow recovery

0
lopez obrador in tree nursery
Spending on social programs such as the tree-planting initiative has been the president's priority.

Mexico’s refusal to mitigate the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic by boosting public spending is set to leave it with the lowest budget deficit among Latin America’s major economies this year — but that also means its recovery is lagging behind.

President López Obrador, an unlikely fiscal conservative, is fiercely opposed to taking on additional debt. His stimulus plan is equivalent to just 1.1% of GDP, less than a quarter of the average in Latin America according to the UN’s Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Mexico has spent an eighth of what the region’s biggest economy, Brazil, has spent on pandemic help as a proportion of GDP, according to the commission’s data. And most was in the form of loans to small businesses, not grants.

López Obrador has continued to pay the social benefits that are a hallmark of his government, boosting his popularity even though Mexico has notched up the world’s fourth-highest Covid-19 death toll. He has also plowed ahead with a handful of pet infrastructure projects and with aid for the struggling state oil company Pemex. But he has resisted spending more in other areas.

The president justifies his penny-pinching stance as a mixture of principle and necessity. He believes that his government should avoid increasing public debt which, he fears, future generations would have to finance. He abhors state-funded bailouts, which he argues have in the past turned private debts into a public responsibility.

Since taking office in 2018 he has pursued austerity policies in a bid to free up cash for his priority social and infrastructure projects. He says his crusade against profligacy and corruption has so far saved 1.5 trillion pesos (US $75 billion).

His stance leaves Mexico with a healthier budget balance than other economies in the region, Joan Domene at Oxford Economics noted: “By not spending much on pandemic relief measures, Mexico will be very close to running primary surpluses in 2020 and 2021.”

That will hold down its debt levels. Mexico’s general government gross debt-to-GDP ratio is forecast to remain steady year on year at 65.5% in 2021, according to the IMF. By comparison, in Brazil the ratio is forecast to rise more than 1 percentage point to 102.8%.

But López Obrador’s fiscal restraint is ill-timed, economists argue. The IMF and World Bank have for months been urging nations to borrow to tackle the economic crisis caused by the pandemic, despite the long-term problem of higher public debt that this will leave them with.

“We think they could have done more — Mexico has access to credit and the cost of financing for Mexico in dollars is at historically low levels,” Alejandro Werner, the IMF’s western hemisphere director, said recently. That left Mexico with “an enormous growth challenge in the medium term,” he added.

Brazil’s increased spending is set to help its economy through the crisis better than Mexico’s — Brazil will regain its pre-pandemic GDP level by 2023, according to IMF forecasts, but Mexico could take until 2026.

Dos Bocas oil refinery
López Obrador is putting money into infrastructure projects such as the Dos Bocas oil refinery rather than economic stimulus.

Mexico’s economy was contracting even before Covid-19 struck and IMF estimates suggest that it suffered the third-biggest contraction among Latin America’s major economies in 2020. The economy has shrunk year on year for six straight quarters, according to the state statistics institute.

Mexicans themselves are gloomy. In a new poll, 59% felt the economy was faring badly or very badly. Just 14% said it was doing well.

Christopher Garman, managing director for the Americas at consultancy Eurasia Group, said in a recent research note that policies hostile to private investors — Mexico has canceled a partially-built airport and brewery and abruptly changed energy sector rules, for example — are also likely to hold back growth.

Mexico’s economy will get an indirect boost if Joe Biden launches further stimulus measures in the U.S., its biggest trading partner. Furthermore, its restraint on debt has reduced the risk of a credit-rating agency downgrading it to junk — a threat that had once appeared inevitable this year — analysts say.

“A year ago, Mexico was looking worse than every other country in the region,” said Domene. “Now it’s not that bad.”

Andrés Abadía at Pantheon Macroeconomics called a downgrade avoidable, though. He added: “The situation could worsen faster than elsewhere.”

Even if Mexico hits the government’s target of 4.6% GDP growth in 2021 — well above the IMF’s expectation of 3.5% — state revenues are under increasing strain and, with midterm elections due in June, López Obrador will be unwilling to increase taxes.

Mexico received a public finance boost in 2020 because the tax authority squeezed longstanding debts from large companies, but that feat will be hard to sustain, according to analysts. Pemex remains a drain on state finances and Mexico has burned through most of its budget stabilization fund known as FEIP, a rainy-day savings pot.

“We think the FEIP will have run out in December [2020],” said Mariana Campos at México Evalúa, a think tank.

Meanwhile, a bonanza that the government had a few months ago been set to enjoy from the Bank of México’s surplus on its dollar reserves has not materialized. Analysts had believed it could total as much as $25 billion, but the recent recovery in the peso may erode it.

“The way things are going, it’s probable there won’t be any windfall for the government,” said one former senior public official.

That leaves López Obrador facing dwindling revenues, so he is unlikely to change his stance on Mexico’s fiscal policy.

As Domene put it: “You only need money if you plan to spend.”

© 2021 The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. Please do not copy and paste FT articles and redistribute by email or post to the web.

Coronavirus vaccination program will be rolled out Tuesday in all 32 states

0
Senior citizens will be up next for Covid vaccine.
Senior citizens will be up next for Covid vaccine.

The Covid-19 vaccination program will be extended to all 32 states of Mexico on Tuesday, Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell said Monday as the country recorded more than 7,000 new cases and almost 700 deaths.

