Why Mexicans don't support Enrique Peña Nieto's Energy Reform?
Lack of trust on the
private sector. According to a
poll published by the newspaper El
Universal, about 62% of the people is something/very against
private investment in the national
Mexican oil
company
(PEMEX).
If we look at the recent past this is no surprise: in
1990 President Carlos Salinas amended
Mexican
Constitution to allow private investment in the
banking system, and created a fund
in case of contingency – the infamous FOBAPROA. In 1994 most of
the banks had severe financial problems. Government
needed 100
billion dollars plus interest to bailout its
recently privatized banks and the FOBAPROA was not enough.
During 1998, the private debt of the
banks was converted to public debt. Today
Mexicans are
still paying.
This
is not an isolated case: Government
had
to bailout private Highways companies just 8
years after their privatization. Another case: Mexico spent 110
million dollars to expropriate sugar mills
in 2001 because private owned companies were in bankruptcy.
Even private
investment in PEMEX has
not done so well. Private
companies extract oil under the multiple service contracts modality
at the Chicontepec basin and the results is a steady
decrease in oil production meanwhile
oil production is increased at Tabasco's coastal region with PEMEX
working alone.
Privatization will
trigger tax raises.
Mexican Oil Company handles 70%
of its income to the Federal
Government. This money is used to build infrastructure, to pay the
wages of the bureaucracy and to pay the welfare. President Peña's
proposal is to create profit-sharing contracts with foreign
private oil companies. Any share has to come from the oil rent so
it'll be less money to the government who is going have to find
another source of income. José Angel Gurria Secretary-General of
the OECD said Mexico must increase
the VAT - shortly
after meeting
President Peña. Now Peña said he will send
a Fiscal Reform to the Congress on early September.
PEMEX can do well
without private investment.
Two core ideas of the state campaign on Mexican
media to promote the Energy
Reform are: PEMEX has neither the money
nor the technology
to keep working, so needs private investment. The
Senator and Economist Alejandro Encinas has challenged both ideas.
First PEMEX is the fouth
oil producer of the world and the thirteenth
of the Americas in order of income. The problem is PEMEX has to pay
70% of this
income to the
government. PEMEX's
fiscal burden can be relieved by
eliminating tax exemptions and loopholes to biggest private
companies. This
loopholes are
tantamount to 3.87%
of the country
GDP
more than the 1%
of GDP the Energy Reform allegedly will
boost. PEMEX
will have the
money if some fiscal arrangements are made without
changing the Constitution.
Secondly
it's said Mexico has no the technology to drill on deep-water.
Mexicans engineers built
the oil industry from scratch
after its nationalization in 1938; an
ensuing
international
boycott
thwarted
the new state-owned company to acquire
technology from abroad, but
today here is
PEMEX 4th
oil producer of the world. The most recent achieving is drilling
successfully the Supremus-1
oil well over 9000 feet on deep-water
on 2012.
Reduced electricity
bills seem unfeasible. President
Peña is promising to lower electricity bills. Both
right-leaning ruling parties -PRI and PAN- have tried to match the
domestic gas
prices to US prices by eliminating subsidies. It's logical to think
they'll do the same about electricity bills. Currently the price of
a kilowatt hour in Mexico
varies from 2.1
to 2.9 MXN ( average 19
American
cents). Meanwhile in the US prices go from 6.8
to 32.9 cents per kWh (average 19.85
American cents). There's
not much room for improving the rates.
The Energy
Reform is not environmentally
friendly. Greenpeace stated this
Energy Reform is
not green, because
it relies on fracking as a method to reach the shale gas. Also
implies a risk of a new Gulf of Mexico oil spill accident while
searching on deep-water. Television
advertisements urge to do not leave the oil underground, but
because oil is
a non-renewable resource it makes
more sense if it's carefully
administered.
Increasing
dependency on the US and loss of
sovereignty. To
Mexicans Globalization means to buy almost everything from abroad
and export nothing but our brothers and sisters. Jobs must be
created in Mexico to hold Mexicans from crossing
to the US risking their lives and leaving a worried family behind.
As show in a
study of Tufts
University the
NAFTA affected negatively small Mexican farmers who cannot compete
with the US subsidized
corn, soy and wheat. Most stores bought
cheap imported grains and seeds rather
than expensive domestic
production. So
after NAFTA was
signed a great wave of unemployed farmers
rushed
into the US looking
for work. What
will happen if the US can't sell us food and gasoline anymore?
Back
to oil: Mexico is importing more than 50%
of the gasoline in spite of being the 4th
world oil producer. There's one refinery
every 2,213 persons in the US and one refinery
every 19,568 persons in México. The problem of sky
rocketing prices of gasoline can be tackled
by building more refineries thus
generating jobs inside Mexico.
The lies
about Lazaro Cárdenas.
Lazaro Cárdenas
was the Mexican president who expropriated private oil companies in
1938 because of their failure to abide by
the law.
Now President Enrique Peña Nieto is airing a heavy campaign on the
2 main TV networks
presenting Cárdenas as favorable to foreign investment. Cuauhtemoc
Cárdenas, son
of Lazaro Cárdenas,
regarded as “ofensive”
the misuse the figure
of Lazaro Cárdenas
for something he did not stand
for. Mexican Historians
Pedro
Salmerón, Luis Fernando Granados and
Halina
Gutierrez have also condemned the government
lies.
Cuauhtemoc
Cardenas made a proposal to involve all society on the discussion
of this Energy Reform and a
popular consultation. To this day Government
officials deny the possibility of
direct democracy even though
the fraction VIII of
Article
35 of the Mexican Constitution allows referendums
about national importance topics
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