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Mexico, US agree on US $35.6-billion development plan to curb migration

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Foreign Affairs Secretary Ebrard
Foreign Affairs Secretary Ebrard: 'good news for Mexico.'

The governments of Mexico and the United States have agreed to work together on a development plan in southern Mexico and Central America to curb migration.

The Secretariat of Foreign Affairs (SRE) and the United States Department of State issued a joint statement yesterday under the title “Mexico-United States Declaration of Principles on Economic Development and Cooperation in Southern Mexico and Central America,” which outlined both countries’ monetary contributions to the plan.

Mexico will invest US $25 billion in southern states over the next five years while the United States will contribute US $10.6 billion: $5.8 billion to the Northern Triangle (Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador) of Central America and $4.8 billion to Mexico.

However, most of the United States funding is not new as it will be allocated from existing aid programs.

The Washington Post reported that “it appears the only new figure is the $4.5 billion in potential loans, loan guarantees and related services through OPIC,” which is the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a U.S. federal government agency.

The new money the U.S. provides would have to be repaid, unlike traditional assistance provided through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

Announcing the new agreement in Mexico City, Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard nevertheless said that “in sum, I think that this is good news, very good news for Mexico.”

He explained that Mexico’s US $25-billion five-year commitment, $5 billion less than the figure announced last week, would more than double the government’s current investment in southern Mexico.

Several migrant caravans have crossed Mexico’s southern border over the past two months, bringing thousands of Central Americans to the country, many of whom are now in Tijuana or other border cities waiting for an opportunity to request asylum with United States authorities.

Migration continues to be central to the Mexico-United States relationship but so far the personal relationship between President López Obrador and President Donald Trump doesn’t appear to have suffered as a consequence.

Trump reiterated on Twitter today that “Mexico is paying (indirectly) for the wall through the new USMCA,” referring to the new North American trade agreement that replaces NAFTA, but at his morning press conference López Obrador remained diplomatic, stating “we have no complaints about the United States government.”

Yesterday’s joint declaration, which The Post described as largely symbolic, “reflects the importance both countries attach to our bilateral relationship,” the respective governments said.

“The United States and Mexico today commit to strengthen and expand our bilateral cooperation to foster development and increase investment in southern Mexico and in Central America to create a zone of prosperity. Both countries recognize the strong links between promoting development and economic growth in southern Mexico and the success of promoting prosperity, good governance, and security in Central America,” the declaration said.

It added that “the United States and Mexico will lead in working with regional and international partners to build a more prosperous and secure Central America to address the underlying causes of migration, and so that citizens of the region can build better lives for themselves and their families at home.”

The U.S. funding for Mexico includes “committing $2 billion for suitable projects in southern Mexico,” the declaration said, adding that “the United States will seek to leverage public and private investment in Mexico and is exploring options of further investment in dialogue with the government of Mexico.”

A bilateral business summit that will seek to increase investment and business opportunities in southern Mexico and Central America will be held in the first quarter of next year, the SRE and Department of State said.

But will the joint development plan, and specifically the Trump administration’s contribution to it, ultimately succeed in stopping Central American migrants fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands and showing up on the United States’ doorstep?

Adam Isacson, director for defense oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America, is skeptical.

In a post on his personal website under the title “This isn’t an aid package,” Isacson writes that the only new U.S. money “is loans, not aid,” adding “it all has to be paid back.”

He continues: “And they’re loans to the private sector — which are not going to address root causes of mass migration from Central America. They won’t reform police, fight corruption, fix justice systems, or anything else that makes threatened people safer from gangs.

“Private sector loans are hugely unlikely to help struggling small farmers in the Northern Triangle’s countryside. (Unless they choose to leave the countryside and get low-wage jobs in OPIC-financed factories.) These loans will mainly help a tiny elite get wealthier in one of the most unequal regions on the planet.”

But this morning, after announcing again the money that both Mexico and the United States will invest in southern states and the Northern Triangle region, López Obrador expressed confidence that the plan would work.

“We celebrate it because it means confronting the migratory phenomenon by dealing with its causes. We have always said that people don’t leave their communities, don’t abandon their towns, their families out of pleasure. They do it out of necessity,” he said.

“If we manage to create work opportunities in the south with good incomes, if there is well-being . . . the problem of forced migration will be resolved.”