“In the vaccination plan, we’re moving from the calibration phase to the expansion phase. We’re going to have vaccination units operating in Covid hospitals in the 32 federal entities,” the coronavirus point man told reporters at the Health Ministry’s nightly press briefing.

The deputy minister said the establishment of more vaccination points would “radically change” the pace of the vaccine rollout.

Mexico started immunizing healthcare workers on December 24 using the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine but the vaccination program has been limited to Mexico City and Coahuila. So far only 87,060 people have received a first dose of the vaccine, which is administered in two shots three weeks apart.

But López-Gatell highlighted that almost 440,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were scheduled to arrive Tuesday, adding that they would be distributed by the military. It is expected that all health workers in Mexico will be vaccinated against Covid-19 by the end of January, he said.

López-Gatell: pace of vaccination set to change radically.
López-Gatell: pace of vaccination set to change radically.

The focus will subsequently shift to seniors aged 80 and over followed by those in the 70-79 and 60-69 age brackets.

President López Obrador said Tuesday that it’s expected that 15 million seniors will be vaccinated against Covid-19 between January and April. People aged under 60 with chronic diseases that make them more vulnerable to a serious Covid-19 illness  will be next in line.

The president said last week that the aim was to inoculate 12.45 million seniors by the end of March, explaining that 10,000 vaccination brigades would fan out across the country to complete the task.

Presenting a five-stage national vaccination plan in December, López-Gatell said that the intention is to administer Covid-19 vaccines to about 75% of the population aged 16 and over by the end of 2021.

To reach that ambitious target, Mexico intends to use a range of Covid-19 vaccines.

The Pfizer vaccine is the only one currently being used in Mexico but the health regulator Cofepris last week approved the AstraZeneca/Oxford University shot. That vaccine – for which the government has an agreement to buy 77.4 million doses – will be used in Mexico starting in March, López-Gatell said Tuesday.

The deputy minister said Monday that the federal government has held initial discussions with Russia to purchase 24 million doses of its Sputnik V vaccine. López-Gatell said he met with Russian officials during a trip to Argentina last week and that the Mexican government reached “preliminary agreements” to purchase that number of doses – enough to inoculate 12 million people.

Speaking at López Obrador’s press conference on Tuesday, the deputy minister said the Sputnik vaccine has a “capacity and efficiency similar to the other vaccines that have been authorized.”

(Russia said in December that the vaccine had an efficacy of 91.4%.)

López-Gatell said that Cofepris began the vaccine review process on the weekend and that a decision with respect to emergency use approval will be taken soon.

Mexico also has an agreement to purchase 35 million doses of China’s CanSino Biologics single-dose vaccine. Immunization could begin in February if it is approved by Cofepris, the Foreign Affairs Ministry said last week.

The government has pledged to make vaccines available free of charge to the entire population of Mexico. López Obrador has said that he is not opposed to the private sector purchasing and administering vaccines but suggested it wouldn’t be easy due to limited global supply.

Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day.
Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day. milenio

A wider rollout of Covid-19 vaccines is urgently needed in Mexico as the coronavirus is spreading more quickly now than at any other time in the pandemic.

The Health Ministry reported 7,594 new cases on Monday, pushing the accumulated tally just above 1.54 million. The official Covid-19 death toll rose to 134,368 with 662 additional fatalities registered.

Hospital occupancy levels remain a concern in several states, and scores of healthcare facilities across the country have reached 100% capacity.

The situation is particularly dire in Mexico City, the country’s coronavirus epicenter. The occupancy rate for general care beds set aside for coronavirus patients in the capital is currently 91.5%, according to federal data, while 86% of beds with ventilators are taken.

Mexico City has recorded just under 369,000 coronavirus cases, a figure that accounts for almost one quarter of total cases across Mexico. The number of Covid-19 fatalities in the capital – 23,612 – is equivalent to 17.5% of the national death toll.

Official figures for both coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico are widely believed to be significant undercounts due to the low testing rate here.

Source: El Universal (sp), El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp) 

“Transparency watchdog unnecessary if government acts with rectitude:’ AMLO

0
The right to information is already guaranteed, insists President López Obrador.
The right to information is already guaranteed, insists President López Obrador.

The national transparency watchdog is not needed because the federal government maintains “permanent communication” with citizens and guarantees the right to information, President López Obrador said Monday.

The president’s remarks came after he announced last week that his government intends to incorporate autonomous organizations such as the National Institute for Transparency and Access to Information (Inai) and the Federal Telecommunications Institute into federal ministries and departments in order to save money and eliminate the duplication of responsibilities.

The plan was widely denounced as an attempt by López Obrador to further concentrate power in the executive. Its announcement came after the government abolished 109 public trusts late last year on the grounds they were vehicles for corruption.

Speaking at his regular news conference on Monday, the president stated: “If we have permanent communication, if the right to information is guaranteed … there is no need … for an entire [transparency] apparatus that costs so much. It costs 1 billion pesos [US $49.9 million] to maintain the transparency institute.”

The Inai is not necessary “if we act with rectitude and fulfill our responsibility,” he stressed, “because we have to respect and enforce the laws – and transparency is a golden rule of democracy.”

“So why have a costly administrative apparatus if the government is obliged to report and reveal everything it does? Besides, this is a government of the people, for the people and with the people – we don’t have anything to hide,” López Obrador said.

