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How China is eating Mexico's lunch: the Maquiladora system's comparative advantage is being challenged head on. (China).


Mexico's Maquiladora ma·qui·la·do·ra  
n.
An assembly plant in Mexico, especially one along the border between the United States and Mexico, to which foreign materials and parts are shipped and from which the finished product is returned to the original market.
 system, a darling of the 1990s and sometimes referred to as a template for special economic zone programs in other emerging economies, suffered a double whammy double whammy
Noun

informal a devastating setback made up of two elements

double whammy n (col) → palo doble

double whammy n (inf
 over the past two years. The first whammy wham·my  
n. pl. wham·mies Slang
1. A supernatural spell for subduing an adversary; a hex: put the whammy on someone.

2.
, U.S. economic weakness, has a built-in light at the end of the tunnel: there is a question of timing, but the downturn in U.S. demand from competitive export processors abroad won't last forever, and somebody will be a winner on the upswing Upswing

An upward turn in a security's price after a period of falling prices.
. But the second whammy is competition from China, and if there is light at the end of that tunnel, it is more likely from raging wildfires than soothing rays of daylight. As a result, direct investors are hesitant; speculators are pondering a bet against the peso that might pay off if exports and Mexico-bound direct investment don't recover; and financial officials are concerned about the bilateral and systemic risks Systemic Risk

Risk common to a particular sector or country. Often refers to a risk resulting from a particular "system" that is in place, such as the regulator framework for monitoring of financial_institutions.
 that could eventuate e·ven·tu·ate  
intr.v. e·ven·tu·at·ed, e·ven·tu·at·ing, e·ven·tu·ates
To result ultimately: The epidemic eventuated in the deaths of thousands.

Verb 1.
 if a turn-around doesn't come.

Mexico's comparative advantage lies in lower labor costs than the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , proximity to developed North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , and--for some industries--somewhat lower costs due to different regulations on areas associated with high per capita income Noun 1. per capita income - the total national income divided by the number of people in the nation
income - the financial gain (earned or unearned) accruing over a given period of time
 economies such as environmental protection. On the other hand, comparative disadvantages include an intrusive bureaucracy that is sometimes corrupt, sometimes simply hostile to the private sector; poor utilities and transportation infrastructure; under-investment in human development; and a less than dynamic industrial structure reflecting imperfect financial intermediation and residual statism stat·ism  
n.
The practice or doctrine of giving a centralized government control over economic planning and policy.



statist adj.
. "Clustering" of the right industries doesn't always take place, and demonstration effects from vibrant new industries are too few, despite successes. Maquiladoras maquiladoras (mäkē'lädō`räs), Mexican assembly plants that manufacture finished goods for export to the United States. The maquiladoras are generally owned by non-Mexican corporations.  were a strategy for maximizing the comparative advantages and protecting investors from the disadvantages, thus tipping the scales and making it attractive for U.S. and other multinationals to come on down.

And come they did. Today there are 3,288 Maquiladora plants in Mexico employing over one million citizens, and accounting for half of the country's exports (see Table 1). But Maquiladora exports have fallen with the U.S. recession and rising Chinese competition. More than two hundred plants closed last year, and hundreds of thousands of jobs were lost. Most went to Asia--primarily China.

What is going on here? Mexico's comparative advantage over the world in its Maquiladora-intense sectors, as revealed by changes in share of world exports, didn't erode in the years leading up to the recent troubles. Mexico grew its global export shares in most of these industries significantly in the late 1990s. But as much as Mexico was changing, China was changing faster--and growing its share of global exports in most of these same industries even faster (see Table 2). That was a sign that there would be trouble when boom-times burst. Importantly, this wasn't just rooted in what China was doing right; it concerned what Mexico was failing to do to keep up: from 1996-2002 Mexico's Global Competitiveness Report The Global Competitiveness Report is a yearly report published by the World Economic Forum. [1] The first report was released in 1979. The 2006-2007 report covers 125 major and emerging economies.  ranking fell seriously from 33 to 45 (55 in terms of micro-economic competitiveness, or business environment), while China (despite fluctuations) moved from 36 to 33.

China's reforms challenge Mexico's comparative advantages head on, and make the disadvantages starker. China wins on low labor costs and many other costs of doing business, while quality control, technology diffusion, mid-level management skills, and physical infrastructure are improving fast enough to impress even skeptics and make Mexico's shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
 in these areas more apparent.

What's left? Mexico's proximity to the U.S. market is the remaining hope. Proximity as salvation presupposes either the criticality of just-in-time timetables or else prohibitively high costs for shipping weightier goods. Looking at the comparative advantage data post-1996, there are a handful of sectors where Mexico stayed ahead of both the world and China: television receivers, engines, various vehicle categories, vehicle parts, meters and control systems, and medical instruments. In several of these (the automotive cluster) and a number of others where Mexico's lead is far slimmer, recent Chinese advances portend por·tend  
tr.v. por·tend·ed, por·tend·ing, por·tends
1. To serve as an omen or a warning of; presage: black clouds that portend a storm.

