Mexico
International Trade Contracts
THE MEXICO-EUROPE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT
This section covers:
- The tariff elimination provisions
- Rules of origin for MEFTA-eligible products
- Procedural requirements
SECTORAL PROGRAMS AND OTHER TARIFF REDUCTION MEASURES
This section covers the following:
- NAFTA duty drawback restrictions and their efect on Mexico’s duty and tax deferral programs
- Mexico’s duty and tax deferral programs
The Legal History of Mexico
This section provides an overview of Mexico.
Resources
See Also
- International Organization
- Foreign Relations
- Intergovernmental Organization
- Regional Organization
- Regional Integration
Resources
See Also
- Legal Biography
- Legal Traditions
- Historical Laws
- History of Law
Further Reading
- Mexico in the Oxford International Encyclopedia of Legal History (Oxford University Press)
- The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Political and Legal History (Oxford University Press)
- Mexico in the Dictionary of Concepts in History, by Harry Ritter
- A Short History of Western Legal Theory, by John Kelly
Merger Law in Mexico
Hierarchical Display of Mexico
Geography > Economic geography > APEC countries
Mexico
Concept of Mexico
See the dictionary definition of Mexico.
Characteristics of Mexico
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Resources
Translation of Mexico
Thesaurus of Mexico
Geography > Economic geography > APEC countries > Mexico
See also
- Instalment sale
- Republic of Chile
- Republic of Korea
- Republic of Indonesia
- Independent State of Papua New Guinea
- New Guinea
- United Mexican States
Comments
One response to “Mexico”
Posner
As for energy (which means oil), it will be opened to competition, but the huge government oil company, Pemex, will continue to be government-owned. Will it have the power to block effective competition from private companies? Who knows. And there is concern that oil production doesn’t do a great deal for an economy because it doesn’t provide widespread employment.
As for telecommunications, I would expect more competition to produce a more efficient telecommunications system, but I don’t have a clear idea of what contribution an improvement in telecommunications makes to economic output. That presumably depends on how great the improvement is.
I don’t see anything in the Mexican administration’s reform program concerning drug violence. There is an extraordinary level of drug violence in Mexico resulting from what amounts to warfare among the numerous drug cartels, and it is abetted by widespread public corruption. The drug wars, which appear to kill about 10,000 Mexicans a year, must be a drag on economic output. The annual number of murders in Mexico is almost twice the number of U.S. murders, even though the U.S. population is more than two and a half times the Mexican population.