Abstract
This document aims to assess the recovery of Mexico’s labour market following the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, the country experienced a significant decline in gross domestic product, the most severe since the crisis of 1982, which also had a profound impact on labor market conditions. The economy was heavily reliant on oil exports, and the country faced challenges due to low oil prices and a sharp increase in international interest rates, as it was one of the most indebted countries globally. The analysis in the document relies solely on official data and employs comparative statistical methods. The hypothesis posits that four years after the 2020 crisis, Mexico’s per capita GDP and most labor market indicators have not fully recovered to pre-pandemic levels. While the potential for recovery exists, various factors, including government actions and external conditions, have significantly altered the landscape. Internally, Mexico has implemented a range of social programs aimed at boosting basic incomes, albeit at the expense of capital investment and human capital development, particularly in education, training, health, capacity building, and science and technology. Externally, barriers to free trade and foreign investment have been erected, clouding Mexico’s short-term economic outlook.
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