“It’s no longer the time of the corrupt governments that dominated during the entire neoliberal period [and] had to go around hiding information, reserving it.”

The president charged that previous governments (he describes the 36 years before he took office as the neoliberal period) created autonomous bodies to oversee their actions to create the impression that they were honest when in fact they were anything but.

“All these organizations that were created for pretense, that cost a lot, that are maintained with the public budget – which is the money of the people, are not necessary because the government already exists; there is the executive power, the legislative power and the judicial power. [So] why did they create all these alternative bodies? … To pretend that there was transparency, to pretend there was honesty.”

In a lengthy consideration of the matter, López Obrador went on to say that autonomous bodies eat up billions of pesos of public money that could otherwise be directed to education, healthcare and “people’s wellbeing.”

“All this has to be debated. That’s why I put in on the table, so that we all reflect on this matter,” he said.

inai

The president, who met with his cabinet later on Monday morning to discuss the proposal, said the first step would be to review the various autonomous bodies, among which are several regulators.

“All these bodies were created in other circumstances, when the government was organized [and] oriented to serve as an instrument, as a facilitator of the looting of the assets of the people and the nation; the government was a committee at the service of a predatory minority,” López Obrador said.

“… It’s important that it’s known that we arrived here to transform and for that reason, even though they don’t like it, we’re going to continue reviewing the mess they left.”

Despite the president’s claim that his government informs citizens of everything they have a right to know, Inai data suggests that the public is not entirely happy with its level of transparency and clarity.

Information obtained by the news website La Silla Rota shows that 4,491 clarification orders  related to transparency – which stem from citizens’ requests for more or clearer information – were submitted to government departments by Inai in 2020. That figure is more than five times higher than the number of clarification orders it made in 2018, the final year of the government led by former president Enrique Peña Nieto, whose six-year term was plagued by corruption scandals.

The government departments to which Inai passed on the highest number of clarification orders last year were, in order, the ministries of Public Education (SEP), Public Administration (SFP), National Defense (Sedena) and Health (Ssa).

Requests for clarification from the Education Ministry increased from just 24 in 2018 to 866 last year. The SFP and Sedena only received four Inai orders for clarification in the last year of Peña Nieto’s government but were given 397 and 359, respectively, in 2020.

Inai data also suggests that the office of the president (Presidencia) is not as transparent as López Obrador claims. In 2020, Inai formally instructed the office to supply or clarify information on 198 occasions while it did so a record 526 times in 2019.

In the final year of Peña Nieto’s term, his office was only directed to supply or clarify information on seven occasions.

Citizens’ applications for information increased to 3,721 in 2019 from 896 in 2018 before declining to 1,774 last year.

With transparency evidently not as strong a suit as López Obrador would have people believe, it’s not surprising that the plan to incorporate Inai into a government department – over which the president has ultimate control – has not been well received by many.

Investigative journalists are among those who stand to lose if the president gets his way and Inai is effectively disbanded.

sandra romandia
Eliminating Inai is an attack on transparency: Romandía.

Writing in the newspaper Milenio, Sandra Romandía said that López Obrador’s proposal “sounds disastrous” for her profession.

Romandía cited a case in which reporters from Semanario Zeta, a news outlet in Tijuana, Baja California, gained access to information via transparency requests that allowed them to expose that some lawmakers in the northern state had improperly used generous allowances granted to them. Without a body that guarantees the right to transparency and access to information, that exposé and others would have been impossible to reveal, she asserted.

The president’s proposal to eliminate Inai is an attack on decades-long efforts to make Mexico more transparent, she contended, writing that the 2002 creation of the Federal Institute for Access to Information and Data Protection, Inai’s predeccesor, was a historical achievement that not only benefited journalists but democracy in Mexico.

The journalist charged that an Inai incorporated into the SFP – which López Obrador said was an option – would be toothless, pointing out that the ministry’s head, Public Administration Minister Irma Sandoval, is “aligned” with the president.

After quoting early 20th century United States president Theodore Roosevelt – who said in 1910 that “a great democracy has got to be progressive, or it will soon cease to be either great or a democracy” – Romandía wrote:

“To take backward steps is to erase from the map the hope for a better, more educated nation, with more information for decision making. It’s to erase moments like that … which the Semanario Zeta team and others lived, which – thanks to the exposure of realities [others] want to hide – generate changes in favor of a better society.”

Source: Reforma (sp), La Silla Rota (sp), Milenio (sp) 

Verdologa adds flavor and texture to classic recipes

0
Verdologa, a succulent, has an almost infinite number of varieties.
Verdologa, a succulent, has an almost infinite number of varieties.

I think the first time I noticed verdolaga was during a weekly shopping trip at the big central market in Mazatlán. Standing in front of piles of produce at my regular stand, my gaze fell upon big bundles of what looked like some sort of succulent. Qué es eso? I asked Sergio.

He explained what it was and what to do with it, and I went home with a third of that giant bundle — about two big handfuls — and a new vegetable entered my culinary repertoire.

Since then, I’ve added verdolaga, called purslane in the United States, to a host of dishes. It tastes kind of like fresh-cut grass,  and I find it a wonderful flavor and texture addition to simple dishes like scrambled eggs, omelets, stir-fries, vegetable soups and, of course, salads.

