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- Date sent: Wed, 10 Apr 96 22:41:01 -0700
- Subject: term paper
-
-
-
- I. Historical, Population, Culture, Political, and Economic Information
-
- History
-
- Mexico was the site of some of the earliest and most advanced civilizations in the western
- hemisphere. The Mayan culture, according to archaeological research, attained its greatest
- development about the 6th century AD. Another group, the Toltec, established an empire in
- the Valley of Mexico and developed a great civilization still evidenced by the ruins of
- magnificent buildings and monuments. The leading tribe, the Aztec, built great cities and
- developed an intricate social, political, and religious organization. Their civilization
- was highly developed, both intellectually and artistically. The first European explorer to
- visit Mexican territory was Francisco Fernßndez de C≤rdoba, who in 1517 discovered traces of
- the Maya in Yucatßn. In 1535, some years after the fall of the Aztec capital, the basic
- form of colonial government in Mexico was instituted with the appointment of the first
- Spanish viceroy, Antonio de Mendoza. A distinguishing characteristic of colonial Mexico was
- the exploitation of the Native Americans. Although thousands of them were killed during the
- Spanish conquest, they continued to be the great majority of inhabitants of what was
- referred to as New Spain, speaking their own languages and retaining much of their native
- culture. Inevitably they became the laboring class. Their plight was the result of the
- 'encomienda' system, by which Spanish nobles, priests, and soldiers were granted not only
- large tracts of land but also jurisdiction over all Native American residents. A second
- characteristic of colonial Mexico was the position and power of the Roman Catholic church.
- Franciscan, Augustinian, Dominican, and Jesuit missionaries entered the country with the
- conquistadores. The Mexican church became enormously wealthy through gifts and bequests that
- could be held in perpetuity. Before 1859, when church holdings were nationalized, the
- church owned one-third of all property and land. A third characteristic was the existence of
- rigid social classes: the Native Americans, the mestizos, mixed Spanish and Native American
- (an increasingly large group during the colonial era), black slaves which were brought from
- Africa and the Caribbean, freed blacks and white Mexicans. The white Mexicans were
- themselves divided. Highest of all classes was that of the peninsulares, those born in
- Spain, as opposed to the criollos, or Creolesùpeople of pure European descent who had been
- born and raised in New Spain. The peninsulares were sent from Spain to hold the highest
- colonial offices in both the civil and church administrations. The peninsulars held
- themselves higher than the criollos, who were almost never given high office. The
- resentment of the criollos became an influential force in the later movement for
- independence. In 1808 the viceroy, under pressure from influential criollos, permitted them
- to participate in the administration. Other peninsular officials objected and expelled the
- viceroy. In the midst of these factional struggles a political rebellion was begun by the
- Mexican people. Mexico has been rocked by political rebellion during most of its entire
- history in one way or another. Under the various dictatorships that Mexico found itself
- under at times in history, it made tremendous advances in economic and commercial
- development. Many of the new undertakings were financed and managed by foreigners (mostly
- American and European). This was and continues to be a major factor in the discontent of
- most Mexicans. Moreover, the government favored the rich owners of large estates,
- increasing their properties by assigning them communal lands that belonged to the Native
- Americans. When the Native Americans revolted, they were sold into peonage. Discontent,
- anger and a spirit of revolt continued to grow throughout Mexico. Madero was elected
- president in 1911, but was not forceful enough to end the political strife. Other rebel
- leaders, particularly Emiliano Zapata and Francisco (Pancho) Villa, completely refused to
- submit to presidential authority. Victoriano Huerta, head of the Madero army, conspired
- with the rebel leaders and in 1913 seized control of Mexico City. New armed revolts under
- Zapata, Villa, and Venustiano Carranza began, and Huerta resigned in 1914. Carranza took
- power in the same year, and Villa at once declared war on him. In addition to the ambitions
- of rival military leaders, intervention by foreign governments seeking to protect the
- interests of their nationals added to the confusion. In August 1915, a commission
- representing eight Latin American countries and the United States recognized Carranza as the
- lawful authority in Mexico. The rebel leaders, except for Villa, laid down their arms. The
- bandit leader incited his forces to commit crimes against Americans to show his resentment
- against the United States and in 1916 led a raid on Columbus, New Mexico. As a result, an
- American force under General John J. Pershing was sent to Mexico. A new constitution,
- enacted in 1917, provided for a labor code, prohibited a president from serving consecutive
- terms, expropriated all property of religious orders, and restored communal lands to the
- Native Americans. Many provisions dealing with labor and social welfare were advanced. Some
- of the most drastic were intended to curb foreign ownership of mineral properties and land.
