Transcript Ejido
Alternative Paths among
Developing Economies
Chapter XVIII
Revolution and Reform in the
Mexican Economy
1
Mexican Economy
Mexico ranks 12th in the world in regard to
GDP and has the highest per capita income
in its region
World's largest producer of silver and one of
the five major producers of oil
2
Mexican Economy
Conjunction of culture and history involves the
essential tensions and contradictions of Mexico’s
economy and society
It is a rapidly industrializing and urbanizing middleincome economy that is integrating itself into the
world economy
At the same time, it contains large pockets of
poverty in traditionalist sectors
3
Mexican Economy
At the top of the Mexican economy is a mostly
Spanish-descended elite who operate successfully
within the modern market capitalist economy
In the middle are the majority mixed-race mestizos
At the bottom is a large poor minority, mostly pure
Indians, living in a traditional Mexican economic
form in village agricultural units known as ejidos
Similar to culture, a modern US-related economy
sits on top of a colonial Spanish-derived system that
in turn sits on top of the remnant of a pre-colonial
traditional economy
4
Mexican Economy
The Mexican economy is difficult to categorize, that
is a common characteristics with other Latin
American economies
Since late 19th century, it has market capitalist
elements
It also had a highly centralized state sector reflecting
patterns from the Spanish colonial period
The economy includes the traditional remnant of the
rural ejidos, reconstructed by revolutionary populism
in the 20th century
5
Mexican Economy
The Mexican system can be labeled as technocratic
populist corporatism → technocratic populism,
dominated by a politicized and technocratic bureaucracy
A movement toward market capitalism began after a
macroeconomic crisis in 1982
In 1994, a new financial crisis erupted with a sharp
devaluation of the peso
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) went
into effect in 1994
6
Mexican Economy
NAFTA, privatization and sales of ejido lands providing a
serious challenge for the post- PRI leadership
The outbreak of an armed rebellion in Chiapas, the poorest
state of Mexico by the Zapatista National Liberation Army
RIP’s fall from power in 2000 with the presidential election of
Fox
This was an end of a more than 70-year old period of
domination of Mexican politics and society by PRI
After the end of the armed revolts in late 2001, Mexico
confronted a dramatic question: Will economic reform lead to
revolution or to the end of reform?
7
Historical Background:
From Origins to Independence
Mayans and Aztecs
First cultivated agriculture in the Western
Hemisphere, starting 6000 years ago with
domestication of corn
The country contains several independent centers of
culture and economic development, Mayans in the
Yucatan peninsula in the south
14th century Aztecs conquered Mexico
Spanish defeated Aztecs in 1521
Mexico became the main part of Spain
8
Historical Background:
From Origins to Independence
Spanish Control
Spanish controlled vast estates and Indians were
forced to work, initially as slaves and later as debt
peons
Most Indians were converted to Roman Catholicism
As long as they accepted Catholicism and paid their taxes,
Indian villages were left to the rule of their own leaders and
were allowed to control their traditional communal lands
Agriculture is the main source of income
Main export was silver
9
Historical Background:
From Independence to the Revolution
Independence from Spain was achieved in 1821, followed by
economic stagnation, large budget deficit, political instability,
severe foreign indebtness
In 1830s and 1840s Mexico lost half of the nation’s area to the
United States in wars
Until 1911, economic policy with openness to trade and
investment
Technocratic advisers balanced the budget and oversaw the
beginning of industrialization and the development of Mexico’s oil
industry by US and British investors
The economy grew substantially with general inequality and
poverty
10
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
1911-1920 Mexico experienced a civil war
During WW I, a secret agreement was devised
between the Mexican government and the German
government
Mexican government would support the German war
effort against the United States in exchange for
German assistance in invading the Southern United
States-did not work
11
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
Rule of Revolutionary Institutional Party
(PRI-1920-2000)
PRI was victorious in the revolution that took place
in the aftermath of the civil war in 1920
Since the late 19th century, it has had both
strong market capitalist elements
a highly centralized state sector
This system had many labels including “state
capitalism” or “technocratic populist corporation”
Technocratic populism, dominated by a politicized and
technocratic bureaucracy
12
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
1917 Constitution
No rights for private property
Laid the groundwork for:
Nationalizing oil industry
Redistributing hacienda (Spanish controlled vast
estates) lands to peons and villages as reconstructed
ejidos
Labor rights were guaranteed
13
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
Mexican Corporatism: President Cardenas’ Period
(1934-1940)
Established the essential institutions of Mexican
corporatism by
Accelerating land distribution
Emphasizing communalism
Organizing a ruling party related peasant interest
group
Organizing a party-related national union federation
Nationalizing the oil industry in 1938
14
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
The 1940-1970 Period
Land distribution was halted in 1940s but resumed after 1958
In 1946, Economic policy encouraging privately owned and
irrigated farms
Import-subsidized industrialization that continued until 1982
Despite restrictions for some industries, foreign investment was