Source: El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp), The Washington Post (en) 

Demand rises for dinosaur egg-shaped earthquake protection capsule

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Vela and his earthquake capsule.
Vela and his earthquake capsule.

Demand for a Mexican-designed earthquake protection capsule is on the rise, according to its creator.

Reynaldo Vela told the newspaper El Universal that he is currently filling 15 orders a month for his Cápsula K107, inside which he says a person could survive for up to a month while trapped under earthquake rubble.

Before the September 19, 2017 earthquake that devastated parts of central Mexico, the 32-year-old inventor had only sold a grand total of three capsules.

Based on the shape of a velociraptor dinosaur egg, each capsule comes replete with food and water supplies for 30 days and is equipped with an oxygen tank, seismic alert sensors, seatbelts, a radio, a GPS beacon and a compartment for fecal matter.

They are made in Vela’s plant in the Mexico City borough of Iztacalco.

Protection for up to 30 days.
Protection for up to 30 days.

The capsules are custom made to client’s individual specifications and have a capacity for resistance of between 40 and 600 tonnes.

“The most basic capsule [is designed] for a house and is made out of steel and other alloys. The most resistant could have titanium, fiberglass rods, resins and polyurethane,” Vela said.

Prices range from 40,000 pesos (US $2,000) to 260,000 pesos (US $13,000).

Vela explained that all the capsules he makes are designed to withstand the force of a building collapsing on top of them but the most expensive model could withstand the weight of a skyscraper such as Mexico City’s Torre Mayor.

The capsules he has made so far are capable of protecting as many as three people, depending on their body size, but Vela said that it would be possible to make one for as many as 30 people, which would be ideal for use in a school classroom.

The Cápsula K107 is the result of eight years of research during which a variety of different shapes were tested to determine which was most resistant to the force of a falling building.

“. . . We tested parallelepipeds, cubes, all sorts of geometric shapes until we got to the shape of an egg – a conventional bird one. That allowed us to say that it was the best geometric shape to resist the force of an impact,” he said.

However, Vela explained that the shape still wasn’t as strong as he wanted but on the advice of a paleontologist he tried out the shape of a velociraptor egg.

“The paleontologist gave us a fossil from which we made a mold, with which we were able to carry out a test . . .[The velociraptor egg shape] is more resistant than a conventional egg because its more elliptic and under that principle the Cápsula K107 was built . . . With this we can guarantee . . . [that it will resist] all the force of a collapsing building,” he said.

Although it has never been tested in a real earthquake, Vela is confident that his invention won’t fail when the next big one strikes.

“It’s an investment to save your life,” he said.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Firm looks at multi-billion-peso medical-residential project in Quintana Roo

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Chetumal considered for medical-residential project.
Chetumal considered for medical-residential project.

A Canadian company appears committed to building a multi-billion-peso medical-residential project in Quintana Roo that would cater to the needs of Canadian retirees.

The head of the state’s Institute for Development and Funding (Idefin), Bernardo Cueto Riestra, said K & A Associates CEO Marc Kealy had expressed the firm’s intention to go ahead with the project in the state capital of Chetumal during a meeting on December 11.

“In the context of this visit . . . Marc Kealy reaffirmed K & A’s projection to develop an investment project worth close to 4.5 billion pesos [US $224.2 million] . . .” he said.

Idefin, K & A and the Quintana Roo Strategic Projects Agency (Agepro) also met in Toronto, Canada, in November to discuss the ways in which the state government can participate in the project, Cueto said.

“A project of this magnitude will mark a before and after for the south of the state, specifically for our capital. In recent weeks, we’ve been working hand in hand with the Strategic Projects Agency . . . and thanks to that cooperation we’ve found a way to provide the conditions that generate the confidence of K & A,” he added.

Agepro director Eduardo Ortiz Jasso said the project would help to close the economic gap between the north and south of Quintana Roo and provide more and better employment opportunities for local families.

Kealy, a former CEO of the Ontario Pharmacists Association, said during his visit to Mexico that “the Canadian community is increasingly aware of the favorable environment that the south of this beautiful Mexican state offers and it’s pleasing to see the willingness of the Quintana Roo government to make this project a reality in the medium term.”

No commencement dates for the project appear to have been set at this stage.