At its most basic, verdolaga can be sautéed with garlic and chopped tomatoes in olive oil and eaten with warm tortillas. Both the stems and leaves are thick and juicy, crunchy when raw and becoming chewy and a bit mucilaginous when cooked — but not in a bad way! As you become more familiar with it, you’ll notice some bunches have smaller, thinner and younger stems and leaves, which will be more tender.

The word verdolaga comes from a nickname for South American football clubs, which have green and white uniforms, like Argentina’s Ferrocarril Oeste and  Colombia’s Atlético Nacional.

Verdolaga is indeed a succulent, with an almost infinite number of varieties. It grows wild all over the world and has been eaten for centuries, all the way back to prehistoric times. Cultivated varieties are more tender; all are high in vitamin C, omega-3 fatty acids and antioxidants. In Mexico, verdolaga is a popular vegetable easily found everywhere from big grocery stores (usually near the cilantro and fresh herbs) to your corner tienda.

This pork stew goes well with beans and tortillas.
This pork stew goes well with beans and tortillas.

Salsa Verde Verdolaga with Pork

  • 4 big handfuls verdolaga, washed, thick stems removed
  • 2 lb. pork shoulder or butt
  • 1 Tbsp. salt
  • 1 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 lb. tomatillos, husked and quartered
  • 4 serrano chiles, halved
  • ½ onion
  • 2-3 cloves garlic, minced
  • ½ cup cilantro, chopped fine
  • ¼ – ½ cup beef stock or water
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Clean verdolaga, removing thick stems. Trim the pork, cut into palm-sized pieces, and salt liberally on all sides. In a blender or food processor, mix tomatillos, onion, garlic, chiles and cilantro on high speed until smooth.

In a deep Dutch oven or stew pot, sear pork to brown on all sides. Remove from pan and set aside. Pour tomatillo sauce into hot pan to deglaze, stirring well. Add broth or water to pan and place meat back into the liquid. Cover and simmer on medium-low for 1 hour.

When meat begins to pull apart, add the verdolaga. Cook about 30 minutes more until meat is easily pulled apart with a fork.

Serve in a bowl with black beans and flour tortillas.

Top these scrambled eggs and verdologa with the salsa of your choice.
Top these scrambled eggs and verdologa with the salsa of your choice.

Scrambled Eggs with Verdolaga

  • 3 handfuls verdolaga
  • 6 eggs
  • 1 onion
  • Salt & pepper
  • 2 Tbsp. olive oil or butter

Clean verdolaga, removing thick stems. In a medium saucepan, bring it to a boil and then cook for 3-4 minutes.

Remove from pan, drain and set aside. In a small bowl, whisk eggs well. Finely chop the onion and sauté in a hot pan with olive oil or butter.

Add eggs, lower heat and cook, gently stirring, till almost done. Add cooked verdolaga and stir, cooking for 2 more minutes or so.

Top with salsa of your choice.

Verdolaga Salad with Mango Vinaigrette

  • 4 cups verdolaga, cleaned
  • 1 cooked chicken breast, cubed
  • 2 Tbsp. fresh mint leaves, minced
  • ½ cup mango pulp or finely chopped fresh mango
  • 2 Tbsp. fresh ginger, minced
  • 1 Tbsp. olive oil
  • ¼ cup vinegar
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 tsp. black pepper
  • 1 Tbsp. sugar
  • Optional: 1 cup any kind of lettuce

In a bowl, mix verdolaga, chicken, tomato, mint leaves and other lettuce, if using.

Set aside.

In a jar, put mango, ginger, olive oil, vinegar, salt, black pepper and sugar; shake well to mix.

Pour over the salad and stir gently.

Verdologa is called purslane in English.
Verdologa is called purslane in English.

Turkish Stew with Verdolaga

This classic Turkish dish is usually served garnished with a dollop of yogurt.

  • 1 bunch verdologa (about 3-4 cups)
  • 1 onion
  • 1 carrot
  • 1 big tomato, chopped
  • 1-2 cloves of garlic
  • 2-3 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 2 jalapeño or serrano chiles, or to taste
  • Salt & pepper

Rinse verdogola and remove thick stems. Slice onions and carrots. Add olive oil to a large saucepan, add onions and garlic and sauté for a minute on medium-low heat, then add carrots. Chop verdolaga roughly and add to the mixture; add tomato.

Cook, covered, for 10 minutes on low heat.

Sopa de Verdolaga y Lentejas

  • 5 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 5 tomatoes, finely chopped
  • 3 Tbsp. tomato paste
  • Pinch of red dried red pepper flakes
  • 1½ tsp. salt
  • ¼ tsp. of pepper
  • ¼ tsp. paprika
  • ¼ tsp. cumin
  • 1 tsp. turmeric
  • 1 can chickpeas, rinsed
  • 1 cup lentils, rinsed
  • 3 cups packed verdolaga, cleaned, stems removed, roughly chopped
  • Fresh cilantro, chopped, for garnish

Sauté onion in olive oil in a medium pot over medium-high heat until translucent and lightly golden, 5-7 minutes. Stir in garlic, tomatoes, tomato paste and seasonings. Add 4 cups of boiling vegetable stock or water to the pot and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Add lentils and cook 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Stir in verdolaga and chickpeas, lower heat to medium-low and simmer for 5-7 minutes more.

Adjust seasonings and garnish with chopped cilantro.