allowed → Special incentives for investments on the Mexican-US
border in 1960s
Between 1940-1980, strong growth and reasonable
macroeconomic stability
15
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
1970s: Shift to Populism and Leftist Stance
Student uprising of 1968 triggered a shift to
populism and a leftist international stance after 1970
Expanded social spending undermined
macroeconomic stability and foreign indebtedness
rose
These problems culminated in the 1982 crisis
16
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
1982 Crisis
1982 Crisis was a result of
Increasing foreign debt
Rising interest rates on that debt
Falling oil prices
Government borrowed massively from abroad to finance rising
social expenditures and subsidies for state-owned firms
In 1982 Mexican government could not meet its interest
obligations and negotiated with the US and the IMF
a program of fiscal austerity
import reductions
This led to declining output for several years after decades of
rapid growth
17
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
Aftermath of 1982 Crisis:
Movement Toward Market Capitalism
After 1989 came major efforts
To reduce government ownership and control in the
economy
Opening the economy to free trade
Reducing endemic corruption
Economy grew rapidly again, especially its export
manufacturing sector, but later it returned to
recession
18
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
Pacto (1987) : A Corporatist Incomes Policy
Set wage and price targets
Tightened monetary and fiscal policies and
liberalized trade that reduced the rate of inflation
In 1989, President Salinas extended and renewed
Pacto six times until 1994
Focused on microeconomic reforms such as
privatization and trade liberalization
19
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
1995 Crisis
Steepest decline of output since the Great
Depression, with a reversion to a fiscal austerity
policy
In 1994, a new financial crisis erupted with a sharp
devaluation of the peso
US government provided an emergency loan of $ 40
billion
A deep recession in 1995 followed by export-led
growth
20
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
NAFTA (1994)
North American Free Trade Agreement went into effect on
Jan. 1, 1994
NAFTA freed trade and investment relations among Mexico,
US and Canada after a long process of marketization and
privatization reforms
Signing NAFTA put Mexico under US economic domination
The ejidos were reformed by allowing the farmers involved to
privatize and sell their plots
There was a reduction in subsidies for corn production, the
principal crop of the ejidos and the mainstay of poor
Mexicans’ diet
21
Historical Background:
From the Revolution to the Present
The result has been rising inequality and poverty in
Mexico since the mid-1980s, providing a serious
challenge for the post- PRI leadership
The outbreak of an armed rebellion in Chiapas, the
poorest state of Mexico by the Zapatista National
Liberation Army
This revolt led by non-Indians that declared opposition to
NAFTA, to land control reforms and to long ruling
Revolutionary Institutional Party (RIP)
RIP’s fall from power in 2000 with the presidential
election of Fox who promised to help Indians and
negotiated an end to revolts in 2001
22
The Land Question:
Types of Land Tenure
The most controversial issue as agriculture
accounts for only 8 % of GDP and 25 % of
employment
Three types of farms existed:
Hacienda
Rancho
Ejido
23
The Land Question:
Types of Land Tenure
Hacienda → derive mostly from royal land grants to
the conquistadores
Many were enormous, containing thousands of
people and functioning as self-contained
communities
Many still exist, but they have lost their special
powers over rural labor
Today, there is no legal difference between them
and the ranchos
24
The Land Question:
Types of Land Tenure
Ranchos → Owned by mestizos (mixed white and
Indigenous)
Tends to be smaller
Derived from land grants given to foot soldiers and small
farmer immigrants who married local Indian women
Ranchos did not have laborers attached to them
They were often sites on poor soil
The favored base for adopting Green Revolution techniques,
especially they were aided by government investment in road
and irrigation systems
25
The Land Question:
Types of Land Tenure
Ejidos → derived from communal lands held in Indian villages
before the Spanish conquest
Landholding was based on extended kinship groups identified
with certain areas
Although held in common, most of the land was divided and
assigned to individual families for their use
Ejido areas contain the poorest Mexicans
In 1992 President Juarez tried to turn them into rancho-style,
capitalist farms
26
The Land Question:
Reestablishment of the Ejidos
1917 Constitution allowed haciendas to be broken
up and distributed as ejidos to the former peons
This involved both individual use of collectively
owned land and communal farming
Thus there are now three types of land tenure:
Private farms
Individual-use ejido farms
Communal ejido farms
27
The Land Question:
Reestablishment of the Ejidos
Land distribution
President Cardenas distributed more than 20 million
hectares (47.4 percent of Mexico’s total cultivated
land)
Although ejido holdings increased, successive
presidents continued to focus infrastructure
investment on the increasingly more productive
private farms
As of 1998, national shares of agricultural land were
43 % in private farms, 52 % in individual-use ejidos
and 5 % in communal ejido farms
28
The Land Question:
The Emergence of Dual Agricultural Development
Since the presidency of Cardenas, a sharp dualism
has emerged between private and ejido farms
Ejidos are more common in densely populated
areas
Majority of them are smaller than 4 hectares, too
small to be efficient under any tenure or technology
system
Ejidos concentrate on traditional corn and beans
production
Not much irrigation investment
29
The Land Question:
The Emergence of Dual Agricultural Development