Source: El Economista (sp), La Verdad (sp), La Jornada (sp) 

A star is born: Roma’s Yalitza Aparicio featured on cover of Vogue México

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Aparacio at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
Aparacio at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

The life of Yalitza Aparicio, a 26-year-old Mixtec teacher from Oaxaca, has taken the most dramatic of turns. She used to spend her days in a classroom, but now she finds herself surrounded by fans asking for her autograph or gracefully posing for the cameras of fashion magazines.

Aparicio is the star of Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón’s latest film, Roma, an intimate and touching look at the life of a well-off middle-class family in Mexico City in the early 1970s. Aparicio’s first-ever role on camera is that of Cleo, an indigenous domestic worker whose character was inspired by Cuarón’s own childhood nanny.

The accolades the film has received have taken its cast around the world and now that the film has been officially released by distributor Netflix, Aparicio’s face has become widely known.

The novice actress visited Toronto and New York this week where she was sought for autographs and selfies by crowds of fans, cold temperatures and rainy weather notwithstanding.

Aparicio is also on the cover of the January issue of Vogue México, sitting in a vintage chair, dressed in a monochrome lace dress from Dior’s latest collection and gazing at the camera.

Oaxaca actress Aparicio on Vogue's January cover.
Oaxaca actress Aparicio on Vogue’s January cover.

“In tiu’n ntav’i,” the cover reads in Mixtec, “A Star Is Born.”

The cover has been praised by readers on social media where one described Aparicio’s presence as “A cover for the history books.”

Another commented: “This breakthrough gives me the chills.”

And a third wrote: “This is the best cover in the history of Vogue México! Congratulations, Vogue!”

The magazine also released a short video in which the actor discusses everything from her dreams to her fear of being in front of the camera to diversity.

“Certain stereotypes are being broken: that only people with a certain profile can be actresses or be on the cover of magazines,” Aparicio says in the video.

“Other faces are now being recognized. It is something that makes me so happy and proud of my roots.”

Source: El Universal (sp), The Independent (en)

Oaxaca wins a round in mezcal denomination of origin challenge

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A mezcal bar in Oaxaca city.
A mezcal bar in Oaxaca city.

Oaxaca won a round this week in its efforts to limit the denomination of origin for mezcal, the state’s staple spirit.

The state Economy Secretariat said yesterday that a federal judge had ordered the suspension of an expansion of the beverage’s denomination of origin that included several municipalities in the state of Aguascalientes.

The Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (IMPI) decided in August to expand mezcal’s denomination of origin region to include municipalities in the states of Aguascalientes, México, Morelos and Puebla. Oaxaca announced a week later it would fight the move.

Aguascalientes is now off the list and the issue of the remaining three states is still being considered by the judge, said the government of Oaxaca in a statement.

The state continues to work to “strengthen the commercialization of the Oaxacan beverage” in domestic and international events, “because mezcal is an ancestral state beverage.”

Despite that claim, regions of eight other states — Durango, Guanajuato, Guerrero, Michoacán, San Luis Potosí, Puebla, Tamaulipas and Zacatecas — are included in the current denomination of origin, meaning that the nine states can produce and sell the distilled maguey beverage and call it mezcal.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Businesses denounce ‘fake news’ extortion in Baja California

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Extortionists call their victims and threaten them with fake news stories.
Extortionists call their victims and threaten them with fake news stories.

A criminal gang is targeting business owners in Baja California and California with an extortion scam in which it threatens to spread fake news about them if they refuse to comply with its demands.

The newspaper Reforma reported today that a source close to the criminal investigation into the scheme had revealed that more than 100 business owners as well as professionals such as doctors and lawyers in Tijuana, Rosarito and San Diego have reported being targeted.

Mexican authorities as well as the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) are investigating the scam, Reforma said.

The extortion racket allegedly operates by demanding an initial payment and subsequent monthly payments from those it targets.

The demands come with the threat that non-compliance will result in false information — that they have criminal records for drug trafficking, weapons offenses, robbery or other crimes — being disseminated online.

At least six people are believed to have been involved in carrying out of the scheme including the gang’s suspected leader, identified as José Santiago N., who was arrested last weekend, Reforma said.

He had allegedly disseminated phony information about business owners and politicians on a website masquerading as an online newspaper called Noticias de México.

The source close to the case told Reforma that the extortionists also tell business owners that they will target their families and assets if they don’t succumb to their demands.