- In 1936 an expropriation law was passed enabling the government to seize private property
- whenever necessary for public or social welfare. The national railways of Mexico were
- nationalized in 1937, as were the soil rights of the oil companies. A government agency
- called Petr≤leos Mexicanos, or Pemex, was created to administer the nationalized industry.
- The expropriations seriously affected the Mexican oil industry, for it became difficult for
- Mexico to sell oil in U.S., Dutch, and British territories. Mexico was forced to arrange
- barter deals with Italy, Germany, and Japan. The oil trade with these nations was
- interrupted by World War II. In 1940, the so-called Good Neighbor Policy of the United
- States became dominant in Mexican politics. This policy involved close cooperation with the
- United States in commercial and military matters. Mexico agreed to allow the United States
- Air Force to use Mexican airfields and also agreed to export critical and strategic
- materials (mostly minerals) only to countries in the western hemisphere. Consistent with its
- policy of cooperation with the United States, Mexico severed diplomatic relations with
- Japan, Italy and Germany in December 1941. In May 1942, after the sinking of two Mexican
- ships by submarines, the Mexican Congress declared war on Germany, Italy, and Japan. Later
- that same year a trade agreement, establishing mutual tariff concessions, was negotiated by
- Mexico and the United States. In 1944, Mexico agreed to pay U.S. oil companies $24 million
- plus interest, for oil properties expropriated in 1938. In June 1945, Mexico became an
- original member of the United Nations. The government stabilized the peso in with the aid
- of loans from the Treasury of the United States and the International Monetary Fund. In
- 1950, the problem of Mexican laborers who entered the United States to seek seasonal farm
- employment became a matter of grave concern to the two governments. Official agreements
- between Mexico and the United States provided for the legal entry of a specified number of
- such workers annually. Approximately 1 million, however, crossed the border illegally every
- year. The problem was further complicated by the demand of the Mexican government for
- guarantees against the exploitation of its citizens by U.S. employers and by the hostility
- of U.S. farm labor organizations toward the competition of Mexican migratory laborers
- willing to work for substandard wages. In March 1952, the Congress of the United States
- passed a bill providing for the punishment by fines and imprisonment of those recruiting and
- employing aliens who entered the country illegally. The Mexican economy grew at a healthy
- annual pace during the period from 1970 to 1974, but beginning in 1975 growth decreased
- markedly and inflation rose substantially. In an attempt to reduce the nation's
- foreign-trade deficit, the government in 1976 devalued the peso by more than 50 percent by
- changing from a fixed to a freely floating exchange rate. A potentially beneficial economic
- development was the discovery in 1974 and 1975 of huge crude-petroleum deposits in Campeche,
- Chiapas, Tabasco, and Veracruz states. Oil production more than doubled during the latter
- half of the 1970s. By the mid-1980s a rapid increase in foreign debt, coupled with falling
- oil prices, had plunged the country into severe financial straits. In 1989, the Salinas
- government sped up the privatization of state-controlled corporations and modified
- restrictive trade and investment regulations to encourage foreign investment by permitting
- full control of corporations by foreign investors. The current president, Ernesto Zedillo,
- is a strong advocate of reform. He has taken the lead in performing budget cuts, price and
- tax adjustments, tight monetary policy and further deregulation and privatization.
-
- Population
-
- The Mexican population is composed of three main groups: the people of Spanish descent, the
- Native Americans, and the people of mixed Spanish and Native American ancestry, or mestizos.