2.
 steep export gains in coming years. Looking at Table 1 again, a saving of two weeks in shipping time (three weeks from China versus one from Mexico) is not alone going to rescue many Maquiladora plants. High-weight items more expensive to ship may be more important, although Chinese multinationals like Haier have set up manufacturing in North America precisely to compete in segments (such as refrigerators) where long-distance shipping is too costly. With the phase-out of global textile and apparel constraints over this decade, as much as 85 percent of global manufacturing in that sector may end up in China, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 U.S. government estimates: for the 27 percent of Maquiladoras and 226,000 workers still in that sector, there is serious trouble ahead.

Mexico is flush with initiatives to counter the competitiveness trends. Slight tax reductions enacted thus far are trivial in light of the evolving economics. Mexican politics will not easily permit bolder business-friendly steps. Investments in infrastructure and human development, especially health and education, are well conceived but take time to pay off. Mexican officials talk of needing to get one step ahead of China on the value-added spectrum, as Taiwan has sought to do, but that is no small feat and must be built on a higher skills human resource profile that takes years of broader social reform to achieve. And besides, China is becoming the next semi-conductor boomtown--this is no longer a challenger just in plastic toys Plastic Toys are an electro-rock band formed in late 2003 based in Southampton, UK. The 4-piece group are made up of Jon Plastic (Vocals/Guitars), Kitty Brooks (Bass), Si Jackson (Guitars) and Ben Coley (Drums).  and cheap underwear.

So China is eating Mexico's lunch, but more due to the Mexican inability to capitalize on Cap´i`tal`ize on`   

v. t. 1. To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes s>.
 successes and induce broader reform than to China's lower wage workers per se (India has pennies-an-hour laborers, but is not directly threatening Mexico). If China were not attracting factories from the Mexican border and capturing new investments before they happen, then other countries probably would be.

What are the implications of China's competitive challenge for the peso? For one thing, don't expect the Chinese currency Currency has been used in China since the New Stone Age, in which Chinese also invented paper money in the 9th century.

Today Renminbi (Chinese: 人民幣), literally People's currency, abbreviated to RMB, is the currency in mainland of the People's
, the renminbi (RMB RMB Right Mouse Button
RMB Regional Management Board (USACE)
RMB Rolf Maier Bode (musician, band)
RMB Ren Min Bi (currency of People's Republic of China) 
), to be revalued this year or next. The Chinese government Ever since Republic of China founded in January 1st, 1912, China has had several regional and national governments. List
  • Chinese Soviet Republic
  • Provisional Government of the Republic of China
  • Reformed Government of the Republic of China
 is committed to the stable RMB-U.S. dollar peg for the time being, and has the wherewithal where·with·al  
n.
The necessary means, especially financial means: didn't have the wherewithal to survive an economic downturn.

conj.
Wherewith.

pron.
Wherewith.
 to back it up. Contrary to some reports, the U.S. government is not leaning on Beijing to revalue. Some Mexican commentators have suggested an undervalued Undervalued

A stock or other security that is trading below its true value.

Notes:
The difficulty is knowing what the "true" value actually is. Analysts will usually recommend an undervalued stock with a strong buy rating.
 RMB is to blame for weak Mexican exports. But foreign investment into Mexico, which in turn drives exports (as is the case in China as well), was robust fight through the peso appreciation of the late 1990s and into 2000, and should be a more fundamental driver of export growth than exchange rate fluctuations. Further, the peso effectively devalued de·val·ue   also de·val·u·ate
v. de·val·ued also de·valu·at·ed, de·val·u·ing also de·val·u·at·ing, de·val·ues also de·val·u·ates

v.tr.
1. To lessen or cancel the value of.
 against the RMB by falling against the dollar since 2002, and this should provide a modicum mod·i·cum  
n. pl. mod·i·cums or mod·i·ca
A small, moderate, or token amount: "England still expects a modicum of eccentricity in its artists" Ian Jack.
 of export edge for the short term.

If Mexico fails to achieve deeper regulatory reform--the real determinate DETERMINATE. That which is ascertained; what is particularly designated; as, if I sell you my horse Napoleon, the article sold is here determined. This is very different from a contract by which I would have sold you a horse, without a particular designation of any horse. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 947, 950.  of peso strength--then the diversion of direct investment and manufacturing by reform-minded China could well be the proximate proximate /prox·i·mate/ (prok´si-mit) immediate or nearest.

prox·i·mate
adj.
Closely related in space, time, or order; very near; proximal.



proximate

immediate; nearest.
 reason for another peso crisis. But Mexico has nearly $50 billion in reserves to employ in staving off currency crisis while the country finds its way to redouble re·dou·ble  
v. re·dou·bled, re·dou·bling, re·dou·bles

v.tr.
1. To double.

2. To repeat.

3. Games To double the doubling bid of (an opponent) in bridge.

v.
 domestic reform. If Mexico takes the course of eschewing bold restructuring appropriate to the challenges--and the peso flounders as a result in the face of diminished expectations--then please: don't blame China.
Maquiladora exports have fallen with the U.S. recession and rising
Chinese competition. More than two hundred plants closed last year, and
hundreds of thousands of jobs were lost.