The source added that that it was possible that the criminals were obtaining information about their targets from social media as “they mention the names of family and friends, the schools of their children and other details.”

Preliminary investigations into the modus operandi of the extortion racket indicate that its members initially contact their targets, presumably via email, and offer to sell them online advertising.

The targets are left with a telephone number to call should they be interested in the service offered.

The telephone numbers of those who call a purported advertising agency are recorded and passed on to the extortionists who then begin their scam.

If the targets don’t immediately comply, fake news about them, including videos, is published online on phony news websites and social media until they cave in.

Investigations into the racket indicate that some of its members operate the fraudulent websites, others identify future targets and one person is responsible for making the fake news videos.

The criminal group has also allegedly planned to target customs personnel in Tijuana.

The Reforma source said that investigators have obtained filmed statements in which former accomplices of the extortion racket have detailed its activities and links to organized crime.

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Volunteer garbage clean-up retrieves stoves and tires from cenotes

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A tire is removed from a Yucatán cenote.
A tire is removed from a Yucatán cenote.

Stoves, tires and even accessories for the practice of witchcraft were among the items retrieved from cenotes, or natural sinkholes, in Yucatán during clean-up exercises completed this year.

Around 80 volunteers, including specialist divers, helped to remove rubbish from around 15 cenotes in the state, lead diver and clean-up coordinator Sergio Grosjean explained.

“We found unserviceable stoves, truck tires . . . and even witchcraft products,” he told the newspaper El Universal.

Bicycle wheels and rusty old chairs were also pulled from the state’s sinkholes along with tonnes of garbage.

There are more than 3,000 cenotes dotted across the length and breadth of the Yucatán peninsula and many of the natural pools are popular tourist attractions where visitors can take a dip to cool off from the region’s notoriously steamy weather.

But around 80% of them are heavily polluted, according to statistics based on explorations by speleologists.

Grosjean, an environmentalist and archaeologist who earlier this year led an expedition that discovered a treasure trove of Mayan cave paintings, said that while tourists are believed to be responsible for much of the trash found in cenotes, some of the items recovered indicate that locals are also to blame.

The diver explained that between one and one and a half tonnes of rubbish were removed from each of the cenotes that were cleaned up this year.

However, Grosjean lamented that in many cases volunteers return to the same cenote months later to find it filled with rubbish and junk again.

“Authorities need to work on educating people and raising awareness so that they take care of the cenotes and don’t continue to dump garbage,” he said.

The Yax Ek, Sanhacat, Homún, Abalá and Caucel cenotes were among the beneficiaries of this year’s clean-up efforts.

The Yucatán peninsula’s elaborate underground water networks potentially face another threat to their health from the construction of the Maya Train project.

Experts have warned that land above the aquifers may not be able to support the weight of the tracks and passing trains.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Anti-hunger campaign failed to meet its goal and is short 1.6 billion pesos

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Ex-president Peña Nieto visits a hunger crusade kitchen in 2015.
Ex-president Peña Nieto visits a hunger crusade kitchen in 2015.

The previous federal government’s main anti-poverty strategy not only failed to achieve its key objective to end hunger but also swallowed up more than 1.6 billion pesos (US $79.5 million) that is unaccounted for, statistics and audits show.

The National Crusade Against Hunger (CNCH) was announced by former president Enrique Peña Nieto in December 2012 and officially launched the following month at an event in Chiapas.

Its ambition was large: eradicate hunger in Mexico.

But recent statistics show that almost six years after the initiative was implemented, there are still more than 20 million Mexicans who don’t have access to enough food.

And now a new analysis of data from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi) and the federal Secretariat of Health reveals that deaths from malnutrition or related illnesses increased in almost four of every 10 municipalities covered by the CNCH in its first phase.

Conducted by a team of journalists from two media organizations – Milenio and La Silla Rota – and an analyst from the non-governmental organization Data Cívica, the study shows that at least 33,668 people died in Mexico from malnutrition between 2014 and 2017 and just under half of those deaths occurred in municipalities where the CNCH was in place.

Deaths from malnutrition, which according to the World Health Organization refers to deficiencies, excesses or imbalances in a person’s intake of energy and/or nutrients, went down in 209 — 47% — of the 444 municipalities where the CNCH was implemented in 2013.