- Of these groups, the mestizos are by far the largest, constituting about 55 percent of the
- population. The Native Americans total about 30 percent. The population of Mexico is
- 90,419,606. The population density in 1990 was 119 people per square mile with about 73
- percent of Mexicans living in urban areas. (Encarta, "Mexico")
-
- Political Divisions
-
- Mexico consists of 32 administrative divisionsù31 states and the Distrito Federal (federal
- district), which is the seat of the federal administration. The national executive power is
- vested in a president, who must be Mexican-born and the child of a native Mexican. The
- president is popularly elected for a six-year term and may never be reelected. The president
- appoints the cabinet, which is confirmed by the congress. The legislative power in Mexico
- consists of the senate and the chamber of deputies. The upper house is a senate, with 64
- members popularly elected for six years. Two senators are elected from each state and from
- the federal district. The lower house is a chamber of deputies, made up of 500 members
- elected to 3-year terms. Three hundred are elected from single-member districts based on
- population, and the remainder are elected according to a system of proportional
- representation. Senators and deputies may not serve two consecutive terms. The highest
- tribunal in Mexico is the supreme court of justice, made up of 21 full-time members
- appointed by the country's president with the consent of the senate. Other important
- judicial bodies in Mexico include circuit courts and district courts. The chief executive of
- each state is a governor, popularly elected to a six-year term. The governor of the federal
- district is appointed by the president of Mexico. Legislative power in the states is vested
- in chambers of deputies, whose members are elected to three-year terms. The Partido
- Revolucionario Institucional (Institutional Revolutionary Party; PRI) is the largest and
- most important political party in Mexico. It was formed in 1928 as the Partido Nacional
- Revolucionario (National Revolutionary Party) and has been continuously in power since that
- time, although under several different names. Opposition parties exist, but not until the
- 1980's did they represent a serious challenge to the PRI. Chief among them is the Partido
- de Acci≤n Nacional (National Action Party; PAN), a conservative, pro-Catholic group drawn
- primarily from the middle class and the Frente Democrßtico Nacional (National Democratic
- Front, FDN), a coalition of leftist opposition groups. (Encarta, "Mexico")
-
- Culture
-
- Mexican culture is a rich, complex blend of Native American, Spanish, and American
- traditions. Rural areas are populated by Native Americans, descendants of the highly
- developed societies of the Maya, Aztec, and Toltecs, and by Spanish and mestizo farmers and
- laborers. Each of these heritages has enriched the regional culture. In the cities, both
- European and North American influences are evident. Most contemporary Mexican artists are
- striving to produce identifiably Mexican work that blends Spanish, Native American, and
- modern European styles. (Encarta, "Mexico")
-
- Economy
-
- Mexico reflects a shift from a primary-production economy, based on mining and agriculture,
- to a semi-industrialized nation. Economic achievements are the result of a vigorous private
- enterprise sector and government policies that have made economic growth a predominant
- objective. Traditionally, the government also emphasized Mexicanization of industry, and
- local control of companies engaged in mining, fishing, transportation, and exploitation of
- forests was required by law. More recently, however, foreign investment in new enterprises
- has been actively encouraged, and government controls on some sectors of the economy have
- been loosened. Mexico's gross domestic product (GDP) increased by 6.5 percent annually
- during the period from 1965 to 1980 but only 0.5 percent yearly during 1980 to 1988. Weak
- oil prices, rising inflation, a foreign debt of more than $100 billion, and worsening budget
- deficits exacerbated the nation's economic problems in the mid-1980s, although the economic
- picture brightened toward the end of the decade. In 1992 the GDP was $324.29 billion. The
- annual budget included $107 billion in revenue and $122 billion in expenditure. (Encarta,
- "Mexico")
-
- II. NAFTA
- In December of 1992, Presidents Salinas and Bush and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney of Canada
- signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The Mexican legislature ratified
- NAFTA in 1993 and the treaty went into effect on January 1, 1994, creating the largest
- free-trade zone in the world. Creating a North American free-trade zone and privatizing
- state-owned industry was part of a plan by the Salinas government to revive the Mexican
- economy. By 1993, the Mexican government had sold 80 percent of its industries to private
- investors for about $21 billion and had reduced inflation from 150 percent to 10 percent. In
- November 1993, President Clinton predicted that if the trade agreement passes, American
- companies will add another 200,000 jobs by 1995. NAFTA's promoters predicted that by the
- end of 1995 the U.S. would enjoy a $9 billion trade surplus with Mexico. The reality is
- that the post-NAFTA surge in imports from Mexico has resulted in an $8.6 billion trade
- deficit with Mexico for just the first six months of 1995. By adding the Mexican trade
- deficit numbers to the current deficit with Canada, the overall U.S. NAFTA trade deficit for
- the first six months of 1995 alone is $16.7 billion. Using the Department of Commerce trade
- data in the formula used by NAFTA proponents used to predict job gains, the real accumulated
- NAFTA trade deficit would translate into over three hundred thousand U.S. jobs lost. A
- number of companies that specifically promised to create new jobs actually laid workers off
- because of the agreement. Allied Signal, General Electric, Mattel, Proctor and Gamble,
- Scott Paper and Zenith all made specific promises to create jobs, and all have laid off
- workers because of NAFTA as certified by the U.S. Department of Labor's special NAFTA
- unemployment assistance program (NAFTA TAA). As of mid-August 1995, the U.S. Department of
- Labor has certified 38,148 workers as having lost their jobs to NAFTA. A total of 68,482
- U.S. workers have filed to receive NAFTA-related unemployment assistance through the
- NAFTA-TAA program. Despite the job losses, trade officials said NAFTA remains a net gainer
- for U.S. workers. Increased exports to Mexico and Canada will support some 3 million U.S.
