Tuesday, February 5, 2013

ACROSS THE RIO GRANDE, MATAMOROS SNEEZES, WE CATCH COLD

By Juan Montoya
Even as locals decry the high unemployment and depressed economy on this side of the river, a new report by the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) shows that the Matamoros economy – for a number of reasons – has been devatated in the last year and hardly achieved any job growth.
The IMSS revealed that Matamoros, with nealry 750,000 re3sidents, achieved a dismal 1.7 percent job growth. The government statistics indicate that only 1,762 jobs were created in the formal economy despite the glowing reports by economic developers on both side so f the river that the border economy has been buttressed by a return of factories that had fled to China and the Indian subcontinent.
In fact, the Matamoros economy was next to last among the five major Tamaulipas cities in job creation for 2012.
Its report states that Tampico led the six major cities with 9,513 jobs created, Victoria followed with 6,411, Nuevo Laredo was next with 2,704, Reynosa with 2,511, Matamoros and then Cuidad Mante with 281.
The jobs gains for Matamoros are particularly worrysome since it depends heavily on the maquiladoras that employ 51,609 of the 104,863 jobs there. In fact, of the 1,762 new jobs created, 1,136 – all but 626 – were generated by that industry.
This is not particularly good news since that means that there was a miniscule amount of employment generated in the tourism, construction, commerce, services, transportation, agriculture and other areas of the economy.
This not only affects Matamoros itself, but also the Matamoros-Brownsville Metroplex. Were it not for the commercial exchanges between this area containing an estimated population of 136,995 residents – the fourth most populated border region on the US-Mexico border – we on the north side of the river would suffer even higher unemployment rates. Already, the Rio Grfande Valley contains the highest unemployment rates in the state, if not the United States.
Assistant Secretary for Market Access and Compliance Michael Camuñez and others can crow about the continuing importance of the US-Mexico economic relationship saying that just one year ago, in 2011, two-way trade in goods and services between the U.S. and Mexico exceeded a staggering half trillion dollars. Camuñez said that U.S. exports to Mexico totaled close to $200 billion, exceeding exports to Brazil, Russia, India and China combined! According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, approximately 6 million U.S. jobs depend on trade with our southern neighbor.
 In a speech to industrialists, Camuñez said that "more than 20 U.S. states count Mexico as their first or second largest export market, and 28 states did more than $1 billion in trade with Mexico in 2011."
The Obama Administration says that manufacturers in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and throughout America depend on integrated U.S.-Mexico supply chains to bring components, supplies and finished goods back and forth across the border every day, sustaining millions of jobs in factories around the country. And this doesn’t take into account the nearly 13.5 million Mexican tourists who traveled to the U.S. in 2011 and spent $9.2 billion while they visited here.
This, of course, is a bird's eye view of the entire border region.
What isn't said is that while that multinationals continue to reap the profits of outsourcing in the form of lower labor costs and services in Mexico and elsewhere, the local economies – as we are experiencing here – continue to wallow in stagnation that force Mexicans and others to look north. And while the informal economy provides a slim lifesaver for some Mexican citizens, how many aguas frescas and elote stands can you have in one block? 
So while the U.S. on one hand perpetrates low wages through the maquilas, it also fuels a labor migration north that directly depresses wages along the border and forces migrants and non-migrants alike to leave their places of origin seeking better economic opportunities in northern states.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The cartels control everything over there, and a lot here. How can any governmental economic logical be applied to Mexico? The have other options than to illegally invade the "northern states" The United States. They are born of revolution yet they must not have any left in them. They seem so powerless to demand any reform...any justice. So they flock here under the guise of employment. The Mexican agenda has always been to take back what they lost to the U.S. and more. Now having achieved positions in political offices and turning their homeland into a training ground for terrorism, they have almost completed that agenda. Economics...that's funny.

Anonymous said...

It is a real stretch to give this area a term like "Brownsville-Matamoros Metroplex"....that is a modern term that doesn't this cross border "ejido"...or "bi-national colonia". Matamoros has lost business because of the cartels that have forced business and people to this side. So, the relocation of Matamoros to this side has help Brownsville, but hurt Mexico. Like Brownsville, Matamoros seems to be moving North, with its good, its bad and its ugly. Downtown Brownsville has become the "mercado" for Matamoros, while most modern businesses, even those from Mexico, move to North Brownsville.
If we do an evaluation of Brownsville and Cameron County, we see high unemployment, lack of growth and increasing problems from the "spillover" of Mexican crime. As a result we are seeing more people and businesses move up the valley...including UT. While the cartels seem to dictate the climate in Matamoros, the lack of leadership on this side of the border makes Brownsville and Cameron County a receptive "colonia" for the spread of crime and despair.

Anonymous said...

BOY ARE WE DOOMED!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

February 5, 2013 at 12:38 PM

Muchas de las maquiladoras se han retirado de los terrenos Mexicanos por causa de la baja economia del pais, todo esta super carisimo y las demandas de la economia son muchisimas y de muy alto precio para pagar, las maquilaoras no se han retirado de Matamoros por el Narco trafico, quien dice eso? eso es una gran locura de imaginar y decir, el negocio de las maquiladoras era muy grande desde anos a tras y con el narco trafico, el narco trafico no tiene nada que ver con estos cambios, el culpable es EL PAIS MEXICANO!! Los culpables son el comercio y los politicos de estos cambios tan bruscos y drasticos, (NO EL NARCO TRAFICO) es tiempo que dejen de estar culpando a el Narco Trafico y deben de culpar al presidente del pais!! y atodos los Governantes del Pais Mexicano!! deben de culpar a la devaluacion del peso, la gente quiere GANANCIAS Y NO PERDIDADS!!! por eso muchas maquiladoras tomaron la decision de moverse para china, por causa de que la mano de obra es mucho muy barata en aquellos territorios y de esta manera poder sacar ganancias, ya que muchOs de los articulos son para carros, electronica y mas son transportados para los Estados Unidos, y es lo que nosotros hoy en dia disfrutamos, pero Estados Unidos no quiere pagar el precio razonable de lo que se esta invertiendo en material, ni mano de obra del Mexicano, por eso muchos de los Mexicanos han tomado la decision de cambiarse a otro pais que estan mas necesitados y darles la oportunidad de trabajar a menos precio la mano de obra!! ESTO SI ES DE DAR TRISTESA!! Los Americanos siempre han sido muy abusivos en pagarle al ser humano una BABA por chingarse trabajando y de esta manera explotar la mano de obra del Mexicano, y no se vale!! Por eso EU es uno de los paises mas ricos del mundo!!

rita