Government regulations and FDI: a historical perspective of mexico |
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Authors: | Juan España Joel Nicholson Sheila Amin Gutierrez de Piñeres |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of International Business , San Francisco State University , 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, California, 93132;2. School of Social Science , The University of Texas at Dallas , Richardson, Texas, 75083-0688 |
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Abstract: | This article analyzes the development of foreign investment regulations and their impact on FDI flows in Mexico. The study covers the evolution of sectoral and aggregate investment patterns from the independence period to the 1994 Peso crisis and its aftermath. The pattern followed by FDI in Mexico has paralleled the transformation of the Mexican economy itself, focusing initially on the extractive and agricultural sectors, then on manufacturing activities, and recently on the services sector. Mexico has continuously reformed and modernized its regulatory system in order to adapt to internal political changes and changes in the world economic environment. Recent economic reforms and liberalization of FDI regulations have had a major positive impact on capital inflows, but more needs to be done, especially in the area of financial services in order to achieve a higher level of economic efficiency and to prevent financial breakdowns like the one experienced in 1994. |
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