Mexico, NAFTA, and the Hardships of Progress: Historical Patterns and Shifting : Methods of OppressionMcFarland & Company, 1995 - 382 pages Examines the sociopolitical history of the country, how events of the past continue to influence the government's policies, and how economic policy will evolve in a period of free trade. Discusses the mechanisms creating Mexico's landed elite and commercial classes, the pauperization of the majority, and the emergence of the dictatorship of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, looking at factors such as nationalism and foreign influence throughout the nation's history. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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Page 11
... wages . By 1993 , the flight of U.S. investment capital to Mexico was already undercutting U.S. production and replacing a skein of high - wage manufac- turing jobs with low - wage service employment . But such export of the means and ...
... wages . By 1993 , the flight of U.S. investment capital to Mexico was already undercutting U.S. production and replacing a skein of high - wage manufac- turing jobs with low - wage service employment . But such export of the means and ...
Page 229
... wage controls of the 1970s were contested by labor's demands to maintain real wages against inflation , to regulate prices , to redistribute wealth through tax impositions , to restruc- ture the economic apparatus to protect jobs , to ...
... wage controls of the 1970s were contested by labor's demands to maintain real wages against inflation , to regulate prices , to redistribute wealth through tax impositions , to restruc- ture the economic apparatus to protect jobs , to ...
Page 237
... wage fund kept the rest of the population at a given standard of exisence , and many in this group fell below a subsistence level . The condi- tion of those dependent on wages varied with the relative strength of these classes vis - à ...
... wage fund kept the rest of the population at a given standard of exisence , and many in this group fell below a subsistence level . The condi- tion of those dependent on wages varied with the relative strength of these classes vis - à ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
A Portrait of Mexico Past | 21 |
Return to the Past | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Mexico, NAFTA and the Hardships of Progress: Historical Patterns and ... Richard Krooth No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
agrarian agreement agricultural American army Atlas of Mexico banks Bazant border California capital Cárdenas Carranza Center church commercial communities Congress corn crops debt demands Democratic Díaz domestic economic ejidatarios ejidos encomienda export expropriation factories farm federal forces foreign interests foreign investments Free Trade global hacendados haciendas hectares History of Mexico Ibid imperial imports Indian industrial infrastructure Institutional Revolutionary party investors Juárez Krooth labor landowners latifundias Latin Lázaro Cárdenas leaders loans manufacturing maquiladora meanwhile ment Mexican government Mexican Revolution Mexican workers Mexico City military million mobilized NAFTA November oil companies organized output Pact party peasants Pemex peons percent pesos petroleum political population President production reform regional revolution revolutionary Ross Perot rural Salinas secure social Spain Spanish sphere tariffs tion Trade Pact transnational U.S.-Mexican unions United urban domain Veracruz villages votes wages wealth World York