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The original documents are located in Box B80, folder "Mexico 4/76 - 10/77 (7)" of the Arthur F. Burns Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1977 JAN -4 AMII: 41 January 4, 1977 OFFICE OF RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN TO: Chairman Burns FROM: Ted Truman Attached are the latest cables on the Mexican economic situation. Attachments: Mexico 16258 Mexico 16285 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Executive Order 10501 which provides that "A document... shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component." FORD & 938870 LIBRARY DEPARTMENT OF STATE nexico * Department of State of I AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM EMT CaIMF/IBRD CJS asp UNELASSIFIED 6674 85->FT PAGE 01 MEXICO 16258 302216Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-15 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05 CIEP-02 TRSE-00 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 ( FRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-04 OPIC-06 LAB-04 130 PA-02 PRS-01 /094 W 3107397 037404 /21 R 301945Z DEC 75 FM AMEMBASS MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHOC 9441 INFO TREASURY WASHDC TO CENTER PLEASE DETURN UNCLAS MEXICO 16258 INTERNATIONAL NTE E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: FFIN MX SUBJ: NEW ADMINISTRATION RATIFIES IMF AGREEMENT. 1. SUMMARY: DECEMBER 30 NEWSPAPERS CARRY GOM PRESS RELEASE STATING THAT THE NEW ADMINISTRATION HAS RATIFIED THE AGREEMENT SIGNED WITH THE IMF TWO MONTHS EARLIER. END SUMMARY. 2. PRESS RELEASE STATES THAT RATIFICATION WILL GIVE MEXICO THREE YEARS IN WHICH TO REESTABLISH EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL EQUILIBRIUM. PRESS RELEASE NOTES THAT USING THE EXTENDED FUND FACILITY WILL AVOID THE NEED TO TAKE MORE RESTRICTIVE MEASURES THAT WOULD BE NECESSARY It EQUILIBRIUM WERE TO BE RESTORED IN A SHORTER TIME FRAME. SUCH MEASURES WOULD, IT IS NOTED, "DRASTICALLY AFFECT PRODUCTION AND EMPLOYMENT." 3. USE OF EFF HAS THREE IMPORTANT ASPECTS, ACCORDING TO PRESS RELEASE. ONE IS THAT IT AVOIDS THE NEED TO RESORT TO BILATERAL SUPPORT, OR "SIMPLE SUPPORT FROM MARKETS." THE SECOND IS THAT IT PERMITS A GRADUAL ADJUSTMENT OF THE ECONOMIC DISEQUILIBRIUM. THE THIRD IS THAT THE GERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED 0 OF STATE Department of State of AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 MEXICO 16258 302216Z TECHNICAL SUPPORT OF THE IMF WILL INCREASE INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT OF MEXICAN ECONOMIC POLICIES. 4. PRESS RELEASE CITES THE FOLLOWING AS THE OBJECTIVES OF THE GOM'S ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT PROGRAMS: (A) TO IMPROVE THE ECONOMIC GROWTH RATE: (B) TO INCREASE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE GROWING LABOR FORCE; (C) STRENGTHEN INTERNAL SAVINGS, THEREBY REDUCING THE NEED FOR RECOURSE TO FOREIGN BORROWINGS; AND (D) FACILIATATE A RELATIVE STABILITY FOR INTERNAL PRICES AND REESTABLISH A "DYNAMIC" EQUILIBRIUM IN THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS SUSTAINABLE OVER THE MEDIUM TERM. 5. FINALLY, PRESS RELEASE STATES THAT DURING THE ADJUSTMENT PERIOD, THE GOM WILL SEEK TO REESTABLISH "FISCAL EQUILIBRIUM", TO REDUCE THE FOREIGN DEBTL TO A HEALTHY AND SUSTAINABLE LEVEL FOR THE LONG TERM, AND TO MAKE STRUCTURAL CHANGES THAT WILL PERMIT A MORE DYNAMIC DEVELOPMENT AND A MORE EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF THE BENEFITS OF THIS DEVELOPMENT. JOVA UNCLASSIFIED OF STATE Department of State of / AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 03 MEXICO 16285 3023312 HIGHER IN EARLY 1977 THAN THEY WERE IN 1975. IT IS VERY LIKELY THAT REAL WAGES IN EARLY 1977 WILL BE GREATER THAN THEY WERE IN 1975, THOUGH SUBSEQUENT INFLATION MAY ERODE THIS. THE INCREASE IN THE NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEX FROM DECEMBER 1975 TO NOVEMBER 1976 WAS 24 PERCENT. ONE COULD ARGUE THAT NO EMERGENCY WAGE INCREASE WAS NECESSARY IN LATE SEPTEMBER. IT APPEARS INEVITABLE THAT THE SEPTEMBER INCREASE COUPLED WITH THE NEW INCREASE WILL ADD TO INFLATIONARY PRESSURES IN 1977. ONE CAN ONLY PRESUME THAT POLITICAL FACTORS OUTWEIGHED ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS IN THE RECENT DECISION. JOVA FORD & LIBRARY GERALD LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 6 ARTMENT OF DEPART STATE Mexico Department of State of AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 6729 EMI SS PAGE 01 MEXICO 16285 302331Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-92 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 PA=01 PRS-01 1080 W 30 3107522 038161 /21 R 302301Z DEC 75 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9455 INFO TRSY WASHDC ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH A LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 16285 E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: EFIN ELAB MX INTERNATIONAL PLEASE INFORMATION CENTER SUBJ: MINIMUM WAGES BEGIN UNCLASSIFIED. 1. SUMMARY: NEW MINIMUM WAGES TO BE EFFECTIVE JANUARY ONE, WILL BE 9 OR 10 PERCENT ABOVE PREVIOUS LEVELS. END SUMMARY. 2. MINIMUM WAGE COMMISSION ANNOUNCED ON DEC 29 THAT MINIMUM WAGES BELOW 100 PESOS A ADAY WOULD BE INCREASED 10 PERCENT AND MINIMUM WAGES ABOVE 100 PESOS A DAY WOULD BE INCREASED 9 PERCENT. INCREASES TO BE EFFECTIVE JANUARY ONE. 3. NEW MINIMUM WAGE IN URBAN AREAS OF THE FEDERAL DISTRICT WILL BE 106.4 PESOS PER DAY, 35 PERCENT ABOVE WAGE THAT BECAME EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1976, WHEN URGAN MINIMUM WAGE FOR FEDERAL DISTRICT WAS INCREASED 24 PERCENT. RECALL THAT MINIMUM WAGES INCREASED 23 PERCENT, EFFECTIVE GERAL FORD LIBRARY LIMITED OFFICIAL 6 USE OF STATE Department of State of I AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 02 MEXICO 16285 3023312 OCT 1, 1976. WHEREAS MINIMUM WAGE IN FEDERAL DISTRICT DURING 1975 WAS THE EQUIVALENT OF $5.07 PER DAY (63.4) PESOS), IT WILL BE THE EQUIVALENT OF $5.32 AT AN EXCHANGE RATE OF 20:1. NEW MINIMUM WAGES ARE SUPPOSED TO BE IN EFFECT UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 1977. 4. MINIMUM WAGES DIFFER FROM REGION To REGION AND BETWEEN URBAN AND RURAL AREAS WITHIN REGIONS. THE HIGHEST IS IN THE STATE OF BAJA CALIFORNIA NORTE (TIJUANA) WHERE IT IS NOW FIXED AT 133.9 PESOS. THE LOWEST IS IN THE STATE OF OAXACA WHERE IT IS 51.1 PESOS IN RURAL AREAS. MINIMUM WAGES ARE ALSO SET FOR A NUMBER OF SPECIALIZED TYPES OF WORK, FOR EXAMPLE, THE MINIMUM WAGE FOR AUTO MECHANIC IN THE FEDERAL DISTRICT WILL BE 161 PESOS PER DAY 5. LABOR LEADER FIDEL VELASQUEZ SAID NEW MINIMUM WAGES WERE ACCEPTABLE AND PERMITTED WORKERS TOT RECUPERATE LOST PURCHASING POWER. HE SAID THE NEW WAGES WOULD APPLY TO APPROXIMATELY TWO MILLION WORKERS. 6. EXCELSIOR EDITORIALIZED UNDER HEADING OF "INSUFFICIENT MINIMUM SALARY". IT SAYS THE NEW WAGE LEVELS REFLECT THE TENDENCY TO STABILIZE THE ECONOMY BUT DO NOT PERMIT WORKERS TO ABSORB THE INCREASE IN THE COST OF LIVING DURING 1976, WHICH IT SAYS EXCEEDS THE TOTAL OF THE EMERGENCY MINIMUM WAGE INCREASE AND THE PRESENT INCREASE. EDITORIAL CONCLUDES BY CALLING FOR BASIC REFORM OF ECONOMIC POLICIES, BUT DOES NOT SAY WHAT THIS SHOULD BE. END UNCLASSIFIED. BEGIN LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 7. ASSUMING THAT ALL WAGES HAVE INCREASED MORE OR LESS IN LINE WITH THE DAILY AVERAGE WAGE IN THE FEDERAL DISTRICT THE DOLLAR COST OF WAGES WILL BE SOMEWHAT LIMITED OFFICIAL USE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1977 JAN -5 PM 4: 48 January 5, 1976 OFFICE OF RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN TO: Chairman Burns FROM: George B. Henry Attached is the latest cable on the Mexican economic situation. Attachment: Mexico 58 cc: Governor Wallich Defense inclusion of U.S. Government 10:01 classification of this document information is due to the classified under Executive Order bear a officially provides that "A document... shall of its which classification a: least as high as that highest classified component." GERATE R. FORD LIBRARA DEPARTMENT on STATE Mexico * * Department of State Jase of STATE AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM EYM UNCLASSIFIED 9993 EMT MEXICO 00058 0416362 SS PAGE 01 ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 FRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02 LAB-04 SIL-01 0MB-01 PA-02 PRS-01 AGRE-00 FEAE-00 ERDA-07 /076 W 041645Z 068763 /65 R 041520Z JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSI MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9485 INFO TREASURY DEPT WASHDC INTERNATIONAL PLEASE INFORMATION RETURN TO CENTER UNCLAS MEXICO 0058 E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: EGEN MX SUBJ: JLP PREDICTS ECONOMIC RECOVERY IN TWO YEARS. 1, SUMMARY. IN TWO RECENT MEETINGS, LOPEZ-PORTILLO HAS STATED THAT THE MEXICAN ECONOMY WILL HAVE RECOVERED IN TWO YEARS, AND THAT SOME IMPROVEMENT IN THE SITUATION CAN BE EXPECTED BY MID-77. END SUMMARY. 2, PRESIDENT LOPEZ-PORTILLO TOLD A DELEGATION FROM THE MEXICAN CONGRESS ON DECEMBER 31, THAT IT WILL TAKE TWO YEARS TO "RECONSTITUTE" THE MEXICAN ECONOMY. HE SAID THE NEXT SIX MONTHS WOULD BE PARTICULARLY DIFFICULT, BUT THAT BY JUNE OR JULY, ONE WILL BE ABLE TO SEE THE "OTHER FACE" OF THE DEVALUATION. 3. JLP CALLED THE 1977 BUDGET NEITHER DEFLATIONARY, NOR INFLATIONARY BECAUSE IT IS AIMED AT INCREASING PRODUCTION. THIS IS, HF SAID, THE ONLY AND MOST INTELLIGENT WASY TO OVERCOME INFLATION. HE WENT ON TO NOTE THAT MEXICO CAN BE SELF-SUFFICIENT IN FOODSTUFFS AND IN ENERGY, AND THIS PROVIDES THE BASIS FOR A STRONG ECONOMY. HE RELATED THE RECOVER IN TWO YEARS TIME TO TWO GERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED D or STATE Department of State AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM STATES OF UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 MEXICO 00058 041636Z AGRICULTURAL SEASONS. 4. LOPFZ-PORTILLO CALLED THE "MODEST" MINIMUM WAGE INCREASE A LESSON IN RESPONSIBILITY THAT BEGINS A PROCESS OF SOLIDARITY WHICH CAN BREAK THE INFLATIONARY SPIRAL. 5. JLP TOUCHED GN SIMILAR THEMES IN A MEETING WITH FEMALE JOURNALISTS SEVERAL DAYS EARLIER. HE TOLD THE JOURNALISTS THAT THE ECUNOMIC SITUATION WILL BE BETTER BY JUNE OR JULY, AND THAT MEXICO HAS TO EXPORT CRUDE OIL IN ORDER TO BE ABLE TO STOP EXPORTING IT AT A FUTURE DATE. JOVA UNCLASSIFIED BOARD OF GOVERNORS FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM OF THE 1977 JAN 10 PM 2: 15 January 10, 1977 OFFICE RECEIVE CHAIRMAN TO: Chairman Burns FROM: Ted Truman Attached is the latest cable on the Mexican economic situation. Attachment: Mexico 168 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Executive Order 10501 which provides that "A document shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component" FORDO i GERALD LIBRARY OF STATE Department of State of / AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM UNCLASSIFIED 2706 PAGE 01 MEXICO 00168 060128Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-15 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05 CIEP-02 SS-15 STR-04 OM8-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-04 OFIC-06 LAB-04 SIL-01 PA-02 PRS-01 /094 W 6 0603332 085825 170 R 060011Z JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9538 INFO TREASURY WASHDC UNCLAS MEXICO 168 E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: EFIN MX SUBJ: RECENT ECONOMIC INDICATORS REF: 76 MEXICO 15716 1. THIS CABLE REPORTS MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA IN BANK OF MEXICO'S ECONOMIC INDICATORS FOR NOVEMBER 1976. 2. MONEY SUPPLY (UNADJUSTED) AT END OCTOBER WAS 124,539.6 MILLION PESOS, COINS AND BANK NOTES WERE 61,875.4 MILLION PESOS AND DEMAND DEPOSITS WERE 52,664.2 MILLION PESOS. SEASONABLY ADJUSTED MONEY SUPPLY AT END-OCTOBER WAS 128,211.5 MILLION PESOS, 3. LIABILITIES OF BANKING SYSTEM CTABLE 1-4) AT END- OCTOBER WERE 710,512.2 MILLION PESOS OF WHICH 391,517.8 MILLION WERE IN PESOS AND 318,994.3 MILLION IN FOREIGN EXCHANGE. CONVERSION RATE WAS 25.4. NOTE THAT PESO LIABILITIES ARE SAME AS END-APRIL LEVEL. INCREASE IN LIABILITIES IS DUE IN LARGE PART TO REVALUATION OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE LIABILITIES. BULK OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE LIABILITIES (251,609.7 MILLION PESOS) BELONG TO NATIONAL GERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED 0 OF STATE Department of State AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM STATES OF UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 MEXICO 00168 060128Z CREDIT INSTITUTIONS, EX-BANK OF MEXICO. OF THESE, 224,164.2 MILLION WERE LOANS FROM FOREIGN BANKS. DOLLAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS WERE 11,307.6 MILLION PESOS. 4. TOTAL FINANCING OF BANKING SYSTEM AT END-SEPTEMBER WAS 622,047.5 MILLION PESOS, AND AT END-OCTOBER, WAS 675,863.8 MILLION PESOS. 5. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FEVENUE IN OCTOBER WAS 10,779.5 MILLION PESOS. EXPENDITURES WAS 15,393.9 MILLION PESOS. 6. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION INDEX DATA FOR 1976 REVISED. INDEX MEMBERS FOR JANUARY-SEPTEMBER Now AS FOLLOWS: 139.5, 140.7, 151.8, 140.6, 145,9, 147.4 145.1, 143.7, 138.9. 7. NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEX FOR NOVEMBER IS 249.1, UP 4.5 PERCENT FROM OCTOBER AND 25.1 PERCENT FROM NOVEMBER 1976. 8. MEXICO CITY WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX FOR NOVEMBER WAS 425.6, UP 8.2 PERCENT FROM OCTOBER AND 40.1 PERCENT FROM NOVEMBER 1975, 9. BALANCE OF PAYMENTS DATE UNCHANGED. OCTOBER IMPORTS WERE 444.5 MILLION; EXPORTS WERE 238.1 MILLION. OCTOBER TOURIST RECEIPTS WERE 57.3 MILLION AND EXPENDITURES WERE 22.5 MILLION. FRONTIER RECEIPTS WERE 122.0 MILLION AND EXPENDITURES WERE 74.0 MILLION. JOVA NCLASSIFIED BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM January JAM I 1977 1: 15 RECEIVED OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN TO: Chairman Burns FROM: Ted Truman Attached are the latest cables on the Mexican economic situation. Attachment: Mexico 232 Mexico 233 Mexico A-33 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Executive Order 10501 which provides that "A document shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component." FORD is GERALD LIBRARY OF mexico STATE * Department of State AMERICAN UNITED TELEGRAM STATES OF UNCLASSIFIED 5513 EMT 55 PAGE 01 MEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 0702102 ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISC-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 FRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 NSC-05 SS-15 STR-04 CEA-01 PA-02 PRS-01 -03 H-02 AGRE-00 1099 W 0714197 098406 /65 R 0700222 JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9556 INFO TREASURY WASHDC SEC 2 ATTACHED PLEASE RETURN TO UNCLAS SECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 0232 INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: EGEN MX SUBJ: PRESIDENTIAL DECEMBER 31 REMARKS ON RECENT LEGISLATION. REF: MEXICO 58 1. BELOW IS OUR INFORMAL TRANSLATION OF PRESIDENT LOPEZ- PORTILLO'S REMARKS TO A SENATE DELEGATION ON DECEMBER 31. PRESS RELEASE CALLS REMARKS "IMPROVISED". INTRODUCTION PARAGRAPHS ARE DELETED. 2. "WE HONESTLY BELIEVE THAT THE ORGANIC LAW OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION THE LAW OF BUDGET AND ACCOUNTING, THE LAW OF PUBLIC DEBT AND THE IMPROVEMENTS TO THE ORGANIC LAW, CONSTITUTE A FUNDAMENTAL BASIS FOR IMPROVING THE ADMINISTRATIVE FUNCTIONING OF OUR NATION, CONSIDERING THAT OUR COUNTRY, PERHAPS MORE THAN UNDER-DEVELOPED, MAY BE UNDER-ADMINISTERED 3. "WE HAVE MANY RESOURCES, SOME NON-RENEWABLE, OTHERS THAT ARE, MANY HUMAN, LIMITED AND CONGESTED FINANCING, BUT WE HAVE THEM. THENCE IT IS ORGANIZATION THAT MAY BE THE FACTOR WITHIN OUR HUMAN ABILITIES TO WHICH WE ARE MOST ACCOUNTABLE PRECISELY BECAUSE IT DEPENDS ON OUR ABILITY. LIBRARY GERALD FORD UNCLASSIFIED PRANTMENT OF STATE Department of State of it AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 MEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 070210Z 4. "WE ARE PLACED IN AN EXTRAORDINARY COUNTRY. IT IS ORGANIZATION THAT TERMINES OUR RELATIONSHIPS, AND THIS COULD BE SUCCESSFUL OR DEFICINET, IF WE SUCCEED OR NOT IN ORGANIZING OURSELVES; IF WE SOUCCEED OR NOT IN MEETING OBJECTIVES, IN FINDING GOALS, AND PLACING THEM IN SPACE AND TIME AND ORGANIZING THUS OUR RESPONSIBLE ACTIONS. 5. "I APPRECIATE THAT IT IS BY ORGANIZATION, AS THE FUNDAMENTAL RESPONSIBILITY OF A FREE BEING THAT MAN CAN GOVERN HIS DESTINY IF HE SUCCEEDS IN PERFORMING WITHIN HIS FREEDOM IN AN ORIENTED COURSE. 6. "FROM THAT COMES THE IMPORTANCE THAT I GIVE TO ADMINISTRATION, TO ORGANIZED SERVICE, IN THE FUNCTION OF OUR COMMON DUTIES. THEREFORE, I AM ESPECIALLY GRATEFUL FOR THE EFFORT, THE COLLA- BORATION THAT YOU GAVE US IN THE CONCEIVING AND IMPETUS To THE ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM, THAT SHALL PERMIT US TO BE ABLE TO COUNT ON SUFFICIENT INSTRUMENTS TO ADVANCE THE PROGRESS OF THE COUNTRY. 7. "T APPRECIATE AS WELL THE EFFORT MADE TO DEVELOP, TO IMPROVE, AND TO APPROVE A BUDGET SO DIFFICULT AS THE ONE WE HAVE HAD TO PRESENT, A BUDGET DRAWN UP BETWEEN TWO ADMINISTRATIONS, BETWEEN TWO ORGANIZATIONS, THE RESULT OF BASIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM AND ABOVE ALL. BETWEEN TWO DEVALUATIONS. A BUDGET COMPRISED BY THE RISK OF POSSIBLY BEING INFLATIONARY, BY THE GRAVE DANGER THAT IT COULD BE DEFLATIONARY, BY THE POSSIBILITY THAT PERSISTS THAT IF WE ERR IN ITS MANAGEMENT, WE WILL HAVE THE WORST OF ALL POSSIBLE WORLDS: INFLATION WITH UNEMPLOYMENT, WHICH IS THE BASIC PROBLEM EXISTING IN THE COUNTRY AND WHICH WE DO NOT WISH TO SEE GROW. 8. "WE BELIEVE THAT THE BUDGET IS NOT INFLATIONARY, NEITHER FOR ITS AMOUNT, UNFORTUNATELY ONLY SLIGHTLY ABOVE THE PAST LEVELS AND POSSIBLY LESS THAN THE POPULATION INCREASE, FOR THE PURPOSE OF INCREASING PRODUCTION. 