- jobs this year, up some 500,000 from two years ago, according to the U.S. Trade
- Representative's office. (Briones)
-
- III. Recent Events
- A. The Chiapas Uprising and the Zapatistas
- On January 1, 1994, a group of Native Americans called the Zapatista National Liberation
- Army (EZLN) captured four towns in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas and demanded
- reforms from the Salinas government for better treatment for poor Indians there. They
- chose to begin their rebellion to coincide with the implementation of NAFTA because they
- consider it a "death sentence." They demand bilingual and intercultural education in their
- indigenous language as well as in Spanish. They want titles and protection of the lands
- where they live. Finally, they say that the governments should ratify the International
- Labor Office's (ILO) resolution 169 on the promotion and protection of the rights of
- indigenous people. The group is named for Emiliano Zapata, a 19th-century Mexican
- revolutionary leader and agrarian reformer. The EZLN has organized itself among some of the
- most dispossessed people of the world. Its' soldiers are drawn from the forests, mountains
- and small towns of the region, both from the indigenous Mayan population, and from
- immigrants from Central and Northern Mexico. The EZLN soldiers have been subsistence
- cultivators and landless wage-laborers. They have grown and marketed their own export crops
- and have worked on the plantations and ranches of others. A very few are intellectuals
- drawn to the area over a decade ago by their ideals and hopes. The EZLN understands how
- NAFTA opens Mexico to U.S. exports and imports, and how the most threatening of these is
- corn, the basic food crop of the indigenous population and an important source of cash
- income. Already they are suffering from low prices for coffee, another cash crop, due to
- government's elimination of financial support for that production. They also know that
- export development means ecological destruction, especially deforestation. (Marcos) Although
- Mexican troops quickly retook most of the territory held by the rebels and a cease-fire was
- called soon afterward, the rebel group generated momentum for political reform in Mexico. A
- government negotiating team, headed by former Mexico City mayor Manuel Camacho Solis, met
- with rebel leaders and offered them a 34-point proposed agreement that included promises of
- political changes, new social programs, land reform, and better standards of living.
- However, the group rejected the plan in June.
-
-
-
-
-
- Subcommandante Marcos is the enigmatic spokesperson and highest army commander of the
- Zapatista National Liberation Army. He is known for his well-written press releases filled
- with wit and sarcasm. He is always masked in public, and often smokes a pipe. The
- government claims to have "identified" Marcos as Rafael Sebastian Guillen Vicente, but
- Marcos and the EZLN have denied this.
-
- Major Ana Mari'a was the commander of the operation for taking the municipal palace of San
- Cristo'bal for the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN). She was 25 years old when she
- joined the Zapatista Army and saw almost the whole process of how it moved forward. She was
- one of the first women who was part of the ranks of the Army and has risen to hold the
- highest rank of any woman in the EZLN. (Gabriel) This revolt affects the current exchange
- rate due to the uncertainty surrounding this uprising. Many valuable resources can be found
- in the Chiapas region, such as timber, coffee and oil. Many foreign industries have reduced
- or canceled work in the region for fear of being caught between the EZLN and government
- troops. There is much more fighting taking place than most American newspapers report.
- With businesses reducing their spending in Mexico, the inflow of U.S. dollars is reduced
- which increases the demand for the dollar in Mexico. This causes the dollar to strengthen
- against the peso.
-
- B. The Colosio Assassination
- On March 23, 1994, during the Mexican presidential campaign, the PRI's candidate Donaldo
- Luis Colosio Murrieta, was assassinated while campaigning in Tijuana, Baja California.