Janet Blaser has been a writer, editor and storyteller her entire life and feels fortunate to be able to write about great food, amazing places, fascinating people and unique events. Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expats is her first book.

International tourist arrivals down 46% to just over 2 million in November

0
Empty beach chairs are a sign of the times.
Empty beach chairs are a sign of the times.

The coronavirus pandemic continued to wreak havoc on Mexico’s tourism industry in November, new data shows.

International arrivals declined 54.3% in November compared to the same month of 2019, while visitors’ total  expenditures dropped by an even higher amount, the national statistics agency Inegi reported Monday.

Inegi said that just under 3.92 million visitors entered Mexico in the penultimate month of last year, 4.66 million fewer than in November 2019.

The visitors spent US $856.6 million while in the country, a 54.8% decline compared to November 2019 when the total outlay was just under $1.9 billion.

Of the 3.92 million visitors, 2.09 million were classified as international tourists. That figure represents a 45.6% decline compared to November 2019.

Airport arrivals declined 55% to 726,258 while land border crossings into Mexico fell 33% to 258,645. Visits by “border tourists” – people entering Mexico for a short period of time from the United States, Guatemala and Belize – declined 40.1% in November to just over 1.1 million.

The Mexico-United States border is supposedly closed to nonessential travel but U.S. tourists have reportedly had few problems traveling south.

Spending by the 2.09 million international tourists totaled $248.4 million, a 69.2% annual decline. Spending on an individual tourist basis by passengers who arrived by air was down 4.9% in November to $878.

Inegi data also shows that the number of Mexicans traveling abroad decreased significantly in November. There were just under 2.25 million departures, a 68.9% decline compared to November 2019.

The decline in international arrivals is a double-edged sword for Mexico. While fewer tourists is in one respect welcome because it inevitably means fewer cases of the coronavirus are imported, the reduction in visitor numbers also means lower or no income for the millions of people who work in the tourism sector, which before the pandemic contributed to almost 10% of GDP.

The reduction in tourist numbers has not affected Mexico’s tourism destinations equally. Quintana Roo, for example, has recently experienced an influx of visitors as U.S. tourists, locked out of European countries and other popular tourism destinations around the world due to the raging coronavirus pandemic at home, flock to the Caribbean coast state.

Mexico’s tourism industry began to reopen in June after shutting down for over two months due to a nationwide suspension of nonessential economic activities.

Quintana Roo, home to popular destinations such as Cancún, Playa del Carmen and Tulum, and Baja California Sur, where Los Cabos is located, are currently “medium” risk yellow on the coronavirus stoplight map. Both states are open for tourism although limits on capacity at hotels and restaurants remain in place.

Two other states, Veracruz and Aguascalientes, are yellow while two, Campeche and Chiapas, are “low” risk green. There are five “maximum” risk red light states – Mexico City, México state, Baja California, Morelos and Guanajuato – while the 21 other states are “high” risk orange.

Mexico is currently going through its most difficult time of the pandemic, with daily case numbers and Covid-19 deaths at or near record levels in recent days. The accumulated case tally is 1.53 million, the 13th highest total in the world, while the official death toll is 133,706, the fourth highest total behind those of the United States, Brazil and India.

Mexico News Daily 

5 hospital officials resign over equipment shortages in Acapulco

0
The Vicente Guerrero hospital where senior staff have quit.
The Vicente Guerrero hospital where senior staff have quit.

Citing shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE) and little government support in their ongoing battle against Covid-19, five department chiefs at a Social Security Institute (IMSS) hospital in Acapulco have resigned since December.

In the last month, medical staff in charge of the Vincente Guerrero hospital’s surgical, anesthesia, X-ray, emergency, and internal medicine departments have all quit, beginning on December 18 with the resignation of the chief of the emergency department, who had contracted Covid-19 in 2020 and had since returned to duty.

But the resigning chiefs have not been relieved of their duties, according to a statement by doctors, nurses and other workers at the hospital, “because no one wants to take [the positions].”

Medical staff said they have reached the limit of their abilities to treat Covid patients, given the protective equipment shortages and a lack of government support.

Staff also warned that they have seen increased numbers of Covid cases arriving at the hospital, in part due to people who are coming from other Guerrero municipalities, and even Mexico City, looking for treatment.

“These are people are coming from Mexico City because the hospitals there are full,” one worker, who preferred to remain anonymous, told the newspaper Milenio.

As of last week, Mexico City’s IMSS hospitals had only six general care beds left, although it did have 200 beds with ventilators, 183 of which IMSS said could be used by patients who don’t require intubation. Some experts have predicted that the city’s hospitals will run out of Covid beds this month.

Elsewhere in Guerrero, IMSS and State Workers Social Security Institute hospitals in Iguala were full or close to it last week. There were beds available in a provisional Covid unit, but no medical personnel to treat patients, according to Mayor Antonio Jaimes Herrera.

Source: Milenio (sp) 

Crematoriums, funeral homes overwhelmed in major cities

0
Coffins may soon be in short supply, warn funeral directors.
Coffins may soon be in short supply, warn funeral directors.

Crematoriums and funeral homes in major cities are overflowing with bodies thanks to the acceleration of Covid-19 infections.

Mexico City’s 17 crematoriums told the newspaper Reforma that they are running extra shifts and performing cremations into the early hours of the morning and still can’t keep up with the demand. Some said they are running more than 48 hours behind schedule and that the situation is only worsening.

