Democratic Governance in Mexico : beyond state capture and social polarization, the World Bank detected 11 major constraints to competitiveness in the country, among them: taxes and tax adjustment, regulatory environment, education, corruption, labor market and energy. The high degree of concentration in economic sectors key and the existence of public and private monopolies limit the competitiveness and economic growth in Mexico, concludes the World Bank (WB).
was pointed out that our country needs to strengthen the regulatory capacity of regulatory transparency campaigns and officials, reduce poverty and advance the reelection of legislators. According to the study, "Mexico is a country and highly unequal from an international perspective."
work emphasizes that in 2005 the wealth of billionaires in Mexico rose to 6.5% of gross domestic product (GDP), similar to the U.S. and the UK and higher than France and Japan, whose average incomes are higher than those of Mexicans.
is argued that billionaires earned their wealth through political connections and privileged access to markets , not by innovation and competitive effort.
The document notes that the radical economic reforms carried out by Mexico in the past led to market concentration and failed to improve competitiveness channel. However, the paper argues that Mexico "is in position to start your second transition to democratic governance." Unfortunately there are groups
who resist reforms and slow when you try them and politicians are reluctant to "push an ambitious agenda of reforms", knowing the difficulties of overcoming the pressure of the interests of powerful people.