- Unnamed U.S. intelligence officials have stated that former Mexican police commander
- Fernando de la Sota Rodalleguez, charged in connection with the assassination, was a paid
- informant for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in Mexico City from 1990 to 1992. De la
- Sota began his police career in 1973 working for Mexico's Federal Security Directorate, and
- by 1992 he had become investigations department commander for the federal attorney general's
- office. He was fired that year on suspicion of taking bribes from alleged drug lord Rafael
- Aguilar Guajardo and the CIA dropped him soon after. De la Sota was working as the head of
- the private security team for Colosio on the day of the assassination. Federal
- investigators arrested De la Sota in February of this year on charges of giving false and
- conflicting testimony about the assassination. Despite his 20 years' experience in police
- work, De la Sota claimed that the gunshots set off a diabetic attack which kept him from
- seeing what was happening. He was released on Feb. 28 on a $7,000 bond. At the time of his
- arrest, Mexican officials indicated off the record that De la Sota was closely connected to
- the assassination. Currently two men are under arrest for the murder: Mario Aburto
- Martinez, a factory worker who allegedly shot Colosio in the head from the right side, and
- Othon Cortes Vazquez, who is charged with shooting the candidate in the abdomen from the
- left side. Cortes Vazquez and De la Sota knew each other. Cortes Vazquez worked for
- various PRI officials as a driver and messenger, and on the day of the murder he was driving
- for Gen. Domiro Roberto Garcia Reyes, who was in charge of the official security for
- Colosio. One of the videotapes held by the attorney general's office reportedly shows De la
- Sota and another member of the private security team, Hector Javier Hernandez Thomassiny,
- guarding Colosio's left side. Cortes Vazquez suddenly "replaced" the two experienced
- bodyguards just before he and Aburto shot the candidate, according to people who saw the
- tape. As soon as Colosio fell, De la Sota and Hernandez Thomassiny allegedly seized Aburto
- and let Cortes Vazquez escape. The uprising in Chiapas and the murder of presidential
- candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio are two examples of how Mexico's social and civic
- institutions are crumbling under the pressure of drug-related lawlessness and corruption,
- factors that are making Mexico a very dangerous place even for members of the ruling elite.
- Indeed, the same environment of lawlessness and impunity that has allowed Mexico's ruling
- party, known as the PRI, to govern for over 65 years is now aiding the expansion of the
- influence of the narcotics trade. Federico Reyes Heroles, editor of the monthly magazine
- Este Pais, says bluntly that the killing was a deliberate hit by Mexico's powerful drug
- lords. News reports in the days following the killing included numerous off-the-record
- comments by government officials confirming the suspicion that the killing was a hit
- organized and paid for by drug traffickers. Another prominent Mexico City editor, speaking
- off-the record, says that the Mexican politicians are being killed off because of a power
- struggle related to money and drugs, not over questions such as democracy and human rights.
- Beyond the death of Colosio, however, another explanation exists: the need to maintain the
- appearance of "fighting drugs" to satisfy Washington. Eduardo Valle, former aide to Interior
- Minister Jorge Carpizo, has given the Mexican government documents and testimony allegedly
- linking government officials and drug traffickers to the assassination of presidential
- candidate Colosio. The former official, who is known as "the owl", worked as a senior
- official directing Mexico's anti-drug efforts. He says that Colosio was murdered by members
- of the Grupo del Gulfo cocaine cartel, with the involvement of Colosio campaign officials
- close to Communications and Transportation Minister Emilio Gamboa. Included with the
- documents provided by Valle during testimony given at the Mexican consulate in Washington
- was a DEA report about telephone calls last December by cartel members to the offices of the
- presidency. (Whalen, p.2-4) Assassinations affect exchange rates due to the uncertainty that
- is caused. Many investors flee from the market if there is a risk of losing their
- investments. Without these investments, the economy begins to tumble downward due to
- increased unemployment and a lower demand for goods. This may cause the dollar to
- strengthen as the people move away from the uncertain peso.
-
- IV. Exchange rate
- See graph attachment.
-
- V. Devaluation of the Peso
- Due to the weaken peso, caused by constant printing of money and high inflation, Mexican
- investors took close to $11 billion dollars out of Mexico in a few days in December 1994.