Typically, families receive ashes from a funeral home or crematorium on the same day or within 24 hours.

“This second wave [of the pandemic] is very worrying for the funerary sector. It’s alarming,” said David Vélez, president of the Association of Funeral Home Owners and Embalmers in Mexico City. “Although we have worked hand-in-hand with authorities to streamline all the necessary procedures, regrettably we can’t keep up with the demand.”

Vélez estimates that the number of dead in Mexico City has risen more than 100% since the city’s first wave of outbreaks.

The situation is similar in other cities: in Monterrey, Nuevo León, employees at the Protecto Deco Santa Catarina funeral home said that the delivery of ashes to families is now taking between 15 and 30 days. They said that another branch in the center of the city used to receive no more than five bodies per day, and now it seeing 10–12.

The ashes of one 73-year-old woman’s ashes cremated there who died December 26 from Covid-19 were only delivered to her family Saturday, they said.

Meanwhile, in Guadalajara, the city’s municipal director of cemeteries told Reforma that public crematoriums (for those on the Mexican social security system) have seen more than a 161% increase in the number of bodies cremated this year. The city processed 2,013 bodies in 2020, compared to 769 in 2019.

“It’s more than double,” said Alberto Martínez. “We have the four cremation ovens working at 100% capacity,” he said.

The handling of thousands of bodies without pause over the 10 months of the pandemic has also taken its toll on staff at Mexico City’s funeral homes and crematoriums, Vélez observed. Up to 20% of employees in the field have died since the pandemic began, he said, and 50% have come down with Covid.

“I don’t know if I’m stressed out or if I’ve gone mad; it’s that bad. It’s really hard to comprehend it when someone is begging you for your services,” he added.

The increase in bodies has affected bureaucratic processes as well. The process of certifying a death and releasing a body to family members used to take 10 minutes but now takes about 12 hours, Vélez said.

Another effect may soon be seen in the availability of coffins. A shortage of steel and wood may see funeral homes run out if there isn’t a decline in death numbers in the next few months, said the national association of funeral directors.

Funeral homes and crematoriums have long been the canaries in the coal mine throughout the pandemic. During May’s first wave of the virus, a Reuters survey of funeral homes in Mexico City reported that they were seeing unprecedented increases in the number of bodies. One Mexico City funeral director told Forbes México in May that demand for his services had quadrupled compared to 2019.

Sources: Reforma (sp) Forbes México (sp)

Fire kills police officer, shuts down 6 lines of Mexico City Metro

0
Smoke billows from the Mexico City Metro building in the historic center on Saturday.
Smoke billows from the Mexico City Metro building in the historic center on Saturday.

Six lines of the Mexico City Metro remained out of service Monday morning after a fire broke out in the subway system’s downtown substation on Saturday, claiming the life of a female police officer.

A fire began at the Buen Tono substation in the Metro system headquarters in the capital’s historic center before 6:00 a.m and subsequently spread to other floors of the building. Lines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the system were shut down as a result of the blaze, which was apparently caused by an oil spill.

The Mexico City government said that a policewoman died as the result of a fall from the subway building during the fire. She was identified as María Guadalupe Cornejo, a young mother of a 3-year-old child.

More than 30 people, including Metro workers and on-site police, were rescued from the building and transferred to hospital for treatment for smoke inhalation. At least one firefighter who responded to the blaze also required medical treatment.

Smoke that billowed out of the Metro building on Saturday morning filled the sky above Mexico City’s downtown and was visible from various points across the capital.

The blaze was eventually brought under total control almost 12 hours after it started, although Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said that it was 90% extinguished at about 9:00 a.m. Saturday.

The mayor and Metro director Florencia Serranía said at a press conference Sunday that work to restore service to lines 4, 5 and 6 would take 48 hours once it started. It was unclear how long it would take for services to be resumed on lines 1, 2 and 3, which are the oldest and busiest of the system. The newspaper Milenio reported that it could take up to three months to fully repair the damage caused by the fire.

Bus services are currently running along the routes of all six lines that were knocked offline. The other six lines of the Metro are operating normally.

A former director of the Metro who is now a Mexico City lawmaker said the substation where the fire occurred should have been modernized 20 years ago but was not.

“These installations should have been replaced 20 years ago [or] at least changed gradually [but] that wasn’t the case,” Jorge Gaviño, a deputy with the Democratic Revolution Party, said in a television interview.

“They’re old, obsolete systems that definitely have to be given adequate maintenance to avoid … risks to passengers.”

Police vehicles were pressed into service to help move stranded Metro passengers.
Police vehicles were pressed into service to help move stranded Metro passengers.

Gaviño said the Mexico City Congress will ask the Metro system’s management to supply the maintenance records of the substation so that they can be analyzed to determine why the fire broke out and how a similar event can be avoided in the future.

“We have to find out if … this regrettable accident was foreseeable or not,” he told Milenio Television.

One thing was made clear at Sunday’s press conference — the head of the Metro was not responsible. Serranía said “it’s necessary to reiterate that by statute maintenance programs are the responsibility of installations management …”

When a reporter asked if she was not responsible for that particular area and had no responsibility for the fire, Serranía said, “… I’m only the director general of the Metro.”

The federal Attorney General’s Office has launched investigations into the death of the police officer and the cause of the fire.

