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Mexico in Crisis

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto delivers a speech at the National Palace in Mexico City on January 13, 2014. (OMAR TORRES/AFP/Getty Images)
Caption
Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto delivers a speech at the National Palace in Mexico City on January 13, 2014. (OMAR TORRES/AFP/Getty Images)

The fiesta is over. Mexico, a remarkably important nation of some 120 million people鈥攊ndeed, the world鈥檚 fifteenth largest economy鈥攊s descending into crisis. Students have been slaughtered en masse with the complicity of a corrupt police force. The country鈥檚 young president and his finance minister are embroiled in a corruption scandal. And the recent fall in oil prices鈥攚hich 鈥攐nly portends further suffering.

It wasn鈥檛 supposed to be this way. When 48-year-old Enrique Pe帽a Nieto was elected Mexican president in 2012, his country鈥檚 future looked bright. A self-styled reformer, the leader of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and former governor of Mexico State moved immediately to implement his Pact for Mexico, which called for the achievement of some 95 goals over his six-year term.

Pe帽a Nieto enjoyed remarkable success over his first two years in office. He the country鈥檚 telecommunications market, greatly weakening the monopoly of billionaire (and Carlos Slim. Ditto for Mexico鈥檚 television broadcasting market, ending the domination of Televisa. In a move that American conservatives are likely to envy, Pe帽a Nieto also managed to overhaul Mexico鈥檚 sclerotic education system, introducing new standards for hiring teachers. ( on signing the law.) And perhaps most significantly, he ended a 75-year old monopoly, whereby state-owned energy company Pemex enjoyed total control of the country鈥檚 sizable oil and gas industries. Foreign companies will now be able to operate in Mexico and invest in Pemex as well. It was little wonder when in early 2014 Time dubbed Pe帽a Nieto 鈥渢he man who saved Mexico.鈥�

Or not. For since early this fall, Pe帽a Nieto and his PRI government have begun to unravel. The president鈥檚 approval rating now stands at a ghastly 39 percent.

Pe帽a Nieto鈥檚 troubles began in September when 43 students were kidnapped and murdered in the anarchic Guerrero State in southern Mexico, a major drug trafficking hub. Remarkably, it subsequently emerged that the local police鈥攁nd where the atrocity occurred鈥攚ere involved in the murders. The case brought back memories of the bad old days of hideous drug wars and corrupt local police forces鈥攁n era that Pe帽a Nieto and his predecessor former president Felipe Calderon were said to have vanquished. Major protests were sparked by the tragedy鈥攑rotests that continue even today, and which have recently Amazingly, it wasn鈥檛 until early December that Pe帽a Nieto even bothered to travel to Guerrero to address the crisis.

At the same time, a at the very top of Mexico鈥檚 government, involving President Pe帽a Nieto himself, as well as his wife. In November, it emerged that Pe帽a Nieto鈥檚 wife had purchased a multi-million dollar mansion from a company that had received major public construction contracts from Mexico State when Pe帽a Nieto was that state鈥檚 governor. Even worse, a subsidiary of the company had just won a no-bid $4 billion dollar contract to construct a new high-speed train line. Mrs. Pe帽a Nieto ended up canceling the purchase of what she had dubbed a 鈥渇amily home鈥� but the damage was done, and the President鈥檚 reputation continued to fall. Meanwhile, Mexico鈥檚 Finance Minister Luis Videgaray has gotten himself embroiled in a similar situation. The Wall Street Journal recently discovered that Mr. Videgaray too had purchased a mansion from the company in question. 鈥淰idegaray, widely seen as the driving force behind Mexico鈥檚 recent economic overhauls鈥� the Journal, 鈥渂ought the house in an exclusive golf resort outside the picturesque town of Malinalo [in 2012].鈥� A pervasive stench of corruption has begun to engulf the Pe帽a Nieto government.

The country鈥檚 economic performance, meanwhile, has disappointed. As Financial Times columnist John Paul Rathbone ,Authorised=false.html?_i_location=http%3A%2F%2F, 鈥淒espite what Mr. Pe帽a Nieto trumpets as a 40 percent rise in jobs created this year, economic growth has failed to take off; indeed, the government has already had to cut its growth forecasts four times. To compensate, the state has increased spending.鈥� Therefore, 鈥渘ext year鈥檚 fiscal deficit will rise to 4 percent . . . almost double the annual average deficit of the previous two governments.鈥� And then there鈥檚 the matter of tumbling oil prices, down from more than $100 a barrel early this summer to roughly $60 now. If prices remain low, the government will almost certainly be forced to cut spending in 2016, aggravating already inflamed passions.

All of this is bad news for Mexico鈥攁nd the United States. The U.S. clearly has a strong interest in a strong and prosperous southern neighbor, given the importance of trade between the two countries. A collapsing Mexico, meanwhile, would likely restful in a wave mass of migration into the United States. (In this regard, President Obama鈥檚 recent executive action on immigration may serve to only invite more illegal immigrants.) Unless President Pe帽a Nieto rights the ship soon, both the United States and Mexico could find themselves sailing into stormy seas.