- The political turmoil from regional insurrection to a string of assassinations and
- disrupted elections help cause the collapse of the peso, requiring a $20 billion bailout
- from the U.S. Treasury. The International Monetary Fund has pledged another $17.8 billion,
- while the central banks of other industrialized nations, acting through the Bank of
- International Settlements, are obligated for an additional $10 billion. (Banda)
-
-
- VI. Advantages/Disadvantages of Importing/Exporting Goods
- A Houston company exporting to Mexico will find some difficulty selling its goods in a
- country were the peso is weak against the U.S. dollar. The Mexican businesses will be
- forced to buy only the necessities due to the unfavorable exchange rate. However, on the
- positive side, if the Mexican businesses expect that the peso will devalue further, it may
- decide to purchase big ticket items now in hopes of beating any further devaluation.
- A Mexican company whose primary business is exporting Mexican made products to the U.S. will
- enjoy the weak peso, strong dollar economy. Imports from Mexico into the U.S. has resulted
- in an $8.6 billion trade deficit with Mexico for the first six months of 1995. While the
- Mexican company is paying for its labor and overhead with weakened pesos, it is receiving a
- stronger U.S. dollar for its goods. The company can request payment in the stronger U.S.
- dollar and invest them into various financial instruments until the peso can rebound or is
- needed to continue operations.
-
- VII. Opinion
- The signs are growing ever stronger that Mexico's determined adherence to its economic
- austerity program is setting the stage for a remarkably solid and sustainable recovery from
- the recent financial crisis. The country's Bolsa stock index has rebounded more than 60
- percent from its February low, the peso has stabilized, compared to what it has done in the
- past, and Mexico's recent $500 million bond offering was oversubscribed by $1.3 billion.
- Mexico is making clear progress in improving its debt structure, and strong export growth is
- producing a dramatic correction in Mexico's current account imbalance. Mexico has a balanced
- federal budget and a largely privatized economy. The North American Free Trade Agreement
- and Mexico's other trade pacts are continuing to play a significant role in creating new
- opportunities for Mexican businesses. A number of U.S. companies have chosen to create
- co-production partnerships with Mexican firms over geographically more remote partners in
- Asia because of Mexico's proximity, modern infrastructure and industrious workforce. NAFTA
- is playing a key role in encouraging such partnerships. By reducing North American trade
- barriers, NAFTA is enabling firms which might otherwise manufacture in Asia to work with
- Mexican partners instead. The growth of business partnerships, along with Mexico's ongoing
- economic, legal, judicial and political reforms helps to explain Mexico's ability to attract
- long-term investment. However, the peso is currently in a tailspin against the dollar due
- mostly to currency speculators. If the Mexican government can stay with its current plans
- and programs with minor adjustment, the peso should rebound. The bottom line from Mexico is
- that its continued commitment to open markets and economic integration is paying off and
- will be reflected in the overall strengthening of the Mexican peso against the U.S. dollar
- in the long run.
-
-
-
-
-
- REFERENCES
-
- Banda, M., (1995, September 5). Economic, Political Crisis Shadows Zedillo's First National
- Address. Associated Press, Internet (WWW), http://www1.trib.com/NEWS/APwire.html.
-
- Briones, J., (1995, September 4). NAFTA's Broken Promises. Public Citizen Publication,
- p.10.
-
- Dean, D., (1995, September 20). Mexico Doing Right Things to Turn Itself Around. Houston
- Chronicle, Sec. A, p.29.
-
- Gabriel, S., Mount Holyoke College. Internet (WWW), Newsgroup: soc.culture.mexican.
-
- Marcos, Subcomandante Insurgente, (1995, August 30). Sub. Marcos Communique to the National
- Conference for Peace. La Jornada, Internet (WWW), Newsgroup: soc.culture.mexican.
-
- Microsoft « Encarta, "Mexico", Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation.
-
- Whalen, Christopher (1995, September 13). Assassins In Mexico, The Mexico Report.
- A newsletter on Mexico that provides litigation management, cross-border due diligence and
- communications strategy with respect to Mexico and other emerging markets.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Name: finalmex.txt
- Email: jbrown@ghgcorp.com
- Language: English
- Subject: Economics
- Title: History and Economics of Mexico (1500's - Present)
- Grade: 95%
- System: University
- Age when handed in: 22
- Country: United States
- Comments: Good paper that discusses Mexico's history and economic growth through present
- day.
-
-
-