TABLE 1
Mexico's Maquiladora Industry Today

                                          PLANTS     EMPLOYEES

Food-related products                          71        9,459
Clothing, textile products                    886      226,033
Shoe, leather products                         42        6,642
Furniture, wood & metal products              349       53,583
Chemical products                             142       23,315
Assembly of transport equipment               256      226,382
Assembly/repair of tools, machinery            61       16,427
Assembly of electrical articles               168       86,230
Electric, electronic parts, materials         533      236,846
Assembly of toys, sports items                 49       10,438
Services                                      229       36,300
Other                                         502      128,826
Total                                       3,288    1,060,481

Source: After Economist Intelligence Unit, Business
Latin America, based on Instituto Nacional de
Estadistica, Geografia e Informatica, 2002.

As Mexico was changing, China was changing faster.

TABLE 2

Revealed Comparative Advantage of Mexico and China,
1995-2000

                                      SHARE OF WORLD EXPORTS (%)

SECTOR                       1996     1997     1998      1999     2000

Miscellaneous Chemicals
   Mexico                    0.46%    0.54%    0.71%    0.62%     1.02%
    China                    1.29%    1.48%    1.33%    1.38%     2.70%

Leather
   Mexico                    1.11%    1.01%    1.18%    1.42%     2.41%
    China                    1.99%    2.45%    2.88%    3.15%     7.34%

Manmade Woven Fabrics
   Mexico                    0.47%    0.42%    0.49%    0.92%     2.49%
    China                    7.51%    9.44%    9.45%    9.73%    21.31%

Machine Tools
  Mexico                     0.84%    1.28%    1.18%    1.38%     1.89%
   China                     4.63%    5.14%    5.49%    5.18%     8.96%

Combustion Engines
   Mexico                    4.99%    4.84%    4.96%    5.17%     8.81%
    China                    0.40%    0.42%    0.40%    0.57%     1.17%

Heating/Cooling Equipment
   Mexico                    2.04%    2.00%    2.49%    3.03%     5.46%
    China                    0.79%    1.12%    1.36%    2.00%     5.31%

Office Machines
   Mexico                    2.85%    2.69%    3.11%    2.40%     3.66%
    China                    8.24%    9.63%    9.83%   10.31%    19.42%

Computer Equipment
   Mexico                    2.02%    2.50%    2.98%    4.05%     9.59%
    China                    2.77%    3.56%    4.75%    5.02%    12.96%

Sound/TV Recorders, Etc.
   Mexico                    2.20%    2.57%    2.75%    3.57%     4.15%
    China                    5.97%    7.21%    7.80%    8.86%    16.78%

Electrical Transmission Equipment
   Mexico                    5.96%    6.38%    8.12%    8.88%    16.49%
    China                    7.51%    8.57%    9.88%   11.17%    22.10%

Passenger Cars
   Mexico                    3.96%    3.77%    3.99%    4.28%     7.80%
    China                    0.01%    0.01%    0.01%    0.00%     0.01%

Motor Vehicle Parts
   Mexico                    2.46%    2.74%    3.37%    3.90%     7.23%
    China                    0.32%    0.36%    0.43%    0.60%     1.41%

Motorcycles
   Mexico                    0.44%    0.54%    0.82%    0.97%     0.84%
    China                    6.11%    7.28%    7.70%    9.03%    17.85%

Furniture
   Mexico                    2.81%    3.55%    3.51%    4.09%     8.60%
    China                    3.94%    5.02%    5.38%    6.19%    11.89%

Medical Instruments
   Mexico                    3.32%    3.85%    4.14%    4.42%    11.32%
    China                    1.19%    1.27%    1.39%    1.45%     3.89%

Meters and counters
   Mexico                    3.16%    7.99%   11.76%   16.57%    30.64%
    China                    1.96%    2.35%    2.42%    2.43%     7.29%

Photographic Equipment
   Mexico                    1.06%    1.32%    2.08%    2.32%     3.83%
    China                    6.83%    8.79%    9.98%    9.50%    14.17%

Source and clarification: Author's calculation based on UNCTAD ITC
database and COMTRADE database. Year 2000 figures are inflated
due to incomplete reporting of world export data. Figures accurately
depict relative position of Mexico to China, but since national
export data and world data are from different series, absolute
values may be imperfect.


Daniel H. Rosen is a visiting fellow at the Institute for International Economics in Washington, D.C. Michael Kovrig, a master's candidate at Columbia's SIPA SIPA Structural Insulated Panel Association
SIPA Small Investor Protection Association
SIPA Silicon Valley Indian Professionals Association
SIPA Specialized Information Publishers Association (formerly Newsletter & Electronic Publishers Association) 
 graduate school, assisted with this article.
COPYRIGHT 2003 International Economy Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Rosen, Daniel H.
Publication:The International Economy
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Mar 22, 2003
Words:1858
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