9. "I BELIEVE THAT EXPENDITURE ORIENTED TO PRODUCTION IS NEVER EXCESSIVE, BECAUSE IT IS ONLY PRODUCTION THAT WILL REMOVE US FROM THE INFLATIONARY RISKS: GROWTH IS THE MOST INTELLIGENT FORM OF COMBATTING INFLATION. OF COURSE, IT CAN ALSO BE DONE - AND THIS IS DONE BY MANY RIGOROUS ECONOMIES THAT ALMOST ALWAYS FALL INTO FASCISM- UNCLASSIFIED on STATE * Department of State of i AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 03 MEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 070210Z BY FORCEABLY REPRESSING THE SAVINGS OF THOSE WITH THE LEAST, INSTEAD OF ACTING AGAINST THOSE WHO HAVE THE MOST. ONE CAN ALSO REDUCE DEMAND BY FORCE. THIS IS A MEANS OF CONTROLLING PROBLEMS SUCH AS WE FACE. BUT IT IS MORE INTELLIGENT AND MORE DESIRABLE TO ACT IN THE AREA OF PRODUCTION. 10. FOR THIS REASON, THE BUDGET WE HAVE APPROVED HAS TWO BASIC PRIORITIES: FOOD AND ENERGETICS. A COUNTRY THAT HAS SUFFICIENT OF THESE TWO PRIORITIES CAN MAKE HEADWAY, AND OURS HAS THEM. 11. "I APPRECIATE THE EFFORTS THAT YOU HAVE MADE IN ORDER TO PASS THE BUDGET, AS YOU HAVE MADE IN THE AREA OF TAX REFORM, WHICH HAS JUSTIFIABLY BEEN CALLED WEAK, BUT IT IS A TAX REFORM BECAUSE IT HAS A STRUCTURE. 12. "WE HAVE VERY LITTLE ROOM FOR MANEUVERS. BOXED IN BY THE INERTIA OF EVENTS, WE DON'T HAVE MUCH AREA TO MOVE IN, WE DON'T HAVE TIME TO RELAX; BUT THE LITTLE AREA WE DO HAVE PERMITS US TO BEGIN, AT LEAST IN AN INDICATIVE WAY, AND I HOPE NOT ONLY SYMBOLI- CALLY, AN AUTHENTIC TAX REFORM, BY WHICH WE FREE LOW-INCOME GROUPS FROM THE INCOME TAX. OF COURSE WE HAVE NOT BEEN FREE FROM CRITICISM FOR SOME HAVE SAID THAT THIS MEASURE TENDS TO INCREASE THE IRRESPONSIBILITIES OF A MAJORITY OF THE POPULATION. BERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED OF STATE * * Department of State UNITED OF TELEGRAM it UNCLASSIFIED 5514 PAGE 01 MEXICO 00232 02 OF 02 071328Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 RB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 NSC-05 SS-15 STR-04 CEA-01 PA=02 PRS-01 L-23 H-02 AGRE-09 1099 W 0714202 103304 /65 R 0700222 JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TC SECSTATE WASHOC 9557 INFO TREASURY WASHDC UNCLAS SECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 0232 13. "STRICTLY SPEAKING, WHAT WE ARE DOING IS STRENGTHENING JUSTICE BY INCRESING THE CONSUMPTION CAPACITY AND DEMONSTRATING THE DISPOSITION OF TAX AUTHORITIES TO SACRIFICE AN IMPORTANT SOURCE OF REVENUE IN ORDER TO ALLEVIATE PRESSURES ON PRICES AND THEREBY PERMIT THAT, IN RELATION TO WAGES, THE PRICE-WAGES POLICIES MAY BE LESS MALIGNANT. 14. "AND HERE I WANT TO REPEAT VERY BRIEFLY TO YOU SOMETHING I HAVE JUST SAID TO THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES: THAT LESSON, THAT BEATIFUL LESSON, THAT RISKY LESSON OF HISTORIC RESPONSIBILITY, THAT OF THE WORKING CLASS OF MEXICO IN UNANIMOUSLY ACCEPTING such A MODEST INCREASE IN THE MINIMUM WAGE. A SACRIFICE THAT BEGINS A PROCESS OF SOLIDARITY THAT I HOPE WILL BE CONFIRMED BY OTHER SOCIAL CLASSES. 15. "IT IS IN THIS MANNER THAT ONE CAN BREAK THE INFLATIONARY SPIRAL, WITH such RESPONSIBLE AND HAZARDOUS ACTS, BY COMPROMISES - THE PURELY NOMINAL DEMOGOGUERY IS EASY - THAT CAN RESOLVE THE CRITICAL SITUATIONS THROUGH WHICH WE LIVE. 16. "WHAT I JUST SAID A MOMENT AGO TO THE DEPUTIES, MANY STILL HERE, NOW I REITERATE BEFORE THIS COMMISSION BECAUSE IT SEEMS TO ME AN HISTORIC EXAMPLE, THE FORCE, THE SACRIFICE OF THE WORKING CLASS. 17. "WITH THESE MEANS IT IS BELIEVABLE THAT WE CAN GOVERN EVENTS. T AM SURE THAT WE WILL BE ABLE TO DO so IN THE COMING DIFFICULT GERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED or STATE * Department of State of STATES AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 MEXICO 00232 02 OF 02 0713282 DAYS. WE ARE GOING TO BEGIN THE CLIMB IN JANUARY, A CLIMB THAT HAS BEEN IGNORED BY MANY BECAUSE OF THE DECEMBER HOLIDAYS; BUT THIS CLIMB BEGINNING IN JANUARY IS GOING To BE DIFFICULT, VERY DIFFICULT. IT WILL BE, AS WE HAVE SAID ON OTHER OCCASIONS, A VERY DIFFICULT SIX MONTHS, BECAUSE IT WILL NOT BE UNTIL JUNE OR JULY WHEN WE BEGIN TO SEE THE OTHER FACE OF THE DEVALUATION, UNTIL NOW BITTER. BEGINNING IN THESE MONTHS, WE WILL BEGIN TO SEE POSITIVE ASPECTS. 18. "THESE SIX MONTHS WILL FORM PART OF WHAT I BELIEVE WILL BE TWO YEARS DURING WHICH WE WILL BE ABLE TO RECONSTITUTE OUR ECONOMY. TWO YEARS, I SAY, NOT AS A MAGIC OR ARBITRARY NUMBER, TWO YEARS BECAUSE THESE ENCOMPASS TWO AGRICULTURAL CYCLES DURING WHICH WE CAN ORGANIZE PRODUCTION IN THE COUNTRY. BEGINNING WITH THIS EFFORT, ONE INITIAL, ANOTHER CONTINUED, SELF-SUFFICIENCY IN FOOD WILL ENABLE US TO CEASE IMPORTING GRAINS AND OILSEEDS THAT MAKE UP THE DEFICIT WHICH DE-BALANCES US IN THIS AREA. 19. "IF WE SUCCEED, THE COUNTRY AFTER TWO YEARS WILL BEGIN TO SEE BETTER TIMES. I DO NOT DOUBT THAT IF WE ACT WITH THE RESPONSABILITY SHOWN BY THE WORKERS SECTOR, WITH THE COLLABORATION OF WHICH YOURS HAVE BEEN AN EXAMPLE, THE COUNTRY WILL FACE UP TO ITS RISKS AND OVERCOME THE CRISIS. 19. "I AM CERTAIN OF IT. THE COUNTRY IS YOUNG, IT IS FLEXIBLE, IT IS POWERFUL. IT IS DISORGANIZED. WE ARE GOING TO ORGANIZE IT BETTER, WITH COURAGE, OCCASIONALLY WITH SACRIFICES, BUT ALWAYS WITH A FIRM WILL. 20. "I THANK YOU FOR YOUR VISIT, YOUR ASSISTANCE, AND WISH TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILIES A PLEASANT NIGHT AND THAT THE NEXT YEAR BE HAPPY FOR ALL. 21. "THIS WISH WILL BE RENEWED NEXT YEAR IN ORDER THAT 178 SHOULD BE BETTER. 22. "I WISH THAT MEXICO SHOULD BEGIN TO LIVE EACH DAY BETTER THAN THE NEXT. I WISH THIS FOR YOU; ON OUR PART WE WILL MAKE EVERY EFFORT THAT WE CAN IN ORDER THAT THIS WILL BE SO." JOVA NCLASSIFIED as STATE mexico Department of State of STATES AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 5813 EMT PAGE 01 MEXICO 00233 071548Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05 CIEP-01 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 L-03 H=01 PA-01 PRS-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 AGRE-00 FEAE-00 /084 W 071629Z 104883 153 R 071520Z JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHOC 9558 INFO TREASURY WASHOC PLEASE RETURN TO LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 0233 INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER E. 0. 11652: N/A TAGS: EFIN MX EALR MX SUBJECT: KEY MINISTER'S ECONOMIC VIEWS. 1. SUMMARY: MINISTER OF NATIONAL PROPERTIES AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT TOLD PRESS CONFERENCE THAT FURTHER REDUCTIONS IN CONSUMPTION WERE NOT POSSIBLE AND ONLY THROUGH INCREASED OUTPUT COULD INFLATION BE OVERCOME. HE ALSO SAID THAT GOVERNMENT WOULD NOT INTERFERE WITH PRIVATE INDUSTRY. END SUMMARY. 2. JOSE ANDRES DE OTEYZA, MINISTER FOR NATIONAL PROPERTIES AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT, HELD A PRESS CONFERENCE ON JANUARY 5. DE OTEYZA IS THE YOUNGEST MINISTER CAT AGE 34), AND HIS MINISTRY'S RESPONSIBILITIES FAVE BEEN EXPANDED TO INCLUDE THE GOVERNMENT'S INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS AS WELL AS MANAGEMENT OF MOST GOM-OWNED INDUSTRIAL PROPERTIES. HE IS CAMBRIDGE-EDUCATED AND HIS VIEWS APPEAR TO REFLECT THE SO-CALLED CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS. HE IS SAID TO BE INFLUENTIAL IN THE NEW ADMINISTRATION WE ARE, THEREFORE, REPORTING THE VIEWS HE EXPRESSED AT A PRESS GERALD FORD LIBRARY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE q STATE UNITED Department of State , TELEGRAM it OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 02 MEXICO 00233 071548Z CONFERENCE IN THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPHS WHICH ARE BASED ON NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. 3. THE ONLY MANNER TO BREAK THE INCREASE IN PRICES IS TO INCREASE SUPPLY BY INCREASING OUTPUT. UNFORTUNATELY, MEXICO IS A RELATIVELY POOR COUNTRY AND IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO BRAKE DEMAND OR REDUCE CONSUMPTION. 4. IN SEVERAL YEARS, THE BASIC INVESTMENTS IN SUCH AREAS AS STEEL, ENERGY AND FERTILIZER WILL BEGIN TO PAY OFF IN TERMS OF INCREASED OUTPUT. THE NATURE OF INVESTMENTS IN THESE AREAS ARE SUCH THAT THERE IS A LONG LEAD TIME BEFORE FULL PRODUCTION CAN BE ATTAINED. THIS SAME TIME SPAN IS NECESSARY TO RESTRUCTURE AND ORGANIZE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION. (COMMENT: THE PAST ADMINISTRRATION JUSTIFIED INCREASES IN PUBLIC SPENDING AND SUBSEQUENT INFLATION BY MAINTAINING THAT EVENTUALLY THE FRUITS OF PUBLIC SECTOR INVESTMENTS WOULD REDUCE INFLATION. THE NEW GROUP SEEMS TO BE SAYING THAT THIS IS STILL SEVERAL YEARS OFF.) 5. THE GOVERNMENT WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRIVATE SECTOR PLANS, EVEN IF THIS MEANS INVESTEMENTS IN NON-PRIORITY AREAS. THE PRIORITY AREAS ARE FOODSTUFFS, ENERGY, STEEL, PETROCHEMICALS, FERTILIZERS, CAPITAL GOODS AND BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS. 6. REGARDING OIL, MEXICO IS EXPORTING 150,000 BARRELS A DAY, THEREBY EARNING $700 MILLION A YEAR, WHICH IS HELPING THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS AND FINANCING IMPORTS OF ESSENTIAL GOODS. OIL IS NOT BEING EXPORTED INDISCRIMINATELY, BUT RATHER OIL IS A RESOURCE THAT MUST BE USED RATIONALLY. IT IS NOT BEING WASTED, AND THE COUNTRY WILL NOT BE IMPOVERISHED IN THE FUTURE. 7. PUBLIC SECTOR AS WELL AS PRIVATE ENTERPRISES SHOULD LIMITED OFFICIAL USE ARTMENT 80 STATE Department of State AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM STATES of LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 03 MEXICO 00233 0715482 BE PROFIT-MAKING. PROFITS ARE THE BASIS OF CAPITAL. HOWEVER, PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES HAVE BROADER RESPONSIBILITIES THAN PRIVATE ENTERPRISES. IN ANY CASE, SUBSIDIES FOR PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES SHOULD BE TRANSITORY AND OPEN, RATHER THAN PERMANENT AND HIDING INEFFICIENCIES. 8, COMMENT: DE OTEYZAIS VIEWS ON OVERCOMING INFLATION THROUGH INCREASED OUTPUT AND THE NEED FOR TWO YEARS BEFORE ANY SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS IS MADE ECHO THOSE OF THE PRESIDENT (SEE MEXICO 58), AND VERY LIKELY INFLUENCED THESE. JOVA BERALD FORD LIBRARY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE ARA AIRGRAM 770001-1004 RS/R REP AF ARA mexico Original to be Filed in Decentralized Files. FILE DESIGNATION EUR FE NEA CU UNCLASSIFIED A-33 INR E 2 a 10 HANDLING INDICATOR TO : US DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHDC FBO AID INFO: EMI US DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WASHDC AMEMBASSY, MEXICO SS AMCONSUL, GUADALAJARA INTERNATIONAL MINE CENTER AGR COM RB INT FROM AMCONSUL, MONTERREY DATE: December 21, 1976 E. O, 11652: NA LAB TAR TR XMB TAGS: PINT, ECON, MX SUBJECT : MONTHLY HIGHLIGHTS REPORT, DECEMBER, 1976 AIR ARMY NAVY OSO REF MONTERREY A- 32 OF NOVEMBER 23, 1976 USTA NSA CIA SUMMARY Monterrey area residents reacted favorably to SUGGESTED DISTRIBUTION President López-Portillo's call for hard work, his lack of rhetorical excess, and his favorable JAN 6 AM 11 43 comments on private investment. PRI candidate César Santos has been declared winner of the Monterrey mayoral election but his PAN opponent Pablo Emilio Madero continues to charge election fraud. POST ROUTING TO: Action Info. Initials Land expropriations by the Government last month AMB PO in Sonora led to a wave of land invasions in the DCM Monterrey consular district and to a one day HOL "businessmen's strike" that attracted widespread support. ECON CONS Protesting higher fares, Monterrey area students and ADM posesionarios seized over one hundred privately- AID owned busses, provoking a brief suspension of USIS service by bus owners. ARTMENT OF STATE Nuevo León Governor Zorrilla Martínez has been subjected to increasing criticism on issues such DEC 20 AM 9:19 as the municipal elections, bus seizures, and his FILE precipitate dismissal of the head of Monterrey's FAORC /DAY WC water company. Date: FORM UNCLASSIFIED For Department Use Only Initials: 10-64 Ray DS - 327 In Out Drafted by: Drafting Date: Phone No.: Contents and Classification Approved by: ECON/COMM: THCarter/RLGlass: mlg 12/17/76 CG: FXLambert Clearances: BERAMO FORD TIBRARY Pa 2 of 7 NCLASSIFIED A-33 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 REACTION TO LOPEZ-PORTILLO Monterrey businessmen, industrialists and political columnists breathed a sigh of relief when José López-Portillo assumed the Presidency on December 1. The tone of his inaugural address was well received, particularly his favorable comments on private investment. Local editorial opinion lauded both the style and substance of his comments and particularly welcomed his lack of rhetorical stridency, which distinguishes him so clearly from his predecessor. The new administration's firmness in dealing with invasions of private land by squatters was well received. Important business groups have supported López-Portillo's public call for a wage policy based on actual cost of living increases and they are watching carefully to see what action he will take when minimum wages are adjusted in January. Another plus for the new President is his appointment of a respected regiomontano as foreign minister and his selection of Monterrey's popular lame-duck mayor to a senior post in the national administration. Overall, Lőpez-Portillo's inaugural call for hard work as the solution to Mexico's problems fell on very receptive ears in a region which prides itself on its industriousness. ELECTION OF SANTOS RATIFIED, PANISTA PROTESTS CONTINUE Two weeks after the December 5 election, Partido Acción Nacional (PAN) mayoral candidate in Monterrey, Ing. Pablo Emilio Madero, continues to claim that he was fraudulently deprived of victory by the machinations of the ruling Partido Revolucionario Insti- tucional (PRI). In what many local observers consider the most corrupt municipal elections in recent memory, the PRI has been accused of widespread abuses, including double and triple voting by príistas, threats and intimidation against PAN poll-watchers and sympathizers, and the sudden reappearance of "lost" ballots and tally sheets at hastily-called meetings of the local Juntas Computadoras (JC). PAN's strategy has been to appeal directly to Federal authorities to seek a recount of what the PAN has characterized as the "spu- rious, illegitimate, bastard vote count" of the Junta or a complete annulment of the elections. PAN and various private citizens and groups have sponsored advertisements and open letters to President José López Portillo as well as to Gobernación Secretary Lic. Reyes Heroles. Concurrently, the panistas are mounting an extensive publicity campaign within Monterrey, aimed both at UNCLASSIFIED GERRLD FORD LIBRARY Pa 3 of 7 UNCLASSIFIED A-33 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 presenting what the party considers conclusive proof of a Madero victory and at challenging the vote claims of the PRI. Bumper stickers reading "I voted for Madero" abound. In attacking the Junta, Madero and the PAN have been joined by a number of newspaper columnists, who have taken great pains to argue the mathematical improbability of the Junta's vote count. PAN is also protesting the awarding of mayoral victories to the PRI in the Monterrey suburbs of Garza García and Santa Catarina. In Garza García, which has had PAN mayors for the past nine years, PAN complaints center on two precincts in which ballots disappeared from the polling places on the day of the election and mysteriously reappeared at a hastily-called meeting of that town's Junta Computadora to which PAN representatives were not invited. PAN candidate (and former Mayor) Junco accompanied Monterrey PAN mayoral nominee Madero to Mexico last week to present his case to the Gobernación Secretary. Garza García panistas have mounted a series of mass demonstrations in the municipality, both in front of the residence of State Governor Zorrilla Martínez and in various local plazas. PAN is also contending that widespread PRI intimidation of its poll- watchers and sympathizers is sufficient to invalidate the PRI victory in the Santa Catarina suburb. The PAN was successful in retaining the mayoralty of the indus- trial suburb of San Nicolás de los Garza, where Ing. Jesús Hinojosa T., was elected decisively on December 5. However, the PRI won in all outlying towns in the State. LAND SEIZURES President Echeverría's expropriation of 100 thousand hectares of farmland in Sonora prompted a quick and coordinated response from this area's business community. Leaders of Monterrey's Cámara Nacional de Comercio (CANACO), Cámara de la Industria de Transformación de Nuevo León (CAINTRA) and the Centro Patronal exhorted businessmen to close their doors on November 24 in a one day "sympathy strike" in support of the Sonora landowners. Businessmen's organizations in Saltillo and Torreón made similar appeals. Spokesmen of the businessmen's associations called the expropriation a "flagrant violation" of the constitution and claimed that the Sonora incident "proved that the executive branch is all-powerful, with a servile legislature and an impotent judiciary". UNCLASSIFIED BERALD FORD CARADA UNCLASSIFIED Page 4 of 7 A-33 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 Response to the strike call was impressive. Downtown Monterrey was deserted with nearly all retailers shut down. All the industrial conglomerates in Monterrey closed their doors to the public, except the Fundidora steel mill, which is part government-owned, Banks and gas stations stayed open. Eighty percent of commercial establishments were reported shut down in both Saltillo and Torreón. Echeverría's land expropriations in Sonora triggered campesino organizations in the consular district to initiate "occupations" of private landholdings. The Federación de Obreros y Campesinos in Durango seized more than 100 thousand hectares of cattle land alongside the Panamerican Highway on November 29. The squatters explained that their action was timed for the last days of the Echeverría administration because they feared López Portillo might not tolerate such land invasions. Most of the squatters were peacefully expelled hours later. Evictions of illegal squatters also took place in rural Nuevo León and in urban Saltillo and