Andres Peñalosa: Under the PRI government, no nation in Latin America had a lower minimum wage than México. The wage gap between top and bottom earners grew during the neoliberal period, with the business class favored and benefits to the poor cut. Buying power for average Mexicans dropped by 80 percent.
To make matters worse, the Mexican economy became subordinated to the US and Canada. In 1991, wages in México ran nine times lower than wages in the US, and today, after almost 30 years under NAFTA, that ratio has grown even greater. During all this time, workers here in México had no defense. The charro unions agreed to low wages. They sold out workers to the PRI and corporate executives.
You served as the commissioner on minimum salaries under AMLO from 2018 to 2020. Have wages gone up since AMLO’s election?
The minimum wage rose twice during my tenure, and the minimum just rose again. Minimum wage workers labor mostly in the service sector, in workplaces like supermarkets. Some 14 million have had their incomes increased to $8.27 a day in US dollars, a 22 percent overall increase.
For the Northern states, the Mexican government felt that wages should be even higher for maquila workers, given the favorable tax breaks companies in that region were getting. The resulting negotiations between the government and the companies — affecting three million workers — didn’t go easily. The corporations stubbornly resisted any higher wages, as did the CTM unions.
But the wage hike was won, not just due to the stance of the Morena negotiators, but the persistent struggle of women workers. Their huge spontaneous strikes pressured the companies. Wages doubled for maquila workers, who now make $12.22 per day USD.
But so much more remains to be done. About 50 percent of workers work on their own in the informal economic sector. The salary reforms aren’t helping them. Mexican wages overall are running lower than China’s. I would sum up the situation by saying that the national government has led a modest recovery in workers’ wages.