It is the first time that multiple lines of the Metro have been shut down for a prolonged period of time. About 5 million trips per day were taken on the system prior to the coronavirus pandemic but ridership declined significantly in 2020 and remained below normal levels when Saturday’s fire occurred. Still, more than 1 million passengers were affected by Saturday’s shutdown.

Line 1 of the Metro – one of the largest subway systems in the world – began operations in 1969 while lines 2 and 3 opened the following year. The system’s newest line – 12 – began operations in 2012 but was partially shut down from March 2014 to December 2015 due to structural problems.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp), Infobae (sp)

In 10 days, 100,000 new cases of Covid-19 as spread of the virus accelerates

0
For many, social distancing and other protective measures have not been a priority.
For many, social distancing and other protective measures have not been a priority.

The coronavirus is spreading more quickly now than at any other time in the pandemic.

The federal Health Ministry reported 107,945 new cases in the first 10 days of January, including a single-day record of 16,105 cases on Saturday.

The confirmed case tally over the 10-day period represents an 8% increase compared to the final 10 days of 2020, during which 100,179 cases were reported.

In contrast, it took Mexico 96 days to record its first 100,000 cases: the first two cases of the coronavirus in Mexico were reported on February 28 and the accumulated tally reached six figures on June 3.

The rapid pace at which the virus is now spreading is emphasized by the fact that the single-day record for case numbers was broken on four consecutive days last week: 13,345 cases were reported last Wednesday, 13,734 on Thursday, 14,362 on Friday and 16,105 on Saturday.

New cases spiked in November and have been high ever since.
New cases spiked in November and have been high ever since. milenio

Health authorities also registered a five-figure case tally on Sunday, with 10,003 new cases pushing Mexico’s accumulated total to 1.53 million.

Weekly case figures also illustrate the gravity of the current situation. A total of 80,492 new cases were reported between January 3 and 9, more than in any other seven-day period of the pandemic.

The final full week of November marked a clear beginning to the dire situation Mexico is now facing. The Health Ministry reported 68,715 new cases between November 22 and 28, a 133% increase compared to the previous week’s tally of 29,435.

The weekly case tally surpassed 60,000 in every subsequent week, rising above 70,000 in the second and third weeks of December before a new record in excess of 80,000 was set last week.

Malaquías López,  a public health professor at the National Autonomous University and spokesperson for the university’s Covid-19 commission, told the newspaper Milenio that it’s not surprising that case numbers have recently spiked. He attributed the increase to end-of-year celebrations and a relaxation of coronavirus restrictions in some states.

Mexico’s Covid-19 death toll has also increased at a rapid pace this month. Authorities reported 7,899 additional fatalities over the first 10 days of 2021, a 9.5% increase compared to the final 10 days of last year.

More than 1,000 fatalities were reported on five consecutive days between last Tuesday and Saturday, including a single-day record of 1,165 deaths last Wednesday. The death toll now stands at 133,706 after 502 fatalities were added on Sunday.

Further cause for concern is that the more contagious strain of the coronavirus first detected in the United Kingdom in September has made its way to Mexico. The Tamaulipas Health Ministry reported that the B117 variant of the virus, considered to be up to 70% more transmissible than most other strains, was detected in a 56-year-old man who traveled to Matamoros via Mexico City, arriving in the northern border city on December 29.

Federal health authorities said Sunday that the man confirmed to have been infected with the new virus strain is a citizen of the United Kingdom who was recently in that country. Director of Epidemiology José Luis Alomía said that the man is in hospital receiving treatment and intubated.

Tamaulipas Health Minister Gloria Molina Gamboa said that crew and other passengers on the Mexico City-Matamoros flight were tested for the coronavirus and their results came back negative.

Meanwhile, federal government communications coordinator Jesús Ramírez – President López Obrador’s spokesman – said Sunday that he had tested positive for Covid-19.

“I am in good health but I’ll be working from home following all the sanitary protocols,” he wrote on Twitter.

Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day
Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day. milenio

Ramírez appeared with López Obrador on Friday, passing a microphone to him at the president’s regular news conference. Neither man was wearing a face mask.

Despite his close proximity to Ramírez, López Obrador hasn’t gone into isolation. He held his regular news conference on Monday morning, announcing that an ambitious program to vaccinate more than 12 million seniors by the end of March will begin in February.

The president appeared to recognize that his government’s efforts to control the pandemic have failed.

“The only option we have, the only alternative to combat the pandemic, is the vaccine,” he said.

Source: Milenio (sp), Reforma (sp) 

Coahuila municipality’s communities originated in escaped US ancestors

0
Muzquiz's Mascogo community is descended from Black Seminoles in the U.S.
Muzquiz's Mascogo community is descended from Black Seminoles in the U.S.

Tucked away in a corner of the state of Coahuila, only a couple of hours from the United States border, lies a municipality with an open secret: two communities — one of African descendants (called Mascogos in Mexico) and one of Kickapoo, both who fled the United States in the 19th century.

The twin communities are both called Nacimiento, referring to the birth of Jesus, but distinguished from each other not so subtly with the appendages de los Negros and de los Indios. Both communities belong to the municipality of Muzquiz, a coal mining and ranching area.