Torreón. GOVERNOR ZORRILLA DRAWS INTENSIFIED CRITICISM Criticism directed at Nuevo León Governor Pedro Zorrilla Mar- tínez intensified during the month. Local newspapers increas- ingly provided a public forum for accusations against the Governor, with representatives of bus owners blaming him per- sonally for some 27 million pesos in losses suffered as a result of bus seizures, spokesmen for the PAN blaming him for "cooking up the monumental electoral fraud" perpetrated against their party, and various private sector sources faulting his frequent absences from the state, his "unconstitutional" conduct in replacing the manager of the local water company, and his failure to defend regiomontanos against Echeverría's verbal attacks. The Governor, a protegé of Echeverría, always staunchly defended the former President in his frequent confrontations with "regiomontano" business leaders. Now that Zorrilla Mar- tínez has lost his patrón in Mexico City, his numerous local opponents feel free to attack him without restraint. BUS DISPUTES AGAIN Urban transportation disputes broke out once again in Monterrey with the seizure of busses by dissident students and posesiona- rios Close to 150 busses were seized in protest against higher bus fares. Bus owners retaliated by withdrawing their UNCLASSIFIED TIBRASY GERALD Fard UNCLASSIFIED Page 5 of 7 A-33 from MONTERREY December 21,1976 remaining busses from service. Public schools closed for several days during the stoppage and absenteeism and tardiness mounted in business enterprises. On December 9 University Rector Todd helped mediate an agreement which included the return of all but eight of the seized busses, which were retained as "hostages", a freeze on the new bus fares, a restoration of student discounts, and an improvement of bus maintenance and routes. POLITICAL MISCELLANY The Saltillo and Torreón campuses of the Autonomous University of Coahuila (AUC) appear to be back to normal after the peaceful resolution of student seizures of several university buildings and the settlement of a strike by State education employees. In Saltillo, the ten-day student occupation of the rectory building ended on November 21 when the University Rector agreed to discuss the reinstatement of several professors who had been suspended. Also in Saltillo, striking AUC administrative workers were dislodged from the School of Nursing by students who were concerned over the loss of the fall semester. In Torreón, medical students seized the administrative building ir protest of the choice of the director of the AUC's Children's Hospital. A pledge by the Rector to reconsider the appointment led to the students' decision to leave the building after 24 hours. ECONOMIC MISCELLANY Rapid inflation continues. The Economic Research Center of the State University estimates a six percent hike in the local consumer price index for the month of November alone. The Center calculates that consumer prices rose 25.5% between November 1975, and November, 1976. Food prices rose 19%, lodging 19%, clothing 31%, and transportation 56%. Leaders of three influential Monterrey business organizations have publicly recommended a new system of wage control based on actual cost of living increases. They propose establishing a system wherein labor contracts will contain a clause for a cost of living escalator computed on a quarterly or semiannual basis. They claim their proposal will eliminate wild estimates and predictions of inflation which are used to justify unreason- able wage demands. What they are advocating seems to be a detailed version of the vague proposal in López Portillo's inaugural address calling for a link between salaries and the cost of living. UNCLASSIFIED GERALD FORD LIERANT ge 6 of 7 UNCLASSIFIED A-33 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 Local auto sales are at rock bottom. The director of the local association of auto dealers stated that 20 car distributorships in the area had sold only seven 1977 cars during the month of November. The cheapest 1977 model costs 85 thousand pesos and credit is still tight. Meanwhile, auto- motive repair and maintenance shops are reported doing a booming business. To stimulate new car sales, the auto associa- tion has recommended that part of the Central Bank's reserves be devoted to rediscounting car loan paper. An agricultural team from the Soviet Union studying Mexican programs for the biological control of plant diseases visited the La Laguna region (centered around Torreón, Coahuila) for one week in late November. Heading the Soviet delegation was the USSR's Agricultural Attaché in Mexico, Dr. Anatoli Kiruschev. The group visited a number of ejidos and the Mexican Center for the Reproduction of Beneficial Insects. Outgoing Monterrey Mayor Leopoldo González Sáenz has been appointed Subsecretary for Public Works in the López Portillo administration. In a statement to the press following his appointment, "Polo" noted that the functions of the Secretariat of Public Works would be substantially upgraded in the government reorganization plan espoused by López Portillo in that respon- sibility for "Asentamientos Humanos" would be incorporated into the new "superagency". Public Works would also absorb or over- see a number of heretofore independent decentralized agencies and commissions. The rapid growth in size of the Autonomous University of Nuevo León (UANL) in recent years may soon be reversed. Rector Luis E. Todd has asked the University Council to begin limiting enrollment in August, 1977. Todd has also approached State Governor Pedro Zorrilla Martínez with the idea of creating both a new state university and a "colegio de Bachilleres". Meanwhile, the university continues in financing difficulty. Blaming delays in the receipt of some 16 million pesos from the state government, Todd recently stated that the university has insufficient funds to pay the Christmas bonuses due to its more than three thousand employees. Area citrus farmers are distressed because of overproduction and attendant weak prices. They also claim distress because of restricted exports to the United States. The local citrus organizations estimates 650 pesos per ton as the industry's break-even price, while current prices per ton have fallen to 300 pesos. The citrus organization also concedes that the high quality of U.S., Spanish, and Israeli oranges militates against Mexican export prospects. UNCLASSIFIED GERALD FORD LIBRARY UNCLASSIFIED Page 7 of 7 A-33 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 The directors of the Public Health Service and the Family Planning Program estimate that the birthrate of 44-45 per thousand which prevailed until 1974 fell to 40.8 in 1975. They explain that the Mexican Institute of Social Security alone has thus far inserted over 2000 loops, prescribed pills for close to 6000 patients, and sterilized nearly 2000 men and women. LAMBERT UNCLASSIFIED FOR & 076330 BRARY ar BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1977 JAN 25 AM 10: 02 RECEIVED January 24, 1977 OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN FROM: TO: Ted Chairman Truman Burns EMT Attached is the latest cable on the US/Mexican Relations. Attachment: Mexico 804 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Executive which provides that "A documen, alassification BI thest as Highest classifier LIBRARY GERALD ? FORD PUPARTMENT OF 1a STATE MEXICO Department of State OF AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL 9627 EMT PAGE 01 MEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 EUR-12 ISO-00 CIAE-00 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01 INR407 L-03 NSAE-00 NSC-05 PA-01 PRS-01 SP-02 SS-15 USIA-06 AID-05 COME-00 EB-08 FRB-03 TRSE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 CIEP-01 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 SCA-01 SCS-03 DEAE-00 SNM-02 FEA-01 INT-05 OES-06 AGRE-00 VO-03 INSE-00 STR-04 /121 W 2123532 004259 /64 R 2122317 JAN 77 return to FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9836 international ase Information Center INFO AMEMBASSY OTTAWA ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH zatt, C 0 N F I D E N T I 1 SECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 804 EO 11652 : GDS TAGS : PFOR US MX SUBJ : US/MEXICAN RELATIONS SUMMARY a SUBSECRETARY OF POREIGN AFFAIRS, LIC JOSE JUAN DE OLLOQUI, MET WITH THE MEMBERS OF THE FSI SENIOR SEMINAR ON JANUARY 17, TO PROVIDE AN OVERVIEW OF US/MEXICAN RELATIONS. DEOLLOQUI SPOKE EXTEMPORANEDUSLY, INFORMALLY AND OFF-THE-RECORD FOR NEARLY FORTY-FIVE MINUTES AND ANSWERED QUESTIONS. SUMMARY FOLLOWS. END SUMMARY. 1. HE BEGAN BY NOTING THAT MEXICO WAS ENCOURAGED BY RECENT INDICATORS THAT THE US ECONOMY IS STRENGTHENING, PARTICULARLY AS REFLECTED IN A LOWER RATE OF INFLATION AND DECREASED UNEMPLOYMENT. NOTING THAT NEW MEXICAN AND US ADMINISTRATIONS ARE ASSUMING POWER NEARLY SIMULTANEOUSLY, HE EMPHASIZED THAT NOW IS THE TIME FOR A NEW START IN DEVELOPING CLOSER POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC TIES BETWEEN THE US AND MEXICO. AS A CLOSE NEIGHBOR, DEVELOPMENTS IN THE US HAVE AN IMPORTANT IMPACT ON MEXICO. FOR PRAGMATIC REASONS, THEREFORE, MEXICO DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958 SEC. 3.6 MR07-117, #20; state lts 2/22/08 LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD BY dal NARA DATE 3/10/08 CONF IDENTIAL you FORM DS-1652 9.66 DEPARTMENT OF STATE UNITED and Department of State / TELEGRAM OF CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z CONSIDERS IT IMPORTANT TO MAINTAIN AND STRENGTHEN ITS RELATIONS WITH THE US. ALONG WITH CANADA, HE SAID, MEXICO "BELONGS TO NORTH AMERICA. " HE IMPLIED THAT THIS REALITY SHOULD BE REFLECTED IN SOME FORM OF CLOSER UNION OR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE US AND ITS CLOSEST NEIGHBORS. MEXICO AND CANADA, AS BORDERING COUNTRIES, HAVE COMMON INTERESTS AND CONCERNS IN DEALING WITH THE US. AS A RESULT, DE OLLOQUI INDICATED, IT WOULD BE TO THE BENEFIT OF ALL THREE COUNTRIES TO DEVELOP A TIGHTER RELATIONSHIP IN THE FUTURE, RECOGNIZING, OF COURSE, THAT MEXICO IS ALSO A LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRY AND A MEMBER OF THE THIRD WORLD. 2. IN ITS FOREIGN RELATIONS DE OLLOQUI SAID MEXICO SHOULD TAKE ITS ATLANTIC POSITION MORE SERIOUSLY. ONE OF OUR COASTS OVERLOOKS THE CARIBBEAN WHICH IS AN IMPORTANT US SECURITY BELT, HE SAID, MENTIONING PUERTO RICO AND THE CANAL ZONE. SINCE MANY OF THE NEWLY INDEPENDENT ENGLISH-SPEAKING NATIONS HAVE NOT YET FOUND THEIR PLACE IN THE HEMISPHERE, MEXICO CAN EXERT A POSITIVE INFLUENCE IN THIS AREA LOOKING ALSO TOWARD ITS RELATIONS WITH THE PACIFIC AREA, MEXICO IS PARTICULARLY INTERESTED IN MAINTAINING CLOSE TIES WITH THE PHILIPPINES, JAPAN AND INDIA, IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE, MEXICO UNDER THE NEW ADMINISTRATION OF LOPQZ PORTILLO, WILL PLACE INCREASING EMPHASIS ON STRENGTHENING TIES WITH THE OTHER NATIONS OF LATIN AMERICA. (NOTE : DE OLLOQUI DID NOT INDICATE HOW MEXICO WOULD RECONCILE SOME FORM OF SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH THE US AND CANADA WITH ITS DESIRE TO DEVELOP CLOSER TIES WITH LATION AMERICA. OTHER MEXICAN CONTACTS, HOWEVER, HAVE SUGGESTED IN RECENT DAYS THAT MEXICO, BECAUSE OF ITS UNIQUE GEOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC TIES WITH THE US, COULD PLAY AN IMPORTANT POLITICAL ROLE AS A MEDIATOR AND INTERPRETER BETWEEN THE USG AND THE REST OF THE HEMISPHERE.) DE OLLOQUI OBSERVED THAT MEXICO DURING THE LAST SIX YEARS HAS DOUBLED ITS CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9-66 of STATE Department of State STATE UNITED MAME AMERICA TELEGRAM OF CONF IDENT PAGE 03 MEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD AND PURSUED A MORE ACTIVE FOREIGN POLICY. HE FELT THIS WAS A POSITIVE DEVELOPMENT AND DID NOT SEE ANY CONTRADICTION BETWEEN THIS LARGER WORLD ROLE AND MEXICO'S DESIRE FOR CLOSER RELATIONS WITH THE US. 3. DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED CONFIDENCE THAT THE POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC FUTURE OF MEXICO, NOTWITHSTANDING ITS CURRENT FINANCIAL PROBLEMS, IS BRIGHT. EMPHASIZING THAT THE COUNTRY IS POLITICALLY STABLE, HE EXPRESSED HOPE THAT THE GOVERNMENT WOULD BE SUCCESSFUL IN EMERGING FROM ITS PRESENT ECONOMIC PLIGHT BY CONTROLLING INFLATION THROUGH STRICTER CONTROL OF EXPENDITURES, INCREASING ITS EXPORTS TO THE us, AND ATTRACTING MORE us TOURISM. 4. DE OLLOQUI WAS QUITE CONCERNED AT WHAT HE DESCRIBED AS THE DISTORTED COVERAGE OF MEXICO IN THE US PRESS AND SPECIFICALLY CITED THE SENSATIONALIST TREATMENT OF LAST NOVEMBER'S COUP RUMORS AS AN EXAMPLE. HE MENTIONED THE DECLINE IN TOURISM AS A PARTICULAR CONCERN ATTRIBUTABLE IN LARGE PART TO UNFAIR PRESS PUBLICITY. INDEED, HE WENT EVEN FURTHER, SUGGESTING THAT THE SEPT. 1 DEVALUATION WAS LARGELY DUE TO THE ADVERSE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF A SINGLE US NEWSPAPER REPORT (I.E. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL)AND NEGLECTING TO MENTION THE UNDERLYING FINANCIAL FACTORS. 5. REGARDING TOURISM HE PROFESSED ANNOYANCE AND CONCERN AT THE STATE DEPARTMENT'S DECEMBER ACTION IN RELEASING, ALLEGEDLY WITHOUT CONSULTATION, A STATEMENT TO TOURISTS ABOUT THE DANGERS OF TRAVELING IN MEXICO. CHE DID NOT MENTION THAT STATEMENT DEALT ONLY WITH SINALOA.) HE ALSO EXPRESSED CONCERN THAT MEXICAN EFFORTS TO INCREASE EXPORTS MIGHT PROVOKE US CHARGES THAT MEXICO IS DUMPING INTO THE us MARKET. IN A MORE POSITIVE NOTE, HE EXPRESSED OPTIMISM THAT MEXICO HAS NEARLY & FORD GERALD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9-66 DEPARTMENT OP STATE Department of State OF STATES AMERICA UNITED NAME TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 04 MEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z ALL THE ECONOMIC RESOURCES REQUIRED FOR DEVELOPMENT. FOR EXAMPLE, HE SAID, OIL IS NOT A LIMITING FACTOR AND CONTRIBUTES IMPORTANTLY TO MEXICO'S ECONOMIC GROWTH. HE SAID MEXICO HAS NOTHING TO GAIN FROM BECOMING A MEMBER OF OPEC, SINCE IT CURRENTLY DERIVES ALL THE BENEFITS WITHOUT ANY OF THE LIABILITIES OF MEMBERSHIP. CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9-66 DEP STATE ; A Department of State OF STATES AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL 9625 PAGE 01 MEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 2123342 ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 EUR-12 ISO-00 CIAE-00 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01 INR-07 La03 NSAE-00 NSC-05 PA-01 PRS-01 SP-02 SS-15 USIA-06 AID-05 COME-00 E8-08 FRB-03 TRSE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 CIEP-01 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 SCA-01 SCS-03 DEAE-00 SNM-02 FEA-01 INT-05 DES-06 STR-04 AGRE-00 VO-03 INSE-00 /121 W 212353Z 004417 /64 R 212231Z JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9837 INFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH AMEMBASSY OTTAWA c e N IDE N TAL SECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 0804 6. COMMENTING ON US POLICY TOWARD LATIN AMERICA UNDER THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION, DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED THE HOPE THAT THE USG WOULD REFRAIN FROM FORMULATING NEW SLOGANS WITHOUT MEANING AND ADOPT A MORE OPEN AND FRANK RELATIONSHIP TOWARD MEXICO, WHICH ISTHE US'S FOURTH LARGEST MARKET. HE SAID THAT THERE IS A FEELING IN MEXICO THAT THE US TAKES IT FOR GRANTED. GIVEN THEIR GEOGRAPHIC PROXIMITY AND THE IMPORTANT ECONOMIC TIES BETWEEN BOTH COUNTRIES, THIS SHOULD NOT BE THE CASE. MEXICO IS PARTICULARLY CONCERNED ABOUTITS "THREE BILLION DOLLAR TRADE DEFICIT WITH THE US". AND BELIEVES THAT THE USG MUST DO SOMETHING TO CLOSE THE GAP. IN THIS CONTEXT, HE AGAIN CITED THE NEED FOR GREATER ACCESS TO US MARKETS AND FEWER TRADE RESTRICTIONS ON MEXICAN EXPORTS. 7. TURNING TO THE ISSUE OF MIGRANT WORKERS, DE OLLOQUI SAID THAT SERIOUS ECONOMIC PROBLEMS IN MEXICO CAN ONLY AGGRAVATE THE SITUATION. MEXICO, HAVING IDENTIFIED THE AREAS OF PRINCIPAL OUTWARD MIGRATION, NEEDS TO DEVELOP WAYS TO INVEST IN AGRO-INDUSTRIES THAT WILL PROVIDE x GERALD FORD CONF IDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9-66 DEPARTMENT STATE Department of State OF STATE AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 212334Z GREATER DEMPLOYMENT AND REDUCE THE INCENTIVE FOR SUCH MIGRATION. DE OLLOQUI, HOWEVER, DISPUTED THE ATTITUDE OF THOSE IN THE us WHO SEE MEXICAN MIGRATION TO THE US AS A NEGATIVE FACTOR. HE CLAIMED THAT THE US ECONOMY IN THE SOUTHWEST NEEDS MIGRATORY WORKERS WHO ARE WILLING TO TAKE LOWER PAYING JOBS. HE DENIED THAT THESE WORKERS CONSTITUTE A SERIOUS BURDEN ON US WELFARE SERVICES OR THE ECONOMY, INDEED, HE CLAIMED THAT THEY HELP PUT MARGINAL LANDS IN PRODUCTION AND CONTRIBUTE TO THE US SERVICE INDUSTRY. IN SUM, HE URGED THAT THE US REFRAIN FROM ANY STEPS THAT MIGHT RESULT IN A MASSIVE DEPORTATION OF MEXICAN WORKERS. 8. IN A RELATED COMMENT, DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED THE HOPE THAT THE US WOULD NOT TAKE ANY MEASURES THAT WOULD PROVE HARMFUL TO BORDER INDUSTRIES IN MEXICO BECAUSE THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF CLOSURE COULD INDIRECTLY LEAD TO A LOSS OF SOME 35, 000 JOBS ON THE US SIDE OF THE BORDER (PRESUMABLY DUE TO A REDUCTION IN PURCHASE OF US GOODS BY MEXICAN WORKERS). 9. DE OLLOGUI SAID THAT MEXICO WELCOMES FOREIGN, PARTICULARLY US, INVESTMENT UNDER REASONABLE RULES, ADDING THAT IN CONTRAST TO OTHER COUNTRIES MEXICO DOES NOT CHANGE THE RULES OF THE GAME ANDINDEED HAS BEEN QUITE FLEXIBLE IN THE APPLICATION OF THESE RULES TO MAINTAIN NECESSARY INVESTMENT. 