Mexico's new president takes reins of shaky economy

Mexico's new president takes reins of shaky economy

MEXICO CITY
Mexicos new president takes reins of shaky economy

Mexico's incoming president Claudia Sheinbaum will inherit an economy plagued by uncertainty after reforms pushed through by her predecessor upset investors and key regional trading partners.

Riding high after a landslide June election victory, Sheinbaum's Morena party has passed constitutional changes making Mexico the only country to elect all its judges, despite warnings they could be more easily influenced by politics and organized crime.

The reforms have raised fears among some experts that Sheinbaum's presidency will be "stillborn" after she takes office on Oct. 1, said Jesus Carrillo, head of economics at the Mexican Institute for Competitiveness (IMCO), a public policy think tank.

"I don't know if we've gotten that far, but it seems to me that the economy's potential has been reduced a lot," he said.

Even before lawmakers approved the reforms this month, Mexico's central bank lowered its forecast for economic growth this year from 2.4 percent to 1.5 percent.

The United States, Mexico's main trading partner, has warned that the reforms threaten a relationship that relies on investor confidence in the Mexican legal framework.

The changes could pose "a major risk" to Mexican democracy and enable criminals to exploit "politically motivated and inexperienced judges," U.S. Ambassador Ken Salazar said last month.

Even before she takes office, Sheinbaum has found herself engulfed in a diplomatic row with Spain, another key economic partner, over her refusal to invite King Felipe VI to her inauguration.

Sheinbaum, who will be Mexico's first woman president, accused the king of failing to acknowledge harm caused by the former colonial ruler's conquest five centuries ago.

Before voters went to the polls in June, Latin America's second-largest economy had been gearing up for a major influx of foreign investment and basking in a sharp decline in the number of people in poverty.

That optimism has since dimmed somewhat, with the Mexican currency falling by around 13 percent since the election.

Experts have compared the economic damage caused by outgoing President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's reforms to his cancelation of a multibillion-dollar Mexico City airport project at the beginning of his term.

That decision in 2018 paralyzed private investment for months and required paying millions in compensation, Carrillo recalled.

Experts warn that the reforms have set Mexico on a collision course with the United States and Canada, its partners in a regional trade agreement coming up for review by 2026.

While the treaty does not include specific rules on the member countries' judicial system, "it does require that it be impartial and independent," according to IMCO.

Other planned reforms not yet passed by lawmakers, such as the elimination of a number of independent regulators, have deepened investor unease.

Scrapping those bodies "would increase uncertainties over rules and procedures and would make Mexico's infrastructure sector less attractive for private investment, despite robust demand prospects," credit ratings agency Moody's said.

The changes have reduced expectations for how many companies serving U.S. markets will relocate manufacturing operations from Asia to Mexico, a phenomenon known as "nearshoring," Carrillo said.

"If Mexico's ability to comply with and honor its agreements is called into question, it seems to me that nearshoring will disappear," he said.

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