The two ethnicities share similar stories: both were displaced on multiple occasions in the 19th century as the United States expanded and consolidated its hold on territories west and into Florida. Both groups would find at least a measure of asylum in Mexican territory, generally in exchange for military services. Both groups have familial and tribal connections to the United States.

Their communities are separate from the main town of Muzquiz, and only partly connected to the rest of the world. Traditional life for both revolves around farming, livestock and semiautonomous communal governing systems. Both groups have received attention from U.S. academic publications and press.

Although many in Coahuila consider both the Kickapoo and the Mascogos to be somewhat hostile to outsiders, both are important to the identity of Muzquiz. The municipality became a Pueblo Mágico, or Magical Town, in 2018 in large part due to their presence.

Traditional Mascogo building style appears to owe a debt to U.S. log cabins.
Traditional Mascogo building style appears to owe a debt to U.S. log cabins.

Both groups wound up here because Muzquiz began as a fort in 1737 to protect Spanish settlements from Comanche attacks. The current name was given to the municipality in 1832 in honor of an interim president of Mexico who was from here.

However, there are important differences in the stories of the two groups. The Kickapoo were forced south from their native Wisconsin during the 18th and 19th centuries. They splintered into different bands, which have descendants in various parts of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

The group that made its way to Coahuila was first allowed into Mexican Texas in 1824, but protection was not assured. The U.S. put diplomatic pressure on Mexico on various occasions during the 1800s to “return” Kickapoo to be settled on reservations. When Texas broke off and joined the Union, some Kickapoo went south to Coahuila, gaining permission in exchange for scouting and other services to the Mexican government.

Continued efforts by U.S. troops to “repatriate” these Kickapoo led to the Mexican government granting them communal lands to bolster their legal status.

Interestingly, in the early 20th century, a group of 200 Kickapoo left Nacimiento — not for the United States but for Tamichopa, Sonora, joined by a group from Oklahoma. This Sonoran Kickapoo community still exists today.

The Kickapoo have had success in maintaining their identity and bloodlines. Everyone in Nacimiento de los Indios speaks Kickapoo, the only non-native Indian language spoken in Mexico. They also speak Spanish or English or both.

A store selling Kickapoo products.
A store selling Kickapoo products.

Their community is more isolated than that of the Mascogos, only partially on the grid. They still take their drinking water directly from the headwaters of the Sabinas River, the cleanest river water I have seen in Mexico. Some gas and electricity (from generators) are used, but most communications and other services must be obtained in Muzquiz or Eagle Pass, Texas.

Religious life remains strong for the Kickapoo and relatively unchanged. Like the Huichol indigenous people of Mexico, the deer figures prominently in Kickapoo beliefs. Men still traditionally hunt, with deerskin moccasins and other apparel highly prized. In Nacimiento, they have adapted to farming and livestock raising but keep a nomadic element to their lifestyle. They have seasonal moves between Nacimiento and various parts of the United States, often arranging with the neighboring Mascogos to care for their property while they are gone. This migration now figures into their religious ceremonies as well.

Their strong ties and conservation of identity mean that this group is recognized by tribal authorities in the United States. Nacimiento Kickapoo automatically have dual Mexican and U.S. citizenship and can travel freely between the two countries.

The Mascogos, or Negro Mascogos, are the descendants of Black Seminoles. This ethnicity arose with escaped slaves making their way to Spanish Florida, then intermarrying with native Seminoles. When the United States took Florida, all Seminoles were forced west. The people who became the Mascogos (the name probably derived from “Muskogee”) were led into Coahuila by the Black Seminole leader John Horse in the 1850s.

Like the Kickapoo, the Mascogos were allowed into Texas, and later Coahuila, in exchange for military services, which also included land as compensation. The Mascogos worked as scouts for both the Mexican and U.S. armies, and for this reason, they are divided between Nacimiento and Brackettville, Texas, with family ties maintaining a connection between the two communities.

Their African-American heritage is visible in their cuisine (a mix of Mexican and Deep South foods and cooking techniques), their traditional houses (based on log cabins) and their Protestant Christian beliefs. They spoke English until a couple of generations ago when it became relegated only to hymns and the very old.

African American influence shows up in these Mascogo-style ribs.
African American influence shows up in these Mascogo-style ribs.

The Mascogos consider themselves a tribe, and in 2017 the governor of Coahuila recognized them as an indigenous group with the hope of gaining support for them from Mexico’s National Institute of Indigenous Peoples. However, unlike the Kickapoo, the Mascogos do not have recognition by the Seminole tribe in the U.S., nor the citizenship privileges that go along with it. This is mostly likely due to their mixed ancestry, which continues as Mascogos intermarry with local “Mexicans.”

Neither community has more than a couple of hundred members, so their futures are questionable at the very least. In addition to assimilation into Mexican society, the other factor working against them is the economic draw of migrating north across a border that is tantalizingly close. Efforts such as Pueblo Mágico status have been made in the hopes of somehow maintaining their heritage only five to six generations after their arrival.

For Mexicans such as Fernando Mendoza, promotor of Pueblos Mágicos in Mexico, Muzquiz’s history in coal mining, livestock and leather is as important as its Mascogo and Kickapoo communities (who often do much of the same work). But I think Americans like me can be forgiven if we are drawn more strongly to our “lost brethren” forced to flee to another country so long ago.

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico 17 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture. She publishes a blog called Creative Hands of Mexico and her first book, Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta, was published last year. Her culture blog appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.