10. IN SUMMARY, DE OLLOQUI SAID THAT THE USG COULD PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN STRENGTHENING RELATIONS WITH MEXICO BY (A) HELPING TO CORRECT THE CURRENT TRADE IMBALANCE, (B) FACILITATING MEXICO'S ACCESS TO FINANCIAL MARKETS (HE SPECIFICALLY CITED A FLEXIBLE US ATTITUDE IN THE IDB AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, (C) AVOIDING MEASURES THAT WOULD HARM BORDER INDUSTRIES, AND (D) MAKING GREATER EFFORTS TO SEE CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9.66 DEPARTMENT % STATE Department of State OF STATE UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 03 MEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 212334Z THAT THE US PRESS HAD A BETTER INFORMED AND OBJECTIVE ATTITUDE TOWARD DEVELOPMENTS IN MEXICO. WHILE OUR INTERESTS DO NOT ALWAYS COINCIDE, DE OLLOQUI SAID, THE US AND MEXICO ARE ALLIES ON BASIC ISSUES AND MUST HAVE A BETTER RELATIONSHIP. 11. COMMENT: WHILE DEOLLOQUI SPOKE PERSONALLY AND INFORMALLY, IT IS PROBABLE THAT HIS GENERAL VIEWS REFLECT OFFICIAL GOM THINKING WHICH IN ONE FORM OR ANOTHER MAY SURFACE DURING PRESIDENT LOPEZ PORTILLO'S ANTICIPATED VISIT TO WASHINGTON. MOST OF THE BASIC THEMES TOUCHED UPON BY DE OLLOQUI WERE PREDICTABLE AND CONSISTENT WITH THOSE EXPRESSED BY OTHER GOM OFFICIALS OR THE PRESS. 12. NOTEWORTHY AND INTRIGUING, HOWEVER, WAS HIS EARLY AND POINTED REFERENCE TO SOME FORM OF SPECIAL BOND OR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND ITS TWO NEIGHBORS -- MEXICO AND CANADA. IT IS DIFFICULT TO FATHOM WHAT DE OLLOQUI HAS IN MIND. THE CANADIAN DCM RALPH BRANSCOMBE (PROTECT SOURCE) SUBSEQUENTLY CONFIRMED THAT DE OLLOQUI HAD SURFACED THE SAME VAGUE CONCEPT OF A NORTH AMERICAN UNION DURING A RECENT MEETING HE REQUESTED WITH CANADIAN AMBASSADOR LANGLEY. THE CANADIANS, SURPRISED BY THE MEXICAN APPROACH, ARE BAFFLED BY WHAT KIND IF INTERPRETATION THEY SHOULD GIVE IT IN THEIR REPORTING TO OTTAWA. WE WILL BE DISCUSSING THE QUESTION WITH THEM FURTHER. AT THE AMBASSADOR'S JANUARY 17 RECEPTION FOR THE SENIOR SEMINAR, FONSEC AMBASSADOR GONZALEZ DE LEON INDICATED THAT THE CONCEPT OF A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE US AND MEXICO/CANADA DATES BACK TO THE EARLY 50'S AND COMMENTED THAT IF PACKAGED PROPERLY, IT COULD BE REVIVED AND MADE POLITICALLY ACCEPTABLE IN MEXICO. 13. AT THIS POINT WE ARE NOT IN A POSITION TO JUDGE R. DEPALD FORD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9.66 DEPARTMENT % STATE * Department of State OF STATE AMERICA UNITED NAME TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 04 MEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 2123342 WHAT, IF ANYTHING, IS BEHINDDE OLLOQUI'S INITIATIVE IN RAISING THE IDEA OF A NORTH AMERICAN UNION. IT MAY BE, HOWEVER, THAT MEXICO VIEWS THIS APPROACH AS A POSSIBLE POLITICAL BASIS FOR REQUESTING AND JUSTIFYING SPECIAL us ECONOMIC TREATMENT FOR MEXICO, PARTICULARLY IN THE AREA OF EXPORTS. WHATEVER MAY BE BEHIND DE OLLOQUI'S REMARKS, THE FACT THAT HE RAISED THE POSSIBILITY OF A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP CERTAINLY INDICATES THE SHIFT IN MEXICAN OFFICIAL THINKING WHICH HAS OCCURRED SINCE FORMER PRESIDENT ECHEVERRIA LEFT OFFICE, THOMPSON leteckvw CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9-56 BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1977 JAN 26 PM 5: 06 RECEIVED January 26, 1977 OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN TO: FROM: Ted Truman Chairman Burns EMT Attached are the latest cables on Mexico. Attachment: Mexico 874 Mexico A-34 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this document is due to the Inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Exacutive Order 10501 which provides that "A document.. shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component." LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD DEPARTMENT OF STATE mexico * STATE UNITED name AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 4962 EMT SS PAGE 01 MEXICO 00874 251821Z ACTION ARA-10 INFO OCT-01 ISO-00 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-08 INR-07 LAB-04 NSAE-00 SIL-01 TRSE-00 OMB-01 FRB-03 AID-05 XMB-02 PRS-01 PA-01 USIA-06 1050 W 25 252011Z 040394 /46 R 251724Z JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHOC 9879 # LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 0874 INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: ELAB, EGEN, MX SUBJ: JLP INAUGURATES WORKERS BANK AND HAILS LABOR/MANAGEMENT COOPERATION 1. PRESIDENT LOPEZ PORTILLO OFFICIALLY INAUGURATED THE WOKERS BANK (BANCO OBRERO) IN A LARGE CEREMONY HELD ON THE MORNING OF JAN 21, GOM AUTHORIZATION OF THE BANK FULFILLES A JLP DECEMBER 1 INAUGURAL SPEECH PROMISE AND TWENTY-YEAR GOAL OF ORGANIZED LABOR. THE BANK WILL BE AN INSTITUTION OF DEPOSIT, SAVINGS AND LOAN AVAILABLE FOR USE OF ALL WORKERS WHETHER OR NOT ORGANIZED. CTM LEADERS CLAIM THAT INITIAL CAPITAL OF 100 MILLION PESOS HAS BEEN 50 TO 60 PERCENT SUBSCRIBED "EXCLUSIVELY FROM MAJOR MEXICAN UNIONS" AND THAT THERE IS NO GOM OR PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION. GOM AUTHORIZATION INCLUDES SUPERVISION AND INSPECTION BY THE NATIONAL COMMISSION OF BANKING AND INSURANCE. 2. JLP USED THE INAUGURATION AS A FORUM FOR PRESENTING A NEW DECREE AUTHORIZING THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE TO NEGOTIATE WITH INDUSTRY FOR THE PRODUCTION OF 90 BASIC COMMODITIES AT LOW PRICES (SEPTEL) AND FOR FAILING WHAT HE TERMED A "SOCIAL PACT" WHICH IF SUCCESSFUL WOULD "CONTROL THE ECONOMIC DISORDER CTHAT EXISTS) NOT ONLY IN MEXICO." FORD is GERALD LIBRARY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 0 FORM DS.1652 OF STATE Department of State SEALS UNITED NAME AMERICA TELEGRAM OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 02 MEXICO 00874 251821Z AFTER PRAISING ORGANIZED LABOR FOR ITS RESPONSIBLE ROLE IN REFRAINING FROM DEMANDS FOR INFLATIONARY WAGE INCREASES, AND ITS HISTORIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE COUNTRY, JLP ANNOUNCED THAT "WE NOW HAVE A FIRST AND BEAUTIFUL (HERMOSA) RESPONSE FROM THE PRIVATE SECTOR. COMMERICAL AND INDUSTRIAL ESTABLISHMENT HAVE OFFERED US A POPULAR ALLIANCE FOR PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION. " 3. COMMENT: WHILE JLP SPOKE EFFUSIVELY OF THE POPULAR ALLIANCE AND THE "SOCIAL PACT" AS IF BOTH LABOR AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR HAD MADE MAJOR NEW COMMITMENTS, (IN DECEMBER THE GOM NEGOTIATED TEN INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR AND LABOR CONSENTED TO ONLY 9-10 PERCENT NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE INCREASES, BOTH OF WHICH FELL UNDER THE "POPULAR ALLIANCE" RUBRIC), THERE IS NOTHING TANGIBLE YET. WE BELIEVE JOP WAS SIMPLY JAWBONING ON THIS OCCASION, HOPING TO KEEP ALIVE A FRAGILE SPIRIT OF COOPERATION WHICH BOTH LABOR AND MANAGEMENT HAVE SHOWN, A PROBLEM IS THAT LABOR'S FOREBEARANCE ON WAGES IS MORE VISIBLE AND DEMONSTRABLE THAN IS MANAGEMENT SUCCESS AT CONTROLLING PRICES -- HENCE THE FANFARE SURROUNDING THE WORKERS BANK (TO WHICH GOM APPARENTLY IS MAKING NO FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTION) THE PRESIDENTIAL PRAISE OF LABOR'S BEHAVIOR, AND JLP'S ATTEMPTS TO SHOW THAT MANAGEMENT TOO IS ACTING RESPONSIBLY. JOVA LIMITED OFFICIAL USE FORM DS.1652 DEPT. DISTRIBUTION CORIGIN/ACTION PARTMENT OF STATE mexico EB AIRGRAM 770008-1900 RS/R REP AF ARA r Original to be Filed in Decentralized Files. FILE DESIGNATION EUR FE NEA CU ceym LIMITED OFFICIAL USE / A-34 INR E P 10 HANDLING INDICATOR TO SP. FADRC/DA/WC L US DEPT. OF STATE, WASHDC EMT FBO AID S/IL US DEPT. OF COMMERCE, WASHDC SS 20 :Z Wd E- NVC LL INFO: AMEMBASSY, MEXICO AMCONSUL, GUADALAJARA DEPARTMENT OF STATE PLEASE TO CENTER AGR COM FRB INT FROM AMCONSUL, MONTERREY DATE: December 21, 1976 E.0.11652: NA LAB TAR TR XMB TAGS: ECON, PINT, MX SUBJECT : BUSINESSMEN'S ROUNDTABLE REPORT, DECEMBER, 1976 AIR ARMY NAVY OSD REF : MONTERREY'S A-31 OF NOVEMBER 12, 1976 USIA NSA CIA EB SUMMARY 03 OHWY 61 NAME SUGGESTED DISTRIBUTION The first two weeks of the López Portillo adminis- tration received a high rating from the nine local executives who participated in the latest in a series of Businessmen's Roundtable discussions, held at the Monterrey Consulate General on December 16. Govern- ment agricultural policies, removal of tax incentives for exports, and the Government's record of payment were, however, of concern. Most executives saw 1977 POST ROUTING as being an austere year, with sharply higher costs TO: Action Info. for labor and raw materials, a mixed sales picture, Initials AMB! price controls, and dangers of severe inflation PO identified as their major worries. Prospects for DCM retailers and producers of consumer goods were, POL nevertheless, reported as generally bright. The Round- ECON table participants criticized the recent general 28% CONS wage increase, hoped for moderation in the minimum ADM wage revisions, recommended a strong role for company executives in labor relations, and offered examples AID of the infiltration of their workforces by outsiders. USIS Consul General Lambert began this month's Roundtable by offering an overview of US/Mexican relations during the Carter/López Portillo Presidencies. Each of the businessmen then made his presentation in turn. FILE Action Taken: BERALD FORD LIBRARY Date: FORM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE For Department Use Only Initials: 10-64 Drafted by: RWY DS-323 17 In Out Drafting Date: Phone No.: Contents and Classification Approved by: ECON/COMM:THCarter/RLGlass:mlg 12/20/76 APO/DCasteel Clearances: Page 2 of 8 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE A-34 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 REACTION TO LOPEZ PORTILLO Monterrey Roundtable participants were generally optimistic about President José López Portillo, basing their hopes on his inau- gural address and his cabinet-level appointments. The senior executive of a firm which manufactures cranes said that he was impressed by the "sincerity and directness" of the inaugural speech and was gratified by its lack of "rhetoric". A steel pipe manufacturer said that he admired the "simplicity" of the speech and believed that the President wrote most of the text himself. He predicted that López Portillo would not move sharply to the right but would at least stick closer to the center. He was also encouraged by reports that López Portillo had privately consulted with former Presidents Díaz Ordaz and Alemán just prior to the inauguration. The cabinet nominations were generally well received. The crane manufacturer said that all but one of the appointments were "worthy of confidence". However, the appointment of Muñoz Ledo as Secretary of Education puzzled him since he feared the impact of this "leftist" on Mexican youth. The steel pipe manufacturer interjected that moving Muñoz Ledo out of the Presidency of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) tended to "freeze him out of power", especially since his two strong undersecretaries in the Education Secretariat would exert a restraining influence. Moreover, the appointment of Muñoz Ledo was a political necessity to placate Mexican leftists. This appointment may also help maintain peace among Mexican leftists and, if not, give López Portillo a fine excuse to dismiss Muñoz Ledo. One large and important unknown is López Portillo's approach to wage policy. Roundtable participants are anxiously awaiting the Government of Mexico's January, 1977, minimum wage revision. There was a general concurrence that 1976 wage settlements had outstripped price inflation. An automobile parts manufacturer said that he expected an eight to twelve percent minimum wage hike in January and felt that anything over ten percent would be inflationary and could lead to a further devaluation. A ceramics manufacturer opined that if López Portillo does not hold the wage increase to under twelve percent, his factory will be seriously hurt. A manufacturer of stainless steel tubing volunteered that this would be a "good time for the GOM to squelch wage in- flation" through a merely symbolic wage hike, certainly not more than eight to ten percent. The manufacturer of steel pipe said that he had understood that the GOM and the International Monetary Fund had agreed to a post-devaluation wage hike of only 15%, LIMITED OFFICIAL USE Page 3 of 8 A-34 from MONTERREY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE December 21, 1976 which was violated by the Government's 23% wage settlement. He had also heard rumors that the GOM would soon start a policy of paying salary increases in bonds to minimize their infla- tionary impact. Press reports of a 38% increase in the 1977 Federal Budget also inspired several observations. The steel pipe manufacturer noted that the budgetary discipline was so lax in the previous administration that Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX) exceeded its budget ceiling midway through the year. He was confident that López Portillo will "enforce the budget". A manufacturer of ceramics feared a big increase in GOM spending and hoped that López Portillo would "impose budget discipline". The steel pipe manufacturer was optimistic about agreements being formulated between the Government of Mexico and the country's private sector. The agreements, he said, will include provisions to stop the Government from duplicating the efforts of the private sector. He has also heard that chambers of commerce are pressuring the new President to drop the retail sales of CONASUPO, the public sector purchaser and distributor of certain basic foodstuffs. The new Administration's policy on agriculture was of acute concern to the executive from an edible oils firm. Expropriations and land invasions by squatters are threatening Mexico's bread basket and will force the GOM to import large and costly quantities of foodstuffs. Besides the loss of production during the current crop year, the executive also expressed longer term fears that the land's productivity will be permanently damaged. Although 1977 will be a poor year for agriculture, he nevertheless is generally optimistic about the López Portillo administration over the longer run. The Government is an unreliable customer according to the pipe manufacturer, whose company faced massive order cuts when PEMEX exceeded its budget ceiling in July, 1976. A pump manufacturer added that his firm had also faced sudden order cancellations from PEMEX. He was also upset when the GOM's Secretariat of Water Resources suddenly cancelled a sizable pump order so that it could divert the funds to one of President Echeverría's pet projects. One participant added that an order for two hundred taxis by Fomento Metropolitano (FOMET) in Mon- terrey was cancelled after the distributor had purchased the vehicles. According to him, the increased criticism of Nuevo León Governor Zorrilla Martínez by the newspaper El Diario is due at least in part to this action, since the same organization controls both the automobile distributorship involved and the newspaper. A lamp manufacturer who recently arrived in Mexico had the most pessimistic view of the country's future. His pessimism was FORD & LIBRARY GERALD LIMITED OFFICIAL USE Page 4 of 8 A-34 from MONTERREY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE December 21, 1976 based mainly on the cancellation of export subsidies, GOM patent infringements and the new Patent and Trademark Law, and the requirements for greater Mexican content in manufac- tures. He conceded that Mexico's wage rates are generally low enough to permit exporting, but he feared that such restric- tions and "harassment" would discourage export activity. BUSINESS CONDITIONS Although there was some bright spots, the general business out- look for 1977 was described as being somewhat pessimistic, with cash flow problems, the inability to "pass through" higher materials and wage costs because of Mexican Government price controls and competitive market conditions, and financial and wage uncertainties contributing to the pessimism. Several company representatives stated that their firms were in for a year of belt-tightening and austerity. Over the longer term there was considerable optimism. Many participants admitted that the peso devaluations and resultant wage and supplies increases have had a negative effect on their prospects for 1977. While the crane manufacturing company has enough of a backlog to keep the plant operating throughout 1977, most of the firm's orders were received before September 1. The company had quoted fixed prices for these contracts and consequently has been hard hit by escalating costs. The executive admitted that the company's accounts payable had lengthened and that henceforth the firm would quote primarily on a "cost at time of delivery" basis. The manufacturer of steel pipe stated that his firm is now paying 54% more for the steel used in the majority of his firm's opera- tions. A manufacturer of ceramic tile now faces significantly higher prices for the raw materials it must import from the United States. The manager of the firm making lightbulbs bemoaned the sharply higher prices the firm has been required to pay for its imports of tungsten wire. The manager of a company making automobile parts noted a sharpening dichotomy in his 1977 sales picture, The 30-40% of his business represented by sales of original equipment to automobile assemblers has suffered greatly because of the virtual stagnation in sales of 1977 model cars. Car prices have increased more than 50% for the 1977 models. Chevrolet Novas rose from some eighty thousand to one hundred and thirty thousand pesos, for example, and Ford LTDs rose from one hundred and forty thousand to over a quarter of a million pesos in price. The clampdown on the availability of credit has also hurt his business. According to him, automobile production has been drastically reduced, and several automakers are unwilling to fix future production schedules. In contrast, Page 5 of 8 A-34 from MONTERREY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE December 21, 1976 the replacement parts component of the firm's business is experiencing higher sales, primarily because more and more carowners are having their existing vehicles repaired. For the autoparts firm, the added demand for its replacement part business has cushioned somewhat the adverse effects of the devaluations. Besides the improved market prospects for automobile replacementt parts, the tile