Private farms have branched out into such
commercial crops as soybeans and sorghum, and
more recently fresh fruits and vegetables
These have increased larger increase in yields than
corn
Federal government irrigation investment increased
supporting them
Favoritism toward private farms also extended to
government credits and financing
30
The Land Question:
The Emergence of Dual Agricultural Development
NAFTA removed protection of corn from competition
with low cost US producers
Major reduction of general government subsidies to
agriculture during the 1980 austerity period
This policy of attacking rural poverty by forcing the
poorest farmers off the farms leads to the Zapatista
rebellion
Although President Fox has promised to aid the
rural poor, he has made no major change in
agricultural or land ownership policies
31
The Oil Question and the External Debt Crisis of
1982: Development of the Mexican Oil Industry
Since its discovery in 1901, Amoco, Royal Dutch
Shell, Exxon all invested in Mexico
President Cardenas's efforts to get involved in the
managerial control of Royal Dutch/Shell, and Exxon
did not work
In 1938 Cardenas nationalized Mexico's petroleum
reserves and expropriated the equipment of the
foreign oil companies in Mexico
Pemex was established to run the oil industry
32
The Oil Question and the External Debt Crisis of
1982: Development of the Mexican Oil Industry
With the 1979 oil price increases, PEMEX borrow
massively from abroad to expand production
Overoptimistic forecasts about future oil price
increase, government increased foreign borrowing
Although oil price increases of the 1970s helped
Mexican economy, Mexico’s foreign debt tripled
from 1976 to 1981
Oil prices started declining and the inflation started
increasing
Foreign and public indebtedness increased
33
The Oil Question and the External Debt Crisis of
1982: Development of the Mexican Oil Industry
In 1982 negotiations with IMF and the US, resulted
with a shift in US policy to lower interest rates and
with IMF’s imposing strict fiscal austerity
Austerity combined with moves to privatization,
marketization, tariff reduction, and the corporatist
Pacto led to a sustained reduction of inflation after
1987
Current account balance went into surplus and the
budget deficit declined
34
The Oil Question and the External Debt Crisis of
1982: Development of the Mexican Oil Industry
However, oil industry remained nationalized
Pemex was restructured internally in 1988 by President Salinas
Allowed foreign investment in peripheral parts of the industry
Mexico's state-owned oil company, Pemex, holds a constitutionally
established monopoly for exploration, production, transportation,
and marketing of the nation's oil
Since 1995, private investment in natural gas transportation,
distribution, and storage has been permitted, but Pemex remains in
sole control of natural gas exploration and production
Pemex remains as a symbol of Mexico’s independence from foreign
domination
35
Transformation of the Mexican Economy:
Privatization
Major feature of the Mexican reform process from 1982 to
1995 was privatization
Focusing mostly on liquidating or merging small enterprises
These privatizations took place as cash sales
Privatization of the telecommunications company was the
largest privatization in terms of revenues earned for the
government
Copper mining company, two airline companies, two sugar
refineries, a pasta and vegetable company and a motor
vehicle company were among the largest ones → mostly went
to Mexican buyers
36
Transformation of the Mexican Economy:
Maquiladoras, NAFTA, and the Opening of the Mexican
Economy
Since the 19th century, fear of domination by the US
After WW II, President Aleman enacted import
restrictions for industrial development led by import
substitution
The most dramatic anti-US moves for economic
independence were oil and railroad nationalizations
during the 1930s
Policy relaxation came in 1965 with the US-Mexico
Border Industrialization Program, maquiladora program
37
Transformation of the Mexican Economy:
Maquiladoras, NAFTA, and the Opening of the Mexican
Economy
US plants invest on the border and sell output in the US
freely
The investment in industries leads to increasing
employment of Mexican labor force and triggering a
great expansion of manufacturing output and exports
However, controversies over conditions in the
maquiladoras have increased like wages being lower,
workers treated badly, especially female workers
Along with the initiation of NAFTA negotiations → trade
liberalization, tariff reduction, establishment of free trade
zones, removing restrictions on foreign investment
38
Conclusion
Mexico is opening, marketizing and privatizing an
economy long characterized by a state-dominated,
inward-looking policy designed to protect it from US
domination
Institutional Revolutionary Party includes conflicting
socioeconomic forces within a corporatist structure:
Revolutionary in its populist appeal to peasants through
land redistribution and to workers through party-related
unions
Protect business through its institutionalized, technocratic
bureaucracy
39
Conclusion
Mexico’s technocratic populist corporatism began to change
with reform policies developed since the foreign debt crisis of
1982
Mexico has since escaped from its dependence on raw
materials exports and has engaged in an industrialization
drive fueled by foreign investment, further encouraged by
trade liberalization culminating in the NAFTA
These gains were challenged as rising imports of intermediate
goods triggered peso devaluation and an austerity program in
1994
After a recession in 1995 and some policy readjustments,
export-led growth resumed
40
Conclusion
The development and reform policies have
been successful
Living standards improved for most citizens
Economic reform also brought increased
income inequality and opposition, especially
from rural peasants still living in traditional
ejidos
41