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Issue 1, January/February 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Beyond the Border
Have Mexico’s Maquiladoras
Bottomed Out?
One of Mexico’s most talked-about
economic events this decade has been the downturn in
maquiladora, or in-bond export, plants. These plants
account for close to half of all Mexican exports to
the United States, so it’s no wonder they receive
so much attention.
Between October 2000 and March
2002, maquiladora employment fell by nearly 277,000,
or about 21 percent. Employment recovered through spring
of 2003, then fizzled again. The usual causes of maquiladora
fluctuations (U.S. demand and Mexican cost factors)
have begun to move in directions that induce growth.
Are these changes enough to spur a recovery? Maquiladora
employment has begun to edge up, but pressures in both
directions complicate the answer.
To understand more than simple
generalities about maquiladoras today, two factors deserve
attention. First, maquiladoras and their counterparts
in other countries are chronically volatile. Maquiladora
employment and output fluctuations—both down and
up—are greater than in same-industry plants in
high-income industrialized countries. Second, while
the latest downturn has been spread broadly across maquiladora
industries, some have fallen harder than others. Some
industries have recovered a little and appear ready
to move back up. Others look poised for further decline.
Employment Volatility
Between September 1998 and
October 2003, overall maquiladora employment in Mexico
rose more than it fell. As seen in Chart 1, employment
peaks in October 2000 and then falls hard and fast.
Newspapers make much of this drop, but they scarcely
ever discuss the upward move over the preceding two
years. Maquiladora employment rose more between September
1998 and September 2000 than it fell in the following
three years. Despite the sharp decline since October
2000, maquiladora employment has never fallen back to
September 1998 levels.

Maquiladoras act as shock absorbers
for manufacturing operations in industrial countries.
In any country, certain industries have long-term upward
or downward trends. But in the short run, firms in high-income
countries use foreign export-processing zone plants
such as maquiladoras to take the brunt of shocks to
home demand. A given increase or decline in U.S. industrial
production triggers much larger increases or declines
in maquiladora employment in the corresponding industries
in Mexico. After suffering a decline starting in 2000,
U.S. industrial production began to recover late in
2001, offering reasons for hope.
Shock absorbing is not the only
factor in maquiladora employment fluctuations. Recent
changes in the dollar cost of doing business in Mexico
may explain not only some recent problems of the maquiladoras,
but also their recent upturn. Between October 1998 and
March 2002, the inflation-adjusted value of the dollar
weakened against the Mexican peso by 28 percent. At
the same time, the dollar strengthened against the currencies
of Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand and the
Philippines. These changes in the real exchange rate
lowered the dollar cost of buying products in the five
Asian countries, while raising it in Mexico. In Mexico,
average manufacturing wages in dollar terms rose 45
percent between 1998 and 2002 but fell in Singapore
and Sri Lanka. Since March 2002, however, the real value
of the dollar has strengthened 17 percent against the
peso, lowering the cost of doing business in Mexico.
Meanwhile, the dollar has appreciated only slightly
against the currencies of China, Malaysia and the Philippines
and declined against those of Sri Lanka, Singapore and
Thailand.
Sectoral Differences
More than 80 percent of the
Mexican maquiladora employment declines in 2001 and
2002 can be explained by changes in U.S. aggregate demand
and increases in the cost of doing business in Mexico.
Eighty percent, however, is not 100 percent. Clearly,
more is required to explain maquiladora fluctuations
than U.S. industrial production, the real exchange rate
and wage rate fluctuations.
Chart 1 also presents indices
of maquiladora employment for textiles and apparel,
for electronics and for everything else (all other).
Employment in both electronics and textiles and apparel
maquiladoras grew faster than the all other
group, but it also fell harder after reaching its peaks.
By October 2003, employment in both industries was markedly
below September 1998 levels. Although October 2003 employment
in all other industries was also well below its peak,
it was well above September 1998—farther above
it, in fact, than employment in textiles and apparel
and electronics was below it. Moreover, total maquiladora
employment seems to have bottomed out. The relevant
question here is whether the recovery of all other
and perhaps electronics will offset the continued falloff
in textiles and apparel.
Much of what made the two industries
sink farther than all other reflects government
policy. For textiles and apparel, the big policy change
came in January 1994, when the North American Free Trade
Agreement gave this industry a new set of rules for
trade with the United States and Canada. Before NAFTA,
China was the United States’ principal source
of textiles and apparel products. The special tariff
breaks textiles and apparel received under NAFTA pushed
Mexico past China to become the United States’
No. 1 supplier. But in 2000, the United States gave
some of the same trade openings to Caribbean Basin Initiative
countries (which include the nations of Central America).
In 2001, the United States extended other openings to
China when it joined the World Trade Organization. Both
China and the Caribbean Basin Initiative countries overtook
Mexico in textile and apparel exports to the United
States. Mexico seems unlikely to be able to compete
again in the lowest wage, low-skill labor markets that
much of this industry occupies.
The story of the electronics maquiladora
employment fluctuations is more convoluted. The U.S.
recession of 2000–01 began with a downturn in
U.S. electronics-related industries associated with
a worldwide slump in these industries. The relation
between the downturn in U.S. industries and their Mexican
counterparts is clear. Compounding the industry downturn,
changes in real exchange rates and dollar-denominated
manufacturing wages in Mexico during October 2000 through
March 2002 were affecting the cost of doing business.
In 2001, a new NAFTA rule went
into effect that made maquiladora operations more difficult,
costly and uncertain in Mexico. NAFTA Article 303 outlawed
tariff rebates for imports from non-NAFTA countries.
For firms that imported from Asia for assembly in Mexico
and subsequent export to the United States—a long-time
practice of special importance to the electronics maquiladoras—
Article 303 made Mexican operations more expensive overnight.
Firms began to take their operations elsewhere.
The Mexican government attempted
to counteract these tariff cost increases with subsidies
administered through a program known as Prosec. Some
maquiladora managers, complaining that Prosec’s
policies were mercurial and ad hoc, relocated their
operations in spite of the program. Also, because electronics
maquiladoras are especially sensitive to exchange rate
fluctuations, the real exchange rate appreciation of
1998–2002 may have affected these plants more
than others. Finally, the development of input supply
chains in electronics made China a stronger competitor.
Outlook for Maquiladoras
While most of Mexico’s
maquiladora downturn in 2001 and 2002 can be explained
by reductions in U.S. demand and cost-of-doing-business
changes expressed through wage and exchange rate fluctuations,
a significant share of the downturn is due to changes
in trade policy and increased competition abroad in
terms of supply networks and input costs. As the U.S.
recovery continues apace in the wake of its 2000–01
recession, so should the resuscitation of Mexico’s
maquilas. The recent softening of the Mexican peso has
not done much so far to make maquiladoras come back,
but it helped to stanch their decline, and its more
positive effects may still be ahead.
Policy changes raise questions
as to when or whether the maquiladoras will soon regain
their peak levels of employment or output, but it is
hard not to think that Mexico’s maquiladoras have
already bottomed out, even with further declines in
Mexico’s garment industry.
—William C. Gruben
| About
the Author
Gruben is director
general of the Center for Latin American
Economics and a vice president in the Research
Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas.
About Southwest Economy
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