company executive reports that his business is currently "booming" and that his plant is running at 100% of production capacity to meet current demand and reduce a three month backlog. The executive is guardedly optimistic, citing reports that the Carter Administration will cause a "building boom" in the United States, the firm's principal export market. The executive stated that nearly forty percent of the firm's output is currently being exported, a factor which has in part compensated for rising costs for imported raw materials. To maintain these exports, the executive admitted that his firm has been offering an eight percent discount for its exports (quoted in dollar terms) to the US. The executive criticized the GOM's removal of tax incentives to export, stating that, for his firm to remain competitive, the incentives would have to be reinstated or the peso would have to depreciate further vis a vis the dollar. Several participants reported the markedly better sales and profit picture in the retail sector of the Mexican economy. While formerly heavy purchases of consumer goods and foodstuffs by Mexicans in the United States have dropped significantly, domestic wage hikes and more recently the sizable Christmas bonuses paid to workers have stimulated domestic sales. A cutlery manufacturing firm's executive admits that his sales (in terms of number of pieces) have risen 15% in the past six months. Again, the total picture for the firm is mixed, however, since the same company also manufactures industrial springs. The company's sales of springs to autoparts manufacturers have fallen sharply. In contrast, sales of springs to producers of consumer goods have remained good. Another participant mentioned that there now existed waiting lines for popular consumer durables such as washing machines. A third businessman commented that, with rapidly rising wages at the lower income levels, there was occurring a marked shift in income distribution from the middle class and toward the working class. From the businessmen's comments, it was clear that no consensus existed as to when the Government of Mexico might reinstitute a LIMITED OFFICIAL USE Page 6 of 8 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE A-34 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 fixed parity for the peso and, if so, its rate of exchange. One businessman predicted that the current rate of some twenty pesos per dollar would persist for several months. Another described the current situation as a "manipulated float" and saw a return to a fixed parity within four to six months. On the other hand, the cutlery and spring manufacturer is estimating that the peso will fall to the thirty to one level by yearend 1977. Most of the executives believed that the soon to be announced minimum wage levels for 1977 would be a good barometer for the movement of the peso. LABOR RELATIONS General criticism of the 23% wage hike "recommended" last Sep- tember, hope that the minimum wage increases to be announced for January would be moderate, and concern over workforce infiltration were the main themes discussed by the Roundtable participants. There was widespread agreement that the 23% wage increase decreed in September was excessive and unjustified. The manager of a company producing cranes for the steel industry stated that his workforce had received a 17% wage boost in July, 1976, and opined that a six to eight percent increase in September would have fully compensated for the increase in the cost of living between July and late September. The 23% increase came at a particularly bad time, in his view, especially since companies now have to use a much higher base in computing the Christmas bonuses of workers. The chief executive of a company producing food products stated that his workforce had received an 18% wage increase in August, 1976, but nevertheless received the full 23% less than a month later. In the case of the company producing ceramic tile, salary revision negotiations were in progress when the 23% decree was announced. A late September agreement to raise wages by 30% included the 23% recommendation. Besides being critical of the 23% wage increase, the manager of the pump producing company also criticized the recent shift from biennial to annual salary revi- sion negotiations. The food processing executive raised the point that too often plant managers and executives shunned involvement in labor contact negotiations and instead relied on labor relations lawyers. He was critical of this practice, opining that lawyers tend to follow the "path of least resistance" in many cases and generally had less incentive than plant managers to reach a settlement favorable to the company. The executive from the pipemaking company agreed, stating that many outside lawyers would accept a "bad settlement rather than a good fight." He offered the example of Fundidora Monterrey which, according to him, has for more than twenty years not given adequate management attention to contract revision negotiations. He fears that, for the Fundi- dora, the process ma' e irreversible. Page 7 of 8 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE A-34 from MONTERREY December 21, 1976 Various Roundtable participants related their experiences regarding actual or attempted infiltration of their work- forces by outside agitators. The manager of a company making pumps stated that a strike by his "white" (independent) union against the company in March, 1976, was political rather than economic in nature and was instigated by outsiders from the Frente Auténtico de Trabajadores and the Mexican Communist Party. He was particularly critical of interference by radical members of Section 68 of the Miners' Union, the most politically- active of the unions representing workers at Fundidora Monterrey. These groups also sought to intertwine the cause of the strikers with those of posesionarios and students, organizing several joint demonstrations to pressure the pumpmaking company. Accord- ing to the executive, the state labor conciliation board sup- ported his efforts to settle the strike and combat the infiltra- tion. After settlement of the two week strike, the company fired twenty of its two hundred forty workforce which it had identified as troublemakers, including several employees that had been with the company for more than ten years. Despite the reduced workforce, plant productivity subsequently rose because of the better work environment. The executive of a company producing stainless steel products reported a similar experience. He stated that his union, affil- iated with the Confederación de Trabajadores Mexicanos (CTM), was helpful in isolating and removing the troublemakers by denying them membership in the union, which was a prerequisite to employment with the company. The executive of the company producing lamps stated that his labor situation (with a CTM- affiliated union) was generally good but that he was also con- sidering the dismissal of a small group of identified trouble- makers. A number of participants stated that their companies had laid off some portion of their workforces in recent months. The pipemaking company executive offered the most dramatic story, reporting that his workforce had dropped from 1500 to 800 since midyear, primarily because of sharply reduced orders (and a few cancelled contracts). The executive noted that his business was classified in the "construction" field, thus permitting the relatively easy hiring and firing of eventuales, or temporary workers. The majority of those laid off by the firm were in this category. Since there was no requirement to pay severance 8 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE FORD a LIBRARY 828410 TIMILED OLLICIET nee Page 8 of 8 A-34 from MONTERREY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE December 21, 1976 Ledayremeur bgl MOLKELS pl MOLE IN benefits when eyentuales are dismissed, the company was able to reduce its workforce without major cost or legal challenges by its workers through the state labor arbitration panel. The executive noted that most of the plant's workers that were dismissed were able (with company assistance) to find employ- ment elsewhere. BOWG of IN V weyers' cue 9 SW9JT dronb of Age doog prif brognorud CIN- DO embjoyment CASTEEL goulted cyew IN S MS8 perbin] TU твотестий sug скопрувшукога pl MICP FUG ge WEXTCOUOB (CIN) reborreq S H6 WEETT- 01 9 combany Бтодлотод brognofa of FUG perfer MOLK request MOLKIOLCS bygus pecurae usq peeu MICU cue comboul IOL WOLG few AGGIS! 98 embjoyees FUST EMGUIA of IfB CMD progreg gorfl MOLKIOICS митор IF usq FTOU yore. of cue FMO Meek BFITKG' cue comber} boffeg UTS CO FUG eug comper spo THETTERS- Tud CO cue EXECUDING are afgre Jupor CONCITION posto anb- JOTUF CO biessnie FUG bmubwsyrud combsum yocotg- arry cpoBo of borseronsiros guq OLAGNISING BGAGIST Lugas dronba vjao sondur to FUG сялае of FUG affirers SCFTAG of cue nutous tebreseurrud MoKKeΓa SC шешрете of 28 of FHS WINGIS, AUTOU' cpe word He M98 CRIFICS] OF pl 1991991 fye EXCUCS ge sug FUG WEXICON COMMUTER FUSU GCOVOLSTC TU sug Mge ph oncergere ELOW adgives FUG combeny TU W9LCU Jase' M92 brube accept fuge S EFIIKG pl UTS "MPITE" (Tugebenqeuc) gorces pl oncerge LUG wyugder of S combonA redurgtud усслет or accombreg of FUGIL MOIK- ASTIONE колиссерте rejereg exberreuces Decemper ST' Jase LIMITED OFFICIAL USE V-34 WOMLEBEX 3 8 BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1977 JAN 31 PM 4: 46 RECEIVED January 31, 1977 OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN TO: FROM: Ted Truman Chairman Burns EMT Attached is the latest cable from Mexico. Attachment: Mexico 1018 cc: Governor Wallich Defense classification of this decument is due to the inclusion of 01 Covernment information officially classiting main Executive Order 10501 which provides that 3 document shall bear a classification at tratt 88 high as that of its highest classified combonant." FORD is GERALO LIBRARY BRANTMENT OF STATE * Department of State OF SEALS UNITED MARK AMERICA TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 0144 PAGE 01 MEXICO 01018 280032Z ACTION ARA-10 TNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP=02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05 CIEP-01 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 PA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 W 2808257 077315 /17 R 2723327 JAN 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9952 TNFO TRSY WASHDC ALI US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH International Please Information Center LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 1018 E.O. 11652: N/A TAGS: EGEN MX SUBJ: PROGRAM TO PROVIDE 90 BASIC PRODUCTS AT LOW PRICES REF: (A) 76 MEXICO 15646, (B) 75 MEXICO 15754; (C) MEXICO 0874 1. SUMMARY: ON JANUARY 21, LOPEZ-PORTILLO SIGNED DECREE AUTHORIZING SECRETARY OF COMMERCE TO SIGN AGREEMENTS WITH VARIOUS INDUSTRIES TO PROVIDE 90 BASIC CONSUMPTION ARTICLES AT LOW PRICES. PRESIDENT'S COMMENTS AT SIGNINF IMPLIED THTS WOULD BE A SACRIFICE BY INDUSTRY TO COMPENSATE FOR RESTRAINT IN WAGE DEMANDS. MEASURE LABELED AS A MEANS TO REDUCE PRICES. END SUMMARY. 2. THE LOPEZ-PORTILLO ADMINISTRATION IS NOW MOVING TO GET INDUSTRY TO SIGN AGREEMENTS BY WHICH THEY WILL PROVIDE 90 BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS AT FIXED PRICES, AT BOTH WHOLESALE AND RETAIL LEVELS. PRICE OF GOODS TO RE BASED ON DIRECT AND INDIRECT COSTS AND A "REASONABLE" PROFIT TO BE DETERMINED BY NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN FORD & GERALD LIBRARY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 3 FORM DS-1652 9.66 DEPARTMENT OF STATE Department of State STATES UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 02 MEXICO 01018 2800322 INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT. 3. THE PRODUCTS COVER SOME PREPARED FOODSTUFFS, SCHOOL SUPPLIES, HYGIENIC SUPPLIES, HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND CLOTHING. THE PRODUCTS RANGE FROM TOILET PAPER TO BICYLES TO PLASTIC SANDALS. 4. THERE WILL BE NO FISCAL INCENTIVES TO PRODUCE THESE TTEMS, BUT NECESSARY IMPORT PERMITS WILL BE GRANTED AND THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE CAN "RECOMMEND" TO OTHER GOM AGENCIES THAT CERTAIN OTHER FACILITIES SUCH AS FINANCING BE MADE AVAILABLE. THE GOODS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED THROUGH EXISTING RETAIL OUTLETS. SECRETARY OF COMMERNCE SOLAND SAID THAT THE LARGE RETAIL CHAINS HAD AGREED TO HANDLE THESE ITEMS AT LOWER PROFIT MARGIN. SMALL RETAILERS WILL BE ABLE TO BUY THE ITEMS AT A DISCOUNT. 5. SINCE THE PRODUCTS WILL BE SOLD THROUGH EXISTING RETAIL OUTLETS, ANYBODY WILL BE ABLE TO PURCHASE THE TTEMS, THOUGH THE PROGRAM IS AIMED LARGELY AT THE URBAN WORKER. THE GOM HOPES TO HAVE AT LEAST SOME OF THE ARTICLES ON STORE SHELVES WITHIN 90 DAYS. 6. THIS AGREEMENT WITH PRIVATE INDUSTRY SUPPLEMENTS THE TEN AGREEMENTS SIGNED IN MID-DECEMBER. AT THAT TIME. THERE WAS REFERENCE TO AN ELEVENTH AGREEMENT ON BASIC CONSUMER GOODS, BUT IT WAS NOT SIGNED APPARENTLY BECAUSE OF THE LARGE NUMBER OF INDUSTRIES INVOLVED. NEGOTIATIONS WITH VARIOUS INDUSTRIES WERE BEGUN BY THE LOPEZ-PORTILLO TEAM LAST SUMMER. AGREEMENT HAD BEEN REACHED ON 20 OR SO PRODUCTS PRIOR TO THE DEVALUATION. THE NEGOTIATIONS ARE NOW GOING ON BETWEEN INDUSTRY ASSOCIATIONS AND THE GOVERNMENT. 7. WHILE THE GOVERNMENT DOES NOT EXPECT INDUSTRY TO LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 3) FORM DS-1652 9.66 TRANTMENT OF STATE OF STATE UNITED AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 03 MEXICO 01018 280032Z PRODUCE THESE BASIC GOODS AT A LOSS, IT EXPECTS INDUSTRY TO MAKE MINIMAL PROFITS. IN EXCHANGE THE GOVERNMENT WILL PROBABLY INCREASE PRICE CEILINGS FOR HIGHER PRICED GOODS. 8. IT IS NOT CLEAR TO US HOW THIS MEASURE WILL REDUCE PRICES, OR HOW FLEXIBLE GOVERNMENT WILL BE IN LETTING PRICES CHANGE FOR THE 90 BASIC PRODUCTS ONCE THEY HIT THE MARKET. THUS FAR, WE HAVE NOT HEARD ANY MAJOR COMPLAINTS FROM BUSINESSMEN, IN PART BECAUSE SEVERAL TO WHOM WE HAVE SPOKEN SAY THE DISCUSSIONS ARE STILL PRELIMINARY. ON BUSINESSMAN NOTED THAT USING COMMERICAL RETAIL CHAINS AND KNOWN PRODUCT NAMES IS BETTER THAN BEING FORCED TO PRODUCE SPECIAL BRANDS FO RESALE THROUGH THE GOM-OWNED CONASUPO RETAIL STORES. 9. GOM OBVIOUSLY IS ANXIOUS TO CASH IN ON ITS IMPLIED PROMISE TO LOWERPRICES. GOM OFFICIAL TOLD US THAT THE SEVEN MAJOR RETAIL CHAINS IN MEXICO WILL OFFER 35 ARTICLES AT SPECIAL PRICES BEGINNING JANUARY 31. TOVA FORD & LIBRARY GARALO LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 6 FORM DS-1652 9,66 10 [c. 2-77?] RESTRICTED RESTRICTED HANDLE THE ATTACHED DOCUMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH INTERNAL INFORMATION SECURITY PROCEDURES FOR RESTRICTED INFORMATION FORD i GERALD LIBRARY RESTRICTED TAGS: EGEN, EFIN, MX RESTRICTED SUBJECT: CURRENT ECONOMIC SITUATION ACTION: SECSTATE WASHDC INFO: TREASURY 1. SUMMARY. Economic activity in Mexcio has slowed down, with output running slightly below mid-76 levels. GOM appears to be concentrating its. energies on replacing the outgoing bureaucracy and effecting " an administrative reform program. While JLP has publicly stated that 1977 will be an economically difficult year and that Mexico needs a new development strategy, there has not been much discernable progress in developing either a short-term or long-term economic strategy. Private sector seems to be adopting a wait and see atti- tude before undertaking new investments. END SUMMARY. 2. The rate of growth of industrial activity began to slow in mid-1976 in response to the Bank of Mexico's tight credit policies. The industrial production index peaked in June, and has run at lower levels through October, the latest date for which it is available. The October index is 140.7 below levels prevailing in this month in two previous years. Partial data for November is mixed with some industries showing increases in unit sales. RESTRICTED LIBRARY GERALD ? FORD RESTRICTED 2 3. Mexico's gross domestic output is estimated to have grown about 3% in real terms from 1975 to 1976. Most of this growth would have been in the first half of the year with total output more or less holding steady in the second half. The price deflator is estimated to have been about 20%. The preliminary Bank of Mexico data on national accounts will be available by end-February. 4. Actual price data is now available for the year 1976. The year to year increase in the CPI was 15.8%. The December to December 1976 increase was 27.2%. The increase in the WPI was more marked, 22.3% on a year to year basis and 45.9% from December to December. This reason for this is that the WPI is heavily influenced by raw material prices, most of which trade at or close to world prices. 5. Lopez Portillo has publicly stated that the first six months of 1977 will be particularly difficult and that Mexico must find a new development strategy. While he admits that economic problems are the most pressing, there is no public evidence that the government has a coherent short-term economic strategy. GOM policy makers are working on various policy options, but have not yet come to any conclusions as far as we know. JLP's first two priorities appear to have been a restoration of confidence, largely through words, and administrative reform. The latter has meant that in addition to filling positions FORD i LIBRARY GERALD RESTRICTED 3 to a fairly low level in the bureaucracy, new lines of command are being drawn with resultant confusion over responsibilities, information flow, etc. Administration is reportedly JLP's strong point and first love judging. from the priority he has given to administrative reform. The major loser in this reform at least with respect to control oyer spending and trade policy appears to have been JLP's stepping stone to the Presidency, the Finance Ministry. The biggest gainers would appear to be the new Budget and Planning Ministry (ex-Presidency) and the Patrimony and Industrial Development Ministry. The significance of adminis- trative reform in the context of this message is the impact it might have on the economic policy-making process and on the level of government expenditure. 6. The economic policy-making process in the new government is not yet clearly defined. At the present time the Minister for Budget and Planning, Carlos Tello, appears to be the preeminent, though not necessarily dominant advisor to the President. Tello's economic philosophy appears to favor acting against inflation on the supply side. Opposed to him are the financial officials from Hacienda and Banco de Mexico who want to reduce inflation by cutting back demand. Key presidential advisor Rafael Izquierdo is said to be somewhere between these two schools of thought. The President seems to lean to the former school of thought perhaps because he GERALD FORD LIBRARY RESTRICTED 4 fears the political consequences that a cutback in per capita consumption and employment might have. Even as Finance Minister at the time of the U.S. recession, JLP told the Ambassador that Mexico could not afford a recession because of the lack of social welfare programs to take care of the unemployed, a theme he continues to repeat. 7. The JLP administration's first internal policy debate is likely to focus on the budget. There is pressure on him from the Bank of Mexico and Hacienda to reduce expenditures as well as to increase revenues, particularly by higher public sector prices. It is possible that the delays caused by the administrative reform will impact on the level of expenditures. Whether this will result in permanent savings or merely a brief delay in making expenditures is unknown. The outcome of this debate will be the key in determining economic developments later in the year. FORD & LIBRARY 8. Apart from the question of public sector spending, the GOM is faced with the problem of financing a current account deficit which is being forecast at anywhere from $1.8 billion to $2.6 billion. In addition to this, the public sector's short-term debt of $4.2 billion has to be rolled over and public sector long-term debt amortization payments of $1.7 billion have to be refinanced. RESTRICTED 5 9. Mexico's financial problem is twofold and inter- related. That is, the GOM not only has to finance a substantial budget, the size of which will impact on the external accounts, but it also has to arrange, one way or another, for substantial, foreign borrowing. 10. While senior GOM officials often state that Mexico cannot afford a recession, the economy is in a recession according to the informal Mexican definition, i.e., a negative per capita growth rate. Industrial activity may be lower now than it was in last October. This judgment is based on the following factors. (1) The industrial work force is probably lower now than last summer. Various businessmen have told us that they are laying off workers. (2) Public sector spending is probably down due to the reorganization of the entire public sector. We hear reports of major spending decisions being postponed. Public sector spending has been the underpinning of Mexico's economic growth since 1972. (3) Private investment was undoubtedly affected negatively by the events of last fall. The lack of ability to forecast economic developments with any certainty is affecting investment decisions. Many private businessmen say they are waiting to see specific economic measures rather than base investment decisions on moral suasion. (4) Foreign exchange transactions are reporting declining. This may indicate a continued decline in imports FORD i LIBRARY GERALD RESTRICTED 6 that began last September! (5) Peso and dollar financing is not available to Mexico's private sector, nor has it been for some months. The impact of these, plus the delayed impact of the devaluation may be hitting domestic economic activity, particularly in the private sector, harder than is generally known. 11. The picture in the agriculture sector is more difficult to discern. Output of some crops may be up whereas output of other crops may be down. It is not possible to measure the impact of the land seizures in northwest Mexico, but these were certainly not conducive to increased private sector investment in agriculture and may have a negative impact on output in that region. 12. Our judgments in the preceeding two paragraphs are extremely qualitative because of the Lack of current data on which to base an analysis. However, we think the indirect signs of further economic slowdown are significant enough to report. GERALD FORD LIBRARY RESTRICTED 7 13. The GOM is undoubtedly aware of these signs and the prospect of continued stagnation or even further declines in economic activity may be one of the reasons JLP could opt for a relatively high level of public sector spending even though this means more foreign financing than would otherwise be necessary. 14. The current economic slowdown is a mixed blessing. It should lead to a reduction in the current account deficit and, if there are actual budget savings, make attainment of EFF program targets somewhat more likely. On the other hand, JLP is unlikely to be satisfied with a growth rate of zero to two percent because of what he views as the political risks from reduced employment and per capita consumption. 15. Although a significant turnaround in economic activity could hardly have been expected within two months of taking office, we believe the suspected deterioration in the economic situation could have been mitigated by more positive action by the new government. In particular, while JLP has stated that this will be a difficult period, neither he nor other GOM spokesmen have laid out in any detail what the Mexican business community and public might expect in 1977. This has never been done in Mexico, but it is important in the present context because the economic policy framework that predominated for over twenty years disappeared with the devaluation. BERALD FORD LIBRARY RESTRICTED 8 16. Some areas where coherent policies have not yet been developed are the following: A) Exchange rate policy (Fluctuations in rates generally attributed to changes in supply and demand. GOM has not said publicly that exchange rate might also be determined by such objectives as reducing the current account deficit and making manufactured exports competitive in world markets.) B) Interest rate policy. (Higher interest rates on peso deposits will be necessary to retain existing peso financial savings and attract more pesos into banking system.) C) Fiscal policy. (Ideally, some target figure for budget cuts could be announced along with a revenue increase target. The details need not be made public at this time. The intention to pursue a less inflationary policy would be reassuring to foreign bankers and to local businessmen who want financial stability.) D) Wage Guidance. R. DERALD FORD 9 RESTRICTED 17. While JLP has prepared the country for bad economic news, he has not provided any details. The economic situation is confused and the economic climate is radically different from what it was even a year ago. Confusion complicates planning and investment. It also delays the necessary structural changes in the economy. The public does not understand GOM objectives. Without guidance, stagnation is likely to last longer than would otherwise be necessary. Further, the foreign banking community is unlikely to be as supportive as it could in the light of this uncertainty. GERALD R. FORD February 4, 1977 TO: FROM: Ted Truman Chairman Burns EMT Attached is the latest cable from Mexico. Attachment: Mexico 1104 cc: Governor Wallich Defense c'assification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Executive Order 10501 which provides that "A document... shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component." ≤ GERALO R. FORD THERE EMT OF STATE # * Department of State UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM STATES OF CONFIDENTIAL 7979 PAGE 01 MEXICO 01104 0122497 ACTION ARA-10 TNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 AGRE-00 PA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 W 0202127 012820 /63 R 9901257 JAN 77 29 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9991 TNFO AMCONSUL MONTERREY POUCH A C n N E 2 I 7 MEXICO 1104 Please return to dal 7/25/07 International Information Center FO 11652: GDS TAGS: EFIN SUBJECT: NEED TO ASSURE POTENTIAL INVESTORS 4. MEXICAN BUSTNESS/BANKING COMMUNITY HOSTED LUNCH TANUARY 27 FOR BANK OF AMERICA SENIOR VP VAN LEARDEN, WHO REPORTEDLY PUT TOGETHER LAST FALL'S $800 MILLION LOAN FOR MEXICO. AMBASSADOR WAS PRESENT. VAN LEARDEN TOLD GROUP HE THOUGHT MEXICO WOULD GET THROUGH 1977 WITHOUT SERIOUS PROBLEMS, BUT THAT HE WAS CONCERNED ABOUT 1978/79. GOM'S PRTORITY NEED NOW, WAS TO REASSURE FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INVESTORS AND LENDERS, AS WELL AS THE IMF AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, OF ITS SERIOUS INTENT TO OVERCOME ITS PRINCIPAL PROBLEMS, WHICH VAN LEARDEN DIVIDED INTO SHORT AND LONGER TERM. : HE CHARACTERIZED THE SHORT-TERM PROBLEM AS THE NNFD TO PREVENT THE DEVELOPMENT OF A RUNAWAY CYCLE OF IN- FLATION SUCH AS HAD HIT CHILE AND ARGENTINA. THIS WOULD, HE SATD, REQUIRE SACRIFICE AND RESTRAINT NOW ON PART OF BOTH INDUSTRY AND LABOR. AT SAME TIME, PRICE LEVEL OF BASIC MARKET BASKET OF THE POOR COULD BE PROTECTED FROM INFLATION THROUGH APPROPRIATE ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES. & FORD GERALD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL is 2 DEPARTMENT de STATE UNITED Name 1) Department of State TELEGRAM STATES OF CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 01104 0122492 3. IN THE LONG TERM, HE REPORTEDLY SAID MEXICO MUST CONTROL ITS POPULATION GROWTH, BRINGING NUMBER OF NEW ENTRANTS INTO JOB MARKET INTO LINE WITH JOB CREATING POSSIBILITIES OF THE ECONOMY. 4. VAN LEARDEN EXPRESSED UNDERSTANDING THAT ONLY 58 DAYS TN OFFICE WAS OBVIOUSLY INSUFFICIENT TO HAVE DEVELOPED PROGRAMS OVER A BROAD SPECTRUM#BUT OF GREATEST PRIORITY FOR GOM WAS NEED TO EXHIBIT A FAVORABLE ATTITUDE TOWARD INVESTORS, IN PARTICULAR, THE GOM SHOULD CLARIFY ITS ATTITUDE TOWARD NEW FOREIGN INVESTMENT, ESPECIALLY AS MANIFESTED IN IMPLEMENTATION OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT LAW AND PATENTS AND TRADEMARKS LAW. AND IT SHOULD ASSURE POTENTIAL INVESTORS THAT THE "RULES OF THE GAME" WILL NOT CHANGE AFTER INVESTMENTS ARE COMMITTED. GOM MIGHT ALSO DEVELOP INCENTIVES SUCH A "REASONABL" DEPRECIATION (READ RAPID) WRITEOFF TO ATTRACT INVESTORS. 5. WE ALSO UNDERSTAND VAN LEARDEN IS BEING PRESSED TO ORGANIZE NEW LOAN TO GOM. S. AMBASSADOR LEARNED THAT GROUP OF 40 MEXICAN BUSINESS AND BANKING LEADERS HAD LENGTHLY SESSION WITH PRESIDENT FROM WHICH THEY CAME AWAY HIGHLY ENCOURAGED THAT THE WAR BETWEEN GOM AND PRIVATE SECTOR, PARTICULARLY MONTERREY GROUP, WAS OVER. JLP EMPHASIZED THAT PRO- DUCTIVITY MUST BE KEY GOAL IN ALL INVESTMENT, BOTH PRIVATE AND PUBLIC, AND THAT HE WAS PARICULARLY INTERESTED TN INCREASING RATE OF INVESTMENT IN PRIVATE SECTOR INCLUDING FOREIGN INVESTMENT. 7. IN THIS REGARD, PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR RAFAEL IZQUIERDO RE- CENTLY TOLD AMBASSADOR THAT THE MONTERREY GROUP WILL SHORTLY ANNOUNCE THE INTENTION TO UNDERTAKE MAJOR INVESTMENTS IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY AT INSTANCE CONFIDENTIAL DEPARTMENT or STATE UNITED AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM STATES OF *** CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 03 MEXICO 01104 012249Z OF THE GOVERNMENT. POVA FORD & GERALD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL February 7, 1977 TO: Chairman Burns FROM: Ted Truman EMT Attached are the latest cables on Mexico. Attachments: Mexico 1251 Mexico 1306 Mexico 1414 cc: Governor Wallich Defense cirasification of this document is due to the inclusion of U.S. Government information officially classified under Exceutive Order 10501 which provides that "A document... shall bear a classification at least as high as that of its highest classified component." LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD 3a DECARTMENT STATE CAEXICO STATE UNITED AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM OF EMT CONFIDENTIAL 0499 RAGE 01 MEXICO 01251 0220327 ACTION ARA-10 TNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC=05 CIEP-01 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 PA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 w 0305127 027039 /21 R 0219207 FEB 77 2 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 0069 INFO TREASURY WASHDC ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO VIA POUCH Please return to e N F H E R A MEXICO 01251 International Information Center dal 7/25/07 F. 0. 11652: GDS TAGS: EINV, EGEN, MX SUBJECT: PUBLIC-PRIVATE SECTOR RELATIONS REF: (A) MEXICO 1018: (B) 76 MEXICO 15963. 1. SUMMARY: U.S. BUSINESSMEN ARE CRITICAL OF GOM EFFORT TO PRODUCE INEXPENSIVE CONSUMER GOODS AND EVIDENCE SOME APPREHENSION OF NEW GOVERNMENT. PRESUMABLY SHARED BY RUSINESSMEN GENERALLY, THIS ISSUE, PLUS CONCERN OVER EXCESS PROFITS TAX APPEAR TO BE HINDERING TO SOME DEGREE IMPROVED RELATIONS BETWEEN THE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTORS. END SUMMARY. 2. AT AMBASSADOR'S MONTHLY MEETING WITH U.S. BUSINESSMEN, LATTER COMPLAINED ABOUT THE GOMIS PROGRAM TO MARKET 90 BASIC CONSUMTION GOODS AT LOW PRICES. (SEE REF A) GOM APPARENTLY WANTS PRIVATE INDUSTRY TO REDUCE PRICES ON EXISITING GOODS AT LOWER PRICE RANGE RATHER THAN DEVELOP NEW INEXPENSIVE MODELS. IN EXCHANGE, GOM INDICATES IT WILL REMOVE PRICE CEILINGS ON HIGHER PRICED ITEMS. GERALD R. FORD LIVER CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 9.66 DEPART STATE Department of State UNITED STATES OF ) TELEGRAM CONF IDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 01251 022032Z 3. ONE BUSINESSMAN WHOSE COMPANY DEPENDS ON ONE PRODUCT FOR 80 PERCENT OF ITS SALES MAINTAINED HE COULD NOT AFFORD TO LOWERE THE PRICE OF THIS ITEM. ANOTHER, A FOOD PROCESSOR, SAID HE MERELY SUBMITTED TO THE GOM HIS LIST PRICES WITH THE COMMENT THAT HIS FIRM DOES NOT GIVE DISCOUNTS. ANOTHER EXPRESSED CONCERN THAT EVEN IF COMPANIES PARTICIPATED IN THIS "VOLUNTARY" PROGRAM THE GOM MIGHT NOT REMOVE PRICE CEILINGS ON HIGHER PRICED GOODS. STILL ANOTHER WORRIED ABOUT HOW GOVERNMENT RUREAUCRATS WOULD DEFINE A REASONABLE PROFIT, WHICH HE MAINTAINS IS ALL HIS FIRM IS MAKING NOW ON THE TTEMS FOR WHICH THEY WANT A LOWER PRICE. ONE EXPRESSED THE OPINION THAT THIS PROGRAM REFLECTS THE ECHEVERRIA ADMINISTRATION'S BELIEF THAT MIDDLEMEN TAKE UNNECESSARILY I ARGE PROFITS AND A MISUNDERSTANDING OF THE COSTS OF DISTRIBUTION AND RETAILING. SEVERAL BUSINESSMEN MAINTAINED THAT THE WHOLE SCHEME WAS DESIGNED BY RETAILERS TO PREVENT THE GOVERNMENT FROM EXPANDING ITS OWN RETAIL DISTRIBUTION FACILITIES. 4. ANOTHER GOVERNMENT ACTION THAT HAS IRRITATED THE PRIVATE SECTOR IS THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX. THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX WAS FIRST MENTIONED IN THE SEPTEMBER 1, 1976 INFORME AS A MEASURE TO PREVENT ANY "UNUSUAL OR EXCESSIVE PROFITS RESULTING FROM THE EXCHANGE RATE CHANGE OR UNWARRANTED PRICE INCREASES. WE UNDERSTAND THAT ATTEMPTS TO WRITE LEGISLATION THAT WOULD APPLY SO NARROWLY FAILED. THE FINAL CONCEPT WAS INCLUDED IN THE LATE-DECEMBER TAX REFORM PACKAGE AND WAS NOT DISCUSSED WITH ANYBODY OUTSIDE THE GOVERNMENT PRIOR TO ITS PRESENTATION TO CONGRESS, TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE. (SFE REF B). BUSINESSMEN ARGUE THAT THE GROSS PROFITS TAX WOULD BE CONFISCATORY AND UNFAIR IN THAT IT PENALIZES COMPANIES WHOSE PROFITS MAY HAVE INCREASED FOR REASONS OTHER THAN THE DEVALUATION, I.E., A RELATIVELY NEW COMPANY THAT FINALLY TURNS A PROFIT. SOME COMPANIES ARE CONSIDERING A WRIT OF "AMPAROR(INJUNCTION) AGAINST CONFIDENTIAL C FORM DEPARTMENT OF STATE Department of State OF STATE AMERICA UNITED TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 03 MEXICO 01251 022032Z THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX. THIS TAX HAS BEEN DEFENDED PRIVATELY BY GOM OFFICIAL AS A QUID PRO QUO FOR THE 10 PERCENT MINIUMUM WAGE INCREASE. IN THIS REGARD IT SHOULD BE NOTED THAT PRESIDENT PUBLICLY LABELED BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS PROGRAM AS TRADE-OFF FOR WAGE RESTRAINT. 5. WHATEVER THE MERITS OR FAULTS OF THE BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS PROGRAM AND THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX, THEY HAVE HINDERED SOMEWHAT IMPROVEMENT OF PUBLIC- PRIVATE SECTOR RELATIONS AND ENCOURAGED CONTINUED SKEPTICISM OF GOM INTENTIONS ON THE PART OF THE LOCAL U.S. BUSINESS COMMUNITY WHO ARE LOOKING FOR FAVORABLE ACTIONS AS WELL AS FRIENDLY WORDS. R. ON THE OTHER HAND, THE GOM IS MAINTAINING AN OPEN ATTITUDE TO BUSINESS COMPLAINTS. FOR EXAMPLE, PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR RAFAEL IZQUIERDO HAS OFFERED TO SET ASIDE TWO DAYS FOR INDIVIDUAL HALF HOUR MEETINGS TO HEAR ANY COMPLAINTS FROM U.S. BUSINESSMEN AGAINST GOM POLICIES, PARTICULARLY AS REGARDS OBSTACLES TO FORETGN INVESTMENT. THESE SESSIONS ARE TO TAKE PLACE PRIOR TO THE JLP TRIP TO THE U.S. JOVA R. GERALD FORD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL FORM DS-1652 TIMITED or STATE EMT Department of State UNITED AMERICA NAME TELEGRAM STATES OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE 2705 PAGE 01 MEXICO 01306 0317502 ACTION EB-08 TNFO OCT-01 ARA-26 ISO-00 AGRE-00 CIAE-00 COME-00 INR-07 LAB-04 NSAE-00 SP-02 STR-04 TRSE-00 CIEP-01 FRB-03 OMB-01 L-03 ID-13 NSC-05 SS-15 PA-01 PRS-01 USIA-06 /081 W 0403167 041554 170 R 0317337 / FEB 77 3 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 0097 TNFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH A Please return to LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 1306 International Information Center FO 11652 : N/A TAGS : PFOR ETRO MX SUBJ : POSSIBLE TRADE TOPIC FOR LOPEZ PORTILLO MEETING WITH PRESIDENT CARTER REF : MEXICO 948 1. BRUCE EVANS, U.S. -CITIZEN PRESIDENT OF MEXICAN IN-BOND TEX- TILE PLANTS (ACAPULCO FASHIONS) LOCATED IN CIUDAD JUAREZ AND PACATECAS INFORMED EMBOFF FEB 1 THAT PRESIDENT LOPEZ PORTILLO PLANS TO RATSE SPECIFIC ISSUE OF U.S. MEXICO ATERAL TEXTILE AGREEMENT DURING HIS MEETING WITH PRESIDENT CARTER. EVANS TOLD EMBOFF THIS MATTER WAS DISCUSSED DURING LOPEZ PORTILLO'S MEETING LAST WEEK WITH GOVERNORS OF MEXICAN NORTHERN STATES, WHICH WAS ATTENDED INTER ALTA BY CHAIRMAN OF CIUDAD JUAREZ PRI PARTY CWHO ALSO HAPPENS TO BE LAWYER OF IN-BOND PLANTS MENTIONED ABOVE). 2. COMMENT: THIS REPORT ABOUT JLPIS INTENTIONS MAY RE CASE OF WISHFUL THINKING ON PART OF EVANS, WHOSE COMPANY HAS PERSONAL INTEREST IN OBTAINING LARGER R. GERALD FORD LIBITY LIMITED OFFICIAL USE FORM DS-1652 OF STATE Department of State UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM STATES OF LIMITED OFFICIAL USE PAGE 02 MEXICO 01306 031750Z QUOTA FOR TEXTILF CATEGORY 225 (BRASSIERES) ASSEMBLED TN MEXICO AND THEN REXPORTED TO U.S. EVANS WAS ONE OF THOSE MANUFACTURERS WHOSE APPROACHES TO GOM RESULTED IN GOM REQUEST FOR INCREASED TEXTILE CON- SULTATION LEVELS AND CATEGORY LIMITS REPORTED IN REFTEL. TOVA LIMITED OFFICIAL USE FORM DS-1652 OF 3b PER STATE EMT Department of State STATES UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM OF CONF DEI I 5392 PAGE 01 MEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 050231Z ACTION ARA-10 TNFO OCT-01 TSO-00 AGRE-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 DHA-02 MCT-01 DODE-00 PM-04 Hm01 L-03 PA-01 PRS-01 PC-01 CU-02 /095 W 0502557 066120 170 R 0500467 FEB 77 5 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 148 TNFO ALL USCONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH return to AMEMBASSY CARACAS AMEMBASSY GUATEMALA international Please Information Center AMEMBASSY MANAGUA AMEMBASSY PANAMA AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE AMEMBASSY SAN SALVADOR AMEMBASSY TEGUCIGALPA /Azatt C Y SECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 1414 due 7/25/07 FO 11652 : GDS TAGS : PINT MX PFOR EGEN SUBJ: MONTHLY POLITICAL HIGHLIGHTS: JANUARY 1977 REF : MEXICO 874 :- SUMMARY: THE LOPEZ PORTILLO GOVERNMENT IS BEGINNING TO TAKE HOLD IN SUCH AREAS AS PRIVATE SECTOR-LABOR RELATIONS, AGRARIAN UNREST, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, AND DOMESTIC POLITICS THOUGH TERRORISM PERSISTS AND TEACHER UNIONS IN THE UNIVERSITIES ARE SHAPING UP AS A CHALLENGE. AT THE SAME TIME, THE GCM HAS MOVED HESITANTLY AND WITHOUT MUCH SURE-FOOTEDNESS TO DEAL WITH WHAT IT RECOGNIZES AS THE MOST PRESSING PROBLEMS, THOSE TN THE FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC AREA. END SUMMARY. FORD & LIBRARY 076839 CONFIDENTIAL 6 FORM DS-1652 9.66 OF STATE Department of State STATES AMERICA UNITED NAME TELEGRAM OF CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 0502312 2. LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS IMPROVED: JLP'S MOST NOTABLE SUCCESS TO DATE HAS BEEN THE COOPERATION ELICITED FROM THE PRIVATE SECTOR AND LABOR, BOTH OF WHICH HAVE PLEDGED TO TRY TO KEEP PRICES AND WAGES DOWN. THE AGREMENT IS FRAGILE, HOWEVER, AND IT REMAINS TO BE SEEN WHETHER BOTH SECTORS WILL IMPLEMENT IN SPECIFIC ACTIONS THEIR GENERAL PLEDGES TO HELP CONTROL INFLATION. (SEE MEXICO 874). 3. AGRARIAN SITUATION CALMER. WHILE LAND INVASIONS HAVE NOT ENDFD (THERE WERE NEW, SMALL ONES IN SINALDA IN THE LAST SEVERAL WEEKS, THEIR NUMBERS HAVE DIMINISHED, AND STATE AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES ARE REMOVING, SO FAR WITHOUT VIOLENCE, CAMPESINOS FROM LANDS INVADED AS LONG AGO AS OCTOBER 75. WE THINK THIS REPRESENTS LOCAL AUTHORITIES GETTING A NEW SIGNAL FROM MEXICO CITY AND ACTING ACCORDINGLY. THE GOM IS NOW ACTIVELY BUT QUIETLY MEDIATING TN THE SONORA LAND EXPROPRIATION, AND BOTH SIDES ARE REFRAINING FROM ANY ACTION WHICH WOULD DISTURB THE TALKS. THERE IS ALSO EVIDENCE OF A POLITICAL HOUSE- CLEANING OF ECHEVERRTA LOYALISTS IN THE FOUR MAJOR CAMPESINO ORGANIZATIONS, THE REMOVAL OF SALCEDO MONTEON FROM THE CNC SEING THE MOST IMPORTANT SUCH CHANGE. s. ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM: LOPEZ PORTILLO'S ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM MAY BE MORE MEANINGFUL THAN OUR PREVIOUS REPORTS WOULD INDICATE. MORE THAN JUST A RESHUFFLING OF CABINET RESPONSIBILITIES, THE REFORM IS INTENDED TO IMPOSE REAL FISCAL AND POLICY CONTROLS IN THE HERETOFORE FREE- WHEELING PARASTATAL AGENCIES, WHO CONSUME HALF THE ANNUAL BUDGET; BUDGET AND ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES HAVE BEEN TIGHTENED TREASURY'S CONTROL OVER THE PUBLIC DEBT HAS BEEN INCREASED: AND THERE ARE STEPS BEING TAKEN TO UPGRADE THE PROFESSIONALISM OF THE CIVIL SERVICE. FATRGRAM FOLLOWS.) ONF EDENTIAL FORM DL 9.66 OF STATE Department of State STATE UNITED AMERICA TELEGRAM OF CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 03 MEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 050231Z 5. FIRM HAND ON DOMESTIC POLITICS: GOM INNOVATION IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IS NOT BEING REFLECTED IN INTERNAL POLITICS. THE GOM SOLVED THE NUEVO LAREDO ELECTORAL PROBLEM IN TRADITIONAL FASHION BY SEATING BOTH PRI AND OPPOSITION CONTESTANTS. ALTHOUGH THE SITUATION STILL COULD CHANGE, SO FAR BAJA CALIFORNIA VOTERS ARE HAVING TO SHALLOW THEIR UNHAPPINESS OVER THE IMPOSITION OF FCHEVERRIA'S SECRETARY OF DEFENSE AS GOVERNOR, LIKEWISE, PUERTO VALLARTA VOTERS, WHILE STILL CAUSING HEADACHES, ARE NOW BEING GOVERNED BY A SIMILARLY UNPOPULAR IMPOSITION. PRT PRESIDENT SANSORES HAS SEVERAL TIMES SPOKEN OF MAKING THE PROCEDURE FOR SELECTING MUNICIPAL CANDIDATES MORE DEMOCRATTC, BUT NO ONE ANTICIPATES REAL REFORM. is FORD GERALD LIBRARY CONFIDENTIAL H FORM DS-1652 OP STATE UNITED NAME AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM STATES OF CONFIDENTIAL 5380 PAGE 01 MEXICO 01414 02 OF 02 050156Z ACTION ARA-10 TNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AGRE-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 DHA-02 MCT-01 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01 L-03 PA-01 PRS-01 PC-01 CU-02 /095 W 0502527 065836 170 R 050046Z FEB 77 FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO TO SECSTATE WASHDC 149 TNFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH AMEMBASSY CARACAS AMEMBASSY GUATEMALA AMEMBASSY MANAGUA AMEMBASSY PANAMA AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE AMEMBASSY SAN SALVADOR AMEMBASSY TEGUCIGALPA N A L SECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 1414 6. TERRORISM PERSISTS: FOUR TERRORIST INCIDENTS IN ONE WEEK IN JANUARY SERVED TO REMIND THAT THIS PROBLEM HAS NOT GONE AWAY. TWO OF THE FOUR INCIDENTS OCCURRED WHEN MANAGEMENT OFFICIALS ATTEMPTED TO REMOVE PERSONS DISTRIBUTING 23 OF SEPTEMBER COMMUNIST LEAGUE LITERATURE FROM INDUSTRIAL SITES: THE TERRORISTS RESPONDED WITH GUNFIRE, KILLING A VISITING U.S. BUSINESSMAN IN ONE INCIDENT. WHILE GOM OFFICIALS HAVE EXPRESSED CONCERN, NO MAJOR PUBLIC GOVERNMENT FIGURE HINTED AT USG INVOLVE- MENT, A REFLEX OF THE ECHEVERRIA ADMINISTRATION. 7. UNIVERSITY PROBLEMS: EFFORTS BY SELF-PROCLAIMED "MARXIST, ANTI-IMPERIALIST" ELEMENTS TO UNIONIZE UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC AND ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL IN - THE LAST YEAR OR TWO HAVE PROGRESSED TO THE POINT WHERE TWO FORD GERALD CONFIDENTIAL " FORM or STATE of STATE UNITED AMERICA Department of State TELEGRAM CONFIDENTIAL PAGE 02 MEXICO 01414 02 OF 02 050156Z SUCH UNIONS AT MEXICO'S NATIONAL UNIVERSITY (UNAM) ARE CONTESTING GOM CONTROL OF THE CAMPUS. UNAM RECTOR SOBERON LAST AUGUST SUGGESTED A CONSTITUTIONAL "REFORM" WHICH WOULD GIVE THE GOM THE LEGAL WHEREWITHAL TO HAMSTRING THE UNIONS. LITTLE HAS BEEN HEARD OF THE PROPOSAL SINCE THEN, BUT UNION RELATED DISORDERS IN TANUARY AT SEVERAL STATE UNIVERSITIES AND IN MEXICO CITY MAY REVIVE THE PROPOSAL. HOW THE JLP ADMINISTRATION HANDLES THE CHALLENGE IS SHAPING UP AS A POSSIBLY MORE REVEALING MEASURE OF ITS ABILITY TO GOVERN THAN HAVE BEFN ITS VARIOUS MINOR SUCCESSES TO DATE. 8. US-MEXICAN RELATIONS: THE WARMING TREND IN U.S.- MEXICAN RELATIONS WHICH BEGAN WITH THE DECEMBER VISIT OF MRS. CARTER CONTINUED APACE IN JANUARY. MRS. JLP'S RECEPTION IN WASHINGTON GRATIFIED MEXICO, FROM THE PRESIDENT TO THE MAN IN THE STREET, AND MEXICO WAS EQUALLY PLEASED WITH JLP BEING THE FIRST HEAD OF STATE INVITED TO WASHINGTON BY THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION. 0. WHILE THE CURRENT GOOD FEELINGS ARE GENUINE AND PERSONALLY FELT, MEXICO'S DESIRE FOR BETTER RELATIONS WITH THE USG HAS ALSO BEEN DICTATED BY MEXICO'S NEED FOR US HELP ON ITS ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL PROBLEMS. WITH THE JLP VISIT THE GOM APPARENTLY HOPES TO CEMENT THE PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE FIRST FAMILIES, AND TO BENEFIT FROM THAT RELATIONSHIP BY, INTER ALIA, INFORMALLY LINKING ISSUES. OUR CONVERSATIONS INDICATE, FOR EXAMPLE, THAT MEXICO HOPES TO PROFIT FROM ITS RECORD OF COOPERATION ON NARCOTICS MATTERS TO GET MORE. PERHAPS MASSIVE, HELP ON ITS SHORT RANGE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS. WE HAVE THE NAGGING FEELING THAT THE NEW GOVERNMENT FEELS OVERWHELMED BY THE ENORMITY OF ITS PRESENT FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC DIFFICULTIES AND IS COUNTING HEAVILY ON US PRIVATE AND OFFICIAL ASSISTANCE TO SEE IT THROUGH ITS HARD TIMES. (A SEPARATE REPORT FOLLOWS.) JOVA GNFIDENTIAL FORM

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    "ocrText": "The original documents are located in Box B80, folder \"Mexico 4/76 - 10/77 (7)\" of the\nArthur F. Burns Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.\nCopyright Notice\nThe copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of\nphotocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United\nStates of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.\nWorks prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public\ndomain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to\nremain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid\ncopyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\n1977 JAN -4 AMII: 41\nJanuary 4, 1977 OFFICE OF RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nChairman Burns\nFROM: Ted Truman\nAttached are the latest cables on the Mexican\neconomic situation.\nAttachments: Mexico 16258\nMexico 16285\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Executive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document... shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component.\"\nFORD & 938870 LIBRARY\nDEPARTMENT OF STATE\nnexico\n*\nDepartment of State\nof I AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nEMT\nCaIMF/IBRD\nCJS\nasp\nUNELASSIFIED 6674\n85->FT\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 16258 302216Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-15 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05\nCIEP-02 TRSE-00 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00\nCOME-00 ( FRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-04 OPIC-06 LAB-04\n130 PA-02 PRS-01 /094 W\n3107397 037404 /21\nR 301945Z DEC 75\nFM AMEMBASS MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHOC 9441\nINFO TREASURY WASHDC\nTO\nCENTER\nPLEASE DETURN\nUNCLAS MEXICO 16258\nINTERNATIONAL\nNTE\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: FFIN MX\nSUBJ: NEW ADMINISTRATION RATIFIES IMF AGREEMENT.\n1. SUMMARY: DECEMBER 30 NEWSPAPERS CARRY GOM PRESS\nRELEASE STATING THAT THE NEW ADMINISTRATION HAS RATIFIED\nTHE AGREEMENT SIGNED WITH THE IMF TWO MONTHS EARLIER.\nEND SUMMARY.\n2. PRESS RELEASE STATES THAT RATIFICATION WILL GIVE\nMEXICO THREE YEARS IN WHICH TO REESTABLISH EXTERNAL AND\nINTERNAL EQUILIBRIUM. PRESS RELEASE NOTES THAT USING\nTHE EXTENDED FUND FACILITY WILL AVOID THE NEED TO TAKE\nMORE RESTRICTIVE MEASURES THAT WOULD BE NECESSARY It\nEQUILIBRIUM WERE TO BE RESTORED IN A SHORTER TIME\nFRAME. SUCH MEASURES WOULD, IT IS NOTED, \"DRASTICALLY\nAFFECT PRODUCTION AND EMPLOYMENT.\"\n3. USE OF EFF HAS THREE IMPORTANT ASPECTS, ACCORDING TO\nPRESS RELEASE. ONE IS THAT IT AVOIDS THE NEED TO RESORT\nTO BILATERAL SUPPORT, OR \"SIMPLE SUPPORT FROM MARKETS.\"\nTHE SECOND IS THAT IT PERMITS A GRADUAL ADJUSTMENT OF\nTHE ECONOMIC DISEQUILIBRIUM. THE THIRD IS THAT THE\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\n0\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nof AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 16258 302216Z\nTECHNICAL SUPPORT OF THE IMF WILL INCREASE INTERNATIONAL\nSUPPORT OF MEXICAN ECONOMIC POLICIES.\n4. PRESS RELEASE CITES THE FOLLOWING AS THE\nOBJECTIVES OF THE GOM'S ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT PROGRAMS:\n(A) TO IMPROVE THE ECONOMIC GROWTH RATE: (B) TO INCREASE\nEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE GROWING LABOR FORCE;\n(C) STRENGTHEN INTERNAL SAVINGS, THEREBY REDUCING THE\nNEED FOR RECOURSE TO FOREIGN BORROWINGS; AND (D) FACILIATATE\nA RELATIVE STABILITY FOR INTERNAL PRICES AND REESTABLISH\nA \"DYNAMIC\" EQUILIBRIUM IN THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS\nSUSTAINABLE OVER THE MEDIUM TERM.\n5. FINALLY, PRESS RELEASE STATES THAT DURING THE\nADJUSTMENT PERIOD, THE GOM WILL SEEK TO REESTABLISH\n\"FISCAL EQUILIBRIUM\", TO REDUCE THE FOREIGN DEBTL TO A\nHEALTHY AND SUSTAINABLE LEVEL FOR THE LONG TERM, AND TO\nMAKE STRUCTURAL CHANGES THAT WILL PERMIT A MORE DYNAMIC\nDEVELOPMENT AND A MORE EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF THE\nBENEFITS OF THIS DEVELOPMENT.\nJOVA\nUNCLASSIFIED\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nof / AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 16285 3023312\nHIGHER IN EARLY 1977 THAN THEY WERE IN 1975. IT IS\nVERY LIKELY THAT REAL WAGES IN EARLY 1977 WILL BE\nGREATER THAN THEY WERE IN 1975, THOUGH SUBSEQUENT INFLATION\nMAY ERODE THIS. THE INCREASE IN THE NATIONAL CONSUMER\nPRICE INDEX FROM DECEMBER 1975 TO NOVEMBER 1976 WAS\n24 PERCENT. ONE COULD ARGUE THAT NO EMERGENCY WAGE\nINCREASE WAS NECESSARY IN LATE SEPTEMBER. IT APPEARS\nINEVITABLE THAT THE SEPTEMBER INCREASE COUPLED WITH\nTHE NEW INCREASE WILL ADD TO INFLATIONARY PRESSURES IN\n1977. ONE CAN ONLY PRESUME THAT POLITICAL FACTORS\nOUTWEIGHED ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS IN THE RECENT\nDECISION.\nJOVA\nFORD & LIBRARY GERALD\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n6\nARTMENT\nOF\nDEPART\nSTATE\nMexico\nDepartment of State\nof AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n6729\nEMI\nSS\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 16285 302331Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05\nCIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00\nCOME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-92 OPIC-03 LAB-04\nSIL-01 PA=01 PRS-01 1080 W\n30\n3107522 038161 /21\nR 302301Z DEC 75\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9455\nINFO TRSY WASHDC\nALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH\nA\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 16285\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EFIN ELAB MX\nINTERNATIONAL PLEASE INFORMATION CENTER\nSUBJ: MINIMUM WAGES\nBEGIN UNCLASSIFIED.\n1. SUMMARY: NEW MINIMUM WAGES TO BE EFFECTIVE JANUARY\nONE, WILL BE 9 OR 10 PERCENT ABOVE PREVIOUS LEVELS. END\nSUMMARY.\n2. MINIMUM WAGE COMMISSION ANNOUNCED ON DEC 29 THAT\nMINIMUM WAGES BELOW 100 PESOS A ADAY WOULD BE INCREASED\n10 PERCENT AND MINIMUM WAGES ABOVE 100 PESOS A DAY WOULD\nBE INCREASED 9 PERCENT. INCREASES TO BE EFFECTIVE\nJANUARY ONE.\n3. NEW MINIMUM WAGE IN URBAN AREAS OF THE FEDERAL DISTRICT\nWILL BE 106.4 PESOS PER DAY, 35 PERCENT ABOVE WAGE THAT\nBECAME EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1976, WHEN URGAN MINIMUM WAGE\nFOR FEDERAL DISTRICT WAS INCREASED 24 PERCENT. RECALL\nTHAT MINIMUM WAGES INCREASED 23 PERCENT, EFFECTIVE\nGERAL FORD LIBRARY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL 6 USE\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nof I AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 16285 3023312\nOCT 1, 1976. WHEREAS MINIMUM WAGE IN FEDERAL\nDISTRICT DURING 1975 WAS THE EQUIVALENT OF $5.07 PER\nDAY (63.4) PESOS), IT WILL BE THE EQUIVALENT OF $5.32\nAT AN EXCHANGE RATE OF 20:1. NEW MINIMUM WAGES ARE\nSUPPOSED TO BE IN EFFECT UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 1977.\n4. MINIMUM WAGES DIFFER FROM REGION To REGION AND\nBETWEEN URBAN AND RURAL AREAS WITHIN REGIONS. THE\nHIGHEST IS IN THE STATE OF BAJA CALIFORNIA NORTE\n(TIJUANA) WHERE IT IS NOW FIXED AT 133.9 PESOS. THE\nLOWEST IS IN THE STATE OF OAXACA WHERE IT IS 51.1\nPESOS IN RURAL AREAS. MINIMUM WAGES ARE ALSO SET FOR\nA NUMBER OF SPECIALIZED TYPES OF WORK, FOR EXAMPLE,\nTHE MINIMUM WAGE FOR AUTO MECHANIC IN THE FEDERAL\nDISTRICT WILL BE 161 PESOS PER DAY\n5. LABOR LEADER FIDEL VELASQUEZ SAID NEW MINIMUM WAGES\nWERE ACCEPTABLE AND PERMITTED WORKERS TOT RECUPERATE\nLOST PURCHASING POWER. HE SAID THE NEW WAGES WOULD\nAPPLY TO APPROXIMATELY TWO MILLION WORKERS.\n6. EXCELSIOR EDITORIALIZED UNDER HEADING OF\n\"INSUFFICIENT MINIMUM SALARY\". IT SAYS THE NEW WAGE\nLEVELS REFLECT THE TENDENCY TO STABILIZE THE ECONOMY\nBUT DO NOT PERMIT WORKERS TO ABSORB THE INCREASE IN\nTHE COST OF LIVING DURING 1976, WHICH IT SAYS EXCEEDS\nTHE TOTAL OF THE EMERGENCY MINIMUM WAGE INCREASE AND\nTHE PRESENT INCREASE. EDITORIAL CONCLUDES BY CALLING\nFOR BASIC REFORM OF ECONOMIC POLICIES, BUT DOES NOT\nSAY WHAT THIS SHOULD BE. END UNCLASSIFIED.\nBEGIN LIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n7. ASSUMING THAT ALL WAGES HAVE INCREASED MORE OR LESS\nIN LINE WITH THE DAILY AVERAGE WAGE IN THE FEDERAL\nDISTRICT THE DOLLAR COST OF WAGES WILL BE SOMEWHAT\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\n1977 JAN -5 PM 4: 48\nJanuary 5, 1976\nOFFICE OF RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nChairman Burns\nFROM: George B. Henry\nAttached is the latest cable on the Mexican economic\nsituation.\nAttachment: Mexico 58\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense inclusion of U.S. Government 10:01\nclassification of this document information is due\nto the classified under Executive Order bear a\nofficially provides that \"A document... shall of its\nwhich classification a: least as high as that\nhighest classified component.\"\nGERATE R. FORD LIBRARA\nDEPARTMENT on STATE\nMexico\n*\n*\nDepartment of State\nJase\nof STATE AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nEYM\nUNCLASSIFIED 9993\nEMT\nMEXICO 00058 0416362\nSS\nPAGE 01\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 FRB-01\nINR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02\nLAB-04 SIL-01 0MB-01 PA-02 PRS-01 AGRE-00 FEAE-00\nERDA-07 /076 W\n041645Z 068763 /65\nR 041520Z JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSI MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9485\nINFO TREASURY DEPT WASHDC\nINTERNATIONAL PLEASE INFORMATION RETURN TO CENTER\nUNCLAS MEXICO 0058\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EGEN MX\nSUBJ: JLP PREDICTS ECONOMIC RECOVERY IN TWO YEARS.\n1, SUMMARY. IN TWO RECENT MEETINGS, LOPEZ-PORTILLO HAS\nSTATED THAT THE MEXICAN ECONOMY WILL HAVE RECOVERED IN TWO\nYEARS, AND THAT SOME IMPROVEMENT IN THE SITUATION CAN BE\nEXPECTED BY MID-77. END SUMMARY.\n2, PRESIDENT LOPEZ-PORTILLO TOLD A DELEGATION FROM THE\nMEXICAN CONGRESS ON DECEMBER 31, THAT IT WILL TAKE TWO\nYEARS TO \"RECONSTITUTE\" THE MEXICAN ECONOMY. HE SAID THE\nNEXT SIX MONTHS WOULD BE PARTICULARLY DIFFICULT, BUT THAT\nBY JUNE OR JULY, ONE WILL BE ABLE TO SEE THE \"OTHER FACE\"\nOF THE DEVALUATION.\n3. JLP CALLED THE 1977 BUDGET NEITHER DEFLATIONARY, NOR\nINFLATIONARY BECAUSE IT IS AIMED AT INCREASING PRODUCTION.\nTHIS IS, HF SAID, THE ONLY AND MOST INTELLIGENT WASY TO\nOVERCOME INFLATION. HE WENT ON TO NOTE THAT MEXICO CAN\nBE SELF-SUFFICIENT IN FOODSTUFFS AND IN ENERGY, AND\nTHIS PROVIDES THE BASIS FOR A STRONG ECONOMY. HE\nRELATED THE RECOVER IN TWO YEARS TIME TO TWO\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\nD\nor STATE\nDepartment of State\nAMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00058 041636Z\nAGRICULTURAL SEASONS.\n4. LOPFZ-PORTILLO CALLED THE \"MODEST\" MINIMUM WAGE\nINCREASE A LESSON IN RESPONSIBILITY THAT BEGINS A\nPROCESS OF SOLIDARITY WHICH CAN BREAK THE INFLATIONARY\nSPIRAL.\n5. JLP TOUCHED GN SIMILAR THEMES IN A MEETING WITH\nFEMALE JOURNALISTS SEVERAL DAYS EARLIER. HE TOLD THE\nJOURNALISTS THAT THE ECUNOMIC SITUATION WILL BE BETTER\nBY JUNE OR JULY, AND THAT MEXICO HAS TO EXPORT CRUDE\nOIL IN ORDER TO BE ABLE TO STOP EXPORTING IT AT\nA FUTURE DATE.\nJOVA\nUNCLASSIFIED\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\nOF THE\n1977 JAN 10 PM 2: 15\nJanuary 10, 1977\nOFFICE\nRECEIVE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nChairman Burns\nFROM:\nTed Truman\nAttached is the latest cable on the Mexican economic\nsituation.\nAttachment: Mexico 168\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Executive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component\"\nFORDO i GERALD LIBRARY\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nof / AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nUNCLASSIFIED 2706\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00168 060128Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-15 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05\nCIEP-02 SS-15 STR-04 OM8-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00\nFRB-01 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-04 OFIC-06 LAB-04 SIL-01\nPA-02 PRS-01 /094 W\n6\n0603332 085825 170\nR 060011Z JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9538\nINFO TREASURY WASHDC\nUNCLAS MEXICO\n168\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EFIN MX\nSUBJ: RECENT ECONOMIC INDICATORS\nREF: 76 MEXICO 15716\n1. THIS CABLE REPORTS MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA IN BANK OF\nMEXICO'S ECONOMIC INDICATORS FOR NOVEMBER 1976.\n2. MONEY SUPPLY (UNADJUSTED) AT END OCTOBER WAS 124,539.6\nMILLION PESOS, COINS AND BANK NOTES WERE 61,875.4 MILLION\nPESOS AND DEMAND DEPOSITS WERE 52,664.2 MILLION PESOS.\nSEASONABLY ADJUSTED MONEY SUPPLY AT END-OCTOBER WAS 128,211.5\nMILLION PESOS,\n3. LIABILITIES OF BANKING SYSTEM CTABLE 1-4) AT END-\nOCTOBER WERE 710,512.2 MILLION PESOS OF WHICH 391,517.8\nMILLION WERE IN PESOS AND 318,994.3 MILLION IN FOREIGN\nEXCHANGE. CONVERSION RATE WAS 25.4. NOTE THAT PESO\nLIABILITIES ARE SAME AS END-APRIL LEVEL. INCREASE IN\nLIABILITIES IS DUE IN LARGE PART TO REVALUATION OF FOREIGN\nEXCHANGE LIABILITIES. BULK OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE\nLIABILITIES (251,609.7 MILLION PESOS) BELONG TO NATIONAL\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\n0\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nAMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00168 060128Z\nCREDIT INSTITUTIONS, EX-BANK OF MEXICO. OF THESE,\n224,164.2 MILLION WERE LOANS FROM FOREIGN BANKS. DOLLAR\nCHECKING ACCOUNTS WERE 11,307.6 MILLION PESOS.\n4. TOTAL FINANCING OF BANKING SYSTEM AT END-SEPTEMBER\nWAS 622,047.5 MILLION PESOS, AND AT END-OCTOBER, WAS\n675,863.8 MILLION PESOS.\n5. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FEVENUE IN OCTOBER WAS 10,779.5\nMILLION PESOS. EXPENDITURES WAS 15,393.9 MILLION PESOS.\n6. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION INDEX DATA FOR 1976 REVISED.\nINDEX MEMBERS FOR JANUARY-SEPTEMBER Now AS FOLLOWS:\n139.5, 140.7, 151.8, 140.6, 145,9, 147.4 145.1,\n143.7, 138.9.\n7. NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEX FOR NOVEMBER IS 249.1,\nUP 4.5 PERCENT FROM OCTOBER AND 25.1 PERCENT FROM\nNOVEMBER 1976.\n8. MEXICO CITY WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX FOR NOVEMBER WAS\n425.6, UP 8.2 PERCENT FROM OCTOBER AND 40.1 PERCENT FROM\nNOVEMBER 1975,\n9. BALANCE OF PAYMENTS DATE UNCHANGED. OCTOBER IMPORTS\nWERE 444.5 MILLION; EXPORTS WERE 238.1 MILLION. OCTOBER\nTOURIST RECEIPTS WERE 57.3 MILLION AND EXPENDITURES WERE\n22.5 MILLION. FRONTIER RECEIPTS WERE 122.0 MILLION\nAND EXPENDITURES WERE 74.0 MILLION.\nJOVA\nNCLASSIFIED\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\nJanuary JAM I 1977 1: 15\nRECEIVED\nOFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nChairman Burns\nFROM: Ted Truman\nAttached are the latest cables on the Mexican economic\nsituation.\nAttachment: Mexico 232\nMexico 233\nMexico A-33\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Executive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component.\"\nFORD is GERALD LIBRARY\nOF\nmexico\nSTATE\n*\nDepartment of State\nAMERICAN UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nUNCLASSIFIED 5513\nEMT\n55\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 0702102\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISC-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 FRB-01\nINR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02\nLAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 NSC-05 SS-15 STR-04 CEA-01 PA-02\nPRS-01 -03 H-02 AGRE-00 1099 W\n0714197 098406 /65\nR 0700222 JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9556\nINFO TREASURY WASHDC\nSEC 2 ATTACHED\nPLEASE RETURN TO\nUNCLAS SECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 0232\nINTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EGEN MX\nSUBJ: PRESIDENTIAL DECEMBER 31 REMARKS ON RECENT LEGISLATION.\nREF: MEXICO 58\n1. BELOW IS OUR INFORMAL TRANSLATION OF PRESIDENT LOPEZ-\nPORTILLO'S REMARKS TO A SENATE DELEGATION ON DECEMBER 31.\nPRESS RELEASE CALLS REMARKS \"IMPROVISED\". INTRODUCTION\nPARAGRAPHS ARE DELETED.\n2. \"WE HONESTLY BELIEVE THAT THE ORGANIC LAW OF PUBLIC\nADMINISTRATION THE LAW OF BUDGET AND ACCOUNTING, THE LAW\nOF PUBLIC DEBT AND THE IMPROVEMENTS TO THE ORGANIC LAW,\nCONSTITUTE A FUNDAMENTAL BASIS FOR IMPROVING THE ADMINISTRATIVE\nFUNCTIONING OF OUR NATION, CONSIDERING THAT OUR COUNTRY,\nPERHAPS MORE THAN UNDER-DEVELOPED, MAY BE UNDER-ADMINISTERED\n3. \"WE HAVE MANY RESOURCES, SOME NON-RENEWABLE, OTHERS\nTHAT ARE, MANY HUMAN, LIMITED AND CONGESTED FINANCING,\nBUT WE HAVE THEM. THENCE IT IS ORGANIZATION THAT MAY BE\nTHE FACTOR WITHIN OUR HUMAN ABILITIES TO WHICH WE ARE\nMOST ACCOUNTABLE PRECISELY BECAUSE IT DEPENDS ON OUR ABILITY.\nLIBRARY GERALD FORD\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPRANTMENT OF STATE\nDepartment of State\nof it AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 070210Z\n4. \"WE ARE PLACED IN AN EXTRAORDINARY COUNTRY. IT IS\nORGANIZATION THAT TERMINES OUR RELATIONSHIPS, AND THIS COULD BE\nSUCCESSFUL OR DEFICINET, IF WE SUCCEED OR NOT IN ORGANIZING\nOURSELVES; IF WE SOUCCEED OR NOT IN MEETING OBJECTIVES, IN\nFINDING GOALS, AND PLACING THEM IN SPACE AND TIME AND ORGANIZING\nTHUS OUR RESPONSIBLE ACTIONS.\n5. \"I APPRECIATE THAT IT IS BY ORGANIZATION, AS THE FUNDAMENTAL\nRESPONSIBILITY OF A FREE BEING THAT MAN CAN GOVERN HIS DESTINY\nIF HE SUCCEEDS IN PERFORMING WITHIN HIS FREEDOM IN AN ORIENTED\nCOURSE.\n6. \"FROM THAT COMES THE IMPORTANCE THAT I GIVE TO ADMINISTRATION,\nTO ORGANIZED SERVICE, IN THE FUNCTION OF OUR COMMON DUTIES.\nTHEREFORE, I AM ESPECIALLY GRATEFUL FOR THE EFFORT, THE COLLA-\nBORATION THAT YOU GAVE US IN THE CONCEIVING AND IMPETUS To THE\nADMINISTRATIVE REFORM, THAT SHALL PERMIT US TO BE ABLE TO\nCOUNT ON SUFFICIENT INSTRUMENTS TO ADVANCE THE PROGRESS OF\nTHE COUNTRY.\n7. \"T APPRECIATE AS WELL THE EFFORT MADE TO DEVELOP, TO IMPROVE,\nAND TO APPROVE A BUDGET SO DIFFICULT AS THE ONE WE HAVE HAD TO\nPRESENT, A BUDGET DRAWN UP BETWEEN TWO ADMINISTRATIONS, BETWEEN\nTWO ORGANIZATIONS, THE RESULT OF BASIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM AND\nABOVE ALL. BETWEEN TWO DEVALUATIONS. A BUDGET COMPRISED BY THE RISK\nOF POSSIBLY BEING INFLATIONARY, BY THE GRAVE DANGER THAT IT COULD\nBE DEFLATIONARY, BY THE POSSIBILITY THAT PERSISTS THAT IF WE ERR\nIN ITS MANAGEMENT, WE WILL HAVE THE WORST OF ALL POSSIBLE WORLDS:\nINFLATION WITH UNEMPLOYMENT, WHICH IS THE BASIC PROBLEM EXISTING\nIN THE COUNTRY AND WHICH WE DO NOT WISH TO SEE GROW.\n8. \"WE BELIEVE THAT THE BUDGET IS NOT INFLATIONARY, NEITHER FOR\nITS AMOUNT, UNFORTUNATELY ONLY SLIGHTLY ABOVE THE PAST LEVELS AND\nPOSSIBLY LESS THAN THE POPULATION INCREASE, FOR THE PURPOSE OF\nINCREASING PRODUCTION.\n9. \"I BELIEVE THAT EXPENDITURE ORIENTED TO PRODUCTION IS NEVER\nEXCESSIVE, BECAUSE IT IS ONLY PRODUCTION THAT WILL REMOVE US FROM\nTHE INFLATIONARY RISKS: GROWTH IS THE MOST INTELLIGENT FORM OF\nCOMBATTING INFLATION. OF COURSE, IT CAN ALSO BE DONE - AND THIS IS\nDONE BY MANY RIGOROUS ECONOMIES THAT ALMOST ALWAYS FALL INTO FASCISM-\nUNCLASSIFIED\non STATE\n*\nDepartment of State\nof i AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 00232 01 OF 02 070210Z\nBY FORCEABLY REPRESSING THE SAVINGS OF THOSE WITH THE LEAST,\nINSTEAD OF ACTING AGAINST THOSE WHO HAVE THE MOST. ONE CAN ALSO\nREDUCE DEMAND BY FORCE. THIS IS A MEANS OF CONTROLLING PROBLEMS\nSUCH AS WE FACE. BUT IT IS MORE INTELLIGENT AND MORE DESIRABLE TO\nACT IN THE AREA OF PRODUCTION.\n10. FOR THIS REASON, THE BUDGET WE HAVE APPROVED HAS TWO BASIC\nPRIORITIES: FOOD AND ENERGETICS. A COUNTRY THAT HAS SUFFICIENT OF\nTHESE TWO PRIORITIES CAN MAKE HEADWAY, AND OURS HAS THEM.\n11. \"I APPRECIATE THE EFFORTS THAT YOU HAVE MADE IN ORDER TO PASS\nTHE BUDGET, AS YOU HAVE MADE IN THE AREA OF TAX REFORM, WHICH\nHAS JUSTIFIABLY BEEN CALLED WEAK, BUT IT IS A TAX REFORM BECAUSE\nIT HAS A STRUCTURE.\n12. \"WE HAVE VERY LITTLE ROOM FOR MANEUVERS. BOXED IN BY THE\nINERTIA OF EVENTS, WE DON'T HAVE MUCH AREA TO MOVE IN, WE DON'T\nHAVE TIME TO RELAX; BUT THE LITTLE AREA WE DO HAVE PERMITS US TO\nBEGIN, AT LEAST IN AN INDICATIVE WAY, AND I HOPE NOT ONLY SYMBOLI-\nCALLY, AN AUTHENTIC TAX REFORM, BY WHICH WE FREE LOW-INCOME GROUPS\nFROM THE INCOME TAX. OF COURSE WE HAVE NOT BEEN FREE FROM\nCRITICISM FOR SOME HAVE SAID THAT THIS MEASURE TENDS TO INCREASE\nTHE IRRESPONSIBILITIES OF A MAJORITY OF THE POPULATION.\nBERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\nOF STATE\n*\n*\nDepartment of State\nUNITED OF\nTELEGRAM\nit\nUNCLASSIFIED 5514\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00232 02 OF 02 071328Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AID-05 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-07 RB-01\nINR-07 NSAE-00 USIA-15 XMB-04 OPIC-06 SP-02 CIEP-02\nLAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 NSC-05 SS-15 STR-04 CEA-01 PA=02\nPRS-01 L-23 H-02 AGRE-09 1099 W\n0714202 103304 /65\nR 0700222 JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTC SECSTATE WASHOC 9557\nINFO TREASURY WASHDC\nUNCLAS SECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 0232\n13. \"STRICTLY SPEAKING, WHAT WE ARE DOING IS STRENGTHENING JUSTICE\nBY INCRESING THE CONSUMPTION CAPACITY AND DEMONSTRATING THE\nDISPOSITION OF TAX AUTHORITIES TO SACRIFICE AN IMPORTANT SOURCE\nOF REVENUE IN ORDER TO ALLEVIATE PRESSURES ON PRICES AND THEREBY\nPERMIT THAT, IN RELATION TO WAGES, THE PRICE-WAGES POLICIES MAY BE\nLESS MALIGNANT.\n14. \"AND HERE I WANT TO REPEAT VERY BRIEFLY TO YOU SOMETHING I\nHAVE JUST SAID TO THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES:\nTHAT LESSON, THAT BEATIFUL LESSON, THAT RISKY LESSON OF HISTORIC\nRESPONSIBILITY, THAT OF THE WORKING CLASS OF MEXICO IN UNANIMOUSLY\nACCEPTING such A MODEST INCREASE IN THE MINIMUM WAGE. A SACRIFICE\nTHAT BEGINS A PROCESS OF SOLIDARITY THAT I HOPE WILL BE CONFIRMED\nBY OTHER SOCIAL CLASSES.\n15. \"IT IS IN THIS MANNER THAT ONE CAN BREAK THE INFLATIONARY SPIRAL,\nWITH such RESPONSIBLE AND HAZARDOUS ACTS, BY COMPROMISES - THE\nPURELY NOMINAL DEMOGOGUERY IS EASY - THAT CAN RESOLVE THE CRITICAL\nSITUATIONS THROUGH WHICH WE LIVE.\n16. \"WHAT I JUST SAID A MOMENT AGO TO THE DEPUTIES, MANY STILL\nHERE, NOW I REITERATE BEFORE THIS COMMISSION BECAUSE IT SEEMS TO\nME AN HISTORIC EXAMPLE, THE FORCE, THE SACRIFICE OF THE WORKING\nCLASS.\n17. \"WITH THESE MEANS IT IS BELIEVABLE THAT WE CAN GOVERN EVENTS.\nT AM SURE THAT WE WILL BE ABLE TO DO so IN THE COMING DIFFICULT\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\nor\nSTATE\n*\nDepartment of State\nof STATES AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00232 02 OF 02 0713282\nDAYS. WE ARE GOING TO BEGIN THE CLIMB IN JANUARY, A CLIMB THAT HAS\nBEEN IGNORED BY MANY BECAUSE OF THE DECEMBER HOLIDAYS; BUT THIS\nCLIMB BEGINNING IN JANUARY IS GOING To BE DIFFICULT, VERY DIFFICULT.\nIT WILL BE, AS WE HAVE SAID ON OTHER OCCASIONS, A VERY DIFFICULT\nSIX MONTHS, BECAUSE IT WILL NOT BE UNTIL JUNE OR JULY WHEN WE BEGIN\nTO SEE THE OTHER FACE OF THE DEVALUATION, UNTIL NOW BITTER.\nBEGINNING IN THESE MONTHS, WE WILL BEGIN TO SEE POSITIVE ASPECTS.\n18. \"THESE SIX MONTHS WILL FORM PART OF WHAT I BELIEVE WILL BE\nTWO YEARS DURING WHICH WE WILL BE ABLE TO RECONSTITUTE OUR ECONOMY.\nTWO YEARS, I SAY, NOT AS A MAGIC OR ARBITRARY NUMBER, TWO YEARS\nBECAUSE THESE ENCOMPASS TWO AGRICULTURAL CYCLES DURING WHICH\nWE CAN ORGANIZE PRODUCTION IN THE COUNTRY. BEGINNING WITH THIS\nEFFORT, ONE INITIAL, ANOTHER CONTINUED, SELF-SUFFICIENCY IN FOOD\nWILL ENABLE US TO CEASE IMPORTING GRAINS AND OILSEEDS THAT MAKE\nUP THE DEFICIT WHICH DE-BALANCES US IN THIS AREA.\n19. \"IF WE SUCCEED, THE COUNTRY AFTER TWO YEARS WILL BEGIN TO SEE\nBETTER TIMES. I DO NOT DOUBT THAT IF WE ACT WITH THE RESPONSABILITY\nSHOWN BY THE WORKERS SECTOR, WITH THE COLLABORATION OF WHICH YOURS\nHAVE BEEN AN EXAMPLE, THE COUNTRY WILL FACE UP TO ITS RISKS AND\nOVERCOME THE CRISIS.\n19. \"I AM CERTAIN OF IT. THE COUNTRY IS YOUNG, IT IS FLEXIBLE,\nIT IS POWERFUL. IT IS DISORGANIZED. WE ARE GOING TO ORGANIZE IT\nBETTER, WITH COURAGE, OCCASIONALLY WITH SACRIFICES, BUT ALWAYS\nWITH A FIRM WILL.\n20. \"I THANK YOU FOR YOUR VISIT, YOUR ASSISTANCE, AND WISH TO YOU\nAND YOUR FAMILIES A PLEASANT NIGHT AND THAT THE NEXT YEAR BE HAPPY\nFOR ALL.\n21. \"THIS WISH WILL BE RENEWED NEXT YEAR IN ORDER THAT 178\nSHOULD BE BETTER.\n22. \"I WISH THAT MEXICO SHOULD BEGIN TO LIVE EACH DAY BETTER THAN\nTHE NEXT. I WISH THIS FOR YOU; ON OUR PART WE WILL MAKE EVERY\nEFFORT THAT WE CAN IN ORDER THAT THIS WILL BE SO.\"\nJOVA\nNCLASSIFIED\nas\nSTATE\nmexico\nDepartment of State\nof STATES AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n5813\nEMT\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00233 071548Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-07 NSC-05\nCIEP-01 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 L-03 H=01 PA-01\nPRS-01 CIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02\nOPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01 AGRE-00 FEAE-00 /084 W\n071629Z 104883 153\nR 071520Z JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHOC 9558\nINFO TREASURY WASHOC\nPLEASE RETURN TO\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 0233\nINTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER\nE. 0. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EFIN MX EALR MX\nSUBJECT: KEY MINISTER'S ECONOMIC VIEWS.\n1. SUMMARY: MINISTER OF NATIONAL PROPERTIES AND INDUSTRIAL\nDEVELOPMENT TOLD PRESS CONFERENCE THAT FURTHER REDUCTIONS\nIN CONSUMPTION WERE NOT POSSIBLE AND ONLY THROUGH INCREASED\nOUTPUT COULD INFLATION BE OVERCOME. HE ALSO SAID THAT\nGOVERNMENT WOULD NOT INTERFERE WITH PRIVATE INDUSTRY.\nEND SUMMARY.\n2. JOSE ANDRES DE OTEYZA, MINISTER FOR NATIONAL PROPERTIES\nAND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT, HELD A PRESS CONFERENCE ON\nJANUARY 5. DE OTEYZA IS THE YOUNGEST MINISTER CAT AGE 34),\nAND HIS MINISTRY'S RESPONSIBILITIES FAVE BEEN EXPANDED TO\nINCLUDE THE GOVERNMENT'S INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS AS\nWELL AS MANAGEMENT OF MOST GOM-OWNED INDUSTRIAL PROPERTIES.\nHE IS CAMBRIDGE-EDUCATED AND HIS VIEWS APPEAR TO REFLECT\nTHE SO-CALLED CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS. HE IS SAID\nTO BE INFLUENTIAL IN THE NEW ADMINISTRATION WE ARE,\nTHEREFORE, REPORTING THE VIEWS HE EXPRESSED AT A PRESS\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nq\nSTATE\nUNITED\nDepartment of State\n,\nTELEGRAM\nit\nOF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00233 071548Z\nCONFERENCE IN THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPHS WHICH ARE BASED\nON NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS.\n3. THE ONLY MANNER TO BREAK