However, deaths rose in 173 municipalities, or 39% of the those included in the crusade, and the mortality rate from malnutrition remained the same in 62 municipalities or 14% of the total.

All told, 53% of municipalities where the CNCH was implemented saw no improvement in the rate of hunger-related deaths.

While 77.8% of the people who died from malnutrition between 2014 and 2017 were elderly, 311 children aged 12 or younger also died in municipalities where the anti-hunger crusade was in place despite one of its five main objectives being to eliminate childhood nutrition.

Marasmus – a form of severe malnutrition seen in countries where famine is present – claimed the lives of 160 people in municipalities covered by the CNCH.

Statistics from the social development agency Coneval also show that the percentage of people with inadequate access to food fell by a similar figure in municipalities where the crusade wasn’t implemented as those where it was.

In the former, the figure fell by 3.1% between 2010 and 2015 (no new data will be available until the 2020 census is conducted) to 20.9% of the population, whereas in the latter the number of people with inadequate access to food dropped by an only marginally better 3.3% to 22.3% of the population.

In 31% of the municipalities where the CNCH was implemented, residents’ capacity to access food became worse in the same five-year period.

A contributing – or perhaps primary – factor in the failure of the crusade against hunger to achieve its main goal is that funding allocated to the initiative likely didn’t reach its intended target in many cases.

Between 2013 and 2016, the government agencies charged with implementing the CNCH failed to explain how 1.63 billion pesos – 71% of the initiative’s entire budget – was used, according to the Federal Auditor’s Office (ASF).

The ASF has filed 13 criminal complaints with the federal Attorney General’s office (PGR) against the Secretariat of Social Development (Sedesol) and the Secretariat of Agriculture (Sagarpa) with respect to 917 million pesos (US $45.6 million).

Five criminal complaints stemming from a 2013 audit, including one relating to 845.5 million pesos, allege that Sedesol, the Autonomous University of México state and the Autonomous University of Morelos participated together in an embezzlement scheme.

The federal secretariat, which between 2012 and August 2015 was headed by Rosario Robles, awarded contracts to the universities to implement CNCH programs but auditors found a range of classic examples of corruption: services paid for were not provided, overpayments, the use of shell companies and fabricated financial documents, among other irregularities.

The ASF also uncovered conflicts of interest, such as the case of Hugo Manuel del Pozzo, who was the legal representative of a company that was supposedly subcontracted by the México state university to provide CNCH-related services as well as the same university’s financial director.

Del Pozzo was arrested last year for allegedly diverting 16 million pesos paid by the Oaxaca government for a contract not related to the CNCH.

Another main crusade goal was to boost food production and the income of small farmers, an objective that Sagarpa was charged with achieving.

However, the secretariat has not explained how it used 59 million pesos allocated for that purpose between 2013 and 2018.

A criminal complaint filed by the ASF in August says that an audit of the 2013 Sagarpa accounts detected that 362 farmers to whom the Secretariat of Agriculture said it had provided financial or material aid were in fact dead.

Auditors also found that Sagarpa had paid excessive prices to acquire materials that were distributed to farmers as aid.

Former Sedesol chief Robles, who has also been implicated in other alleged corruption schemes, said she didn’t dispute the statistics cited by the Milenio/La Silla Rota/Data Cívica investigation in relation to deaths from malnutrition but nevertheless defended the CNCH.

“I believe that the crusade was a great interdisciplinary effort by [government] secretariats. We reached 30,000 locations where no public policies had reached before,” she said.

“[The key objective] wasn’t achieved but hunger decreased and that’s something that is very important,” Robles added.

The former cabinet secretary conceded that a single death due to malnutrition represented a failure of the CNCH but stressed that three million people who were in situations of extreme poverty now have food to eat including “children who went to school without anything in their stomachs [and] women who took food out of their mouths so that their children had something to eat.

The investigative team pointed out to Robles that Coneval statistics showed that in fact only two million people had seen their access to food improved under the CNCH and that millions more remain in the same precarious situation as before and therefore have nothing to celebrate.

“Accept that at least,” the investigative reporters said to the ex-secretary. “No, yes, of course, of course,” Robles responded.

Source: Milenio/ La Silla Rota (sp) 

Los Pinos plays leading role in screening of award-winning Roma

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An aerial view of the screening of Roma at Los Pinos.
An aerial view of the screening of Roma at Los Pinos.

Los Pinos, which until last month was the official residence of the Mexican president, continues to enhance its reputation as the new people’s palace.

President López Obrador opened the doors of the opulent home to the public for the first time on the day of his inauguration earlier this month, a move that has drawn thousands of visitors to see where presidents have lived since 1934.

Then last Thursday, there was another reason to visit. More than 3,000 people flocked to Enrique Peña Nieto’s former digs for a special screening of the new Mexican film Roma.

Despite the cold weather, film lovers lined up for more than two hours to ensure they got a spot on the grounds in front of the 120-square-meter screen.

Palomitas y ponche, or popcorn and (non-alcoholic) punch – a popular Christmas drink – were handed out free of charge to the most punctual arrivals.

Before the film, which has been nominated for three Golden Globe Awards, Oscar-winning director Alfonso Cuarón appeared on screen to offer a message to the attendees.

“Does it still smell of sulfur or has it been aired out now?” he asked about the presidential mansion, taking a cue from former Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez’s comment about George W. Bush before he delivered a speech to the United Nations General Assembly in 2006 a day after the former U.S. president had done the same.

The reference to sulfur was meant to imply that the devil — in the form of Bush — had preceded him.

After Cuarón’s introduction, filmgoers sat back for the next 135 minutes and watched the drama of Roma unfold

The protagonist, Cleo, represented a sharp contrast to the luxury that successive presidents have enjoyed at Los Pinos.

Yalitza Aparicio, an actor from Oaxaca with no previous experience, has won acclaim for her performance as a domestic worker in Cuarón’s movie, which has been described as a cinematic lover letter to 1970s Mexico City.

“It was just what we expected. A faithful portrait of our society and a call to rescue the [lost] love in our families,” said Fernanda Kuykendall, who watched the film with her son.

Roma, which had only a limited theatrical release before being added to the Netflix streaming service last Friday, has been touted as a front-runner for best picture at next year’s Academy Awards. The nominations will be announced on January 22.

Source: El Financiero (sp) 

Minimum wage to go up 16% to 103 pesos and will double in northern border region

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Labor Secretary Alcalde is flanked by wage commission head Peñaloza, left, and López Obrador.
Labor Secretary Alcalde is flanked by wage commission head Peñaloza, left, and López Obrador.

The daily minimum wage will increase by 16% on January 1 to 102.68 pesos (US $5.10), the federal labor secretary announced today.

Luisa María Alcalde also announced an even bigger hike in the northern border area, where a free zone with lower taxes will be implemented at the start of next year. There, the minimum wage will double from its current level to 176.72 pesos (US $8.80) per day.

Speaking at an event attended by President López Obrador, other cabinet secretaries, members of the private sector and workers’ representatives, Alcalde said that for the first time in many years the minimum wage has been set at a point that is on par with the minimum threshold for individual wellbeing, or the poverty line, which is determined by the social development agency Coneval.

“[It’s] a first step in the right direction,” she said.

López Obrador, who has pledged that “the poor will come first” during his government, described the salary increase as “an historic event because together we begin a new stage in the salary policy of our country.”

Economy Secretary Graciela Márquez Colín said the larger increase in the border region “won’t have inflationary implications” but “will have a positive effect on the purchasing power of workers.”

Prior to today’s announcement, the Mexican Employers Federation (Coparmex) said the National Minimum Wage Commission (Conasami) had reached the decision to increase the wage unanimously.

At his morning press conference, López Obrador said that workers’ representatives, the business sector and the Bank of México had all participated in negotiations and reached an agreement that avoided any impact on inflation.

Conasami’s resetting of the minimum wage level today comes just three days after its former chief was dismissed.

Basilio González Núñez headed up the minimum wage commission for 27 years but was removed by Alcalde, who appointed Andrés Peñaloza Méndez to the role.

The labor secretary wrote on Twitter Friday that Consami will experience “winds of change” under the leadership of Peñaloza, an economist.

Alcalde, a former federal deputy and professor of law who has published several articles advocating for higher wages in Mexico, said in August that the new government would be committed to increasing the minimum wage and doubling it in the nation’s north.

However, even with the increase set to take effect on New Year’s Day, Mexico will continue to have one of the lowest minimum wages in Latin America.

Source: Expansión (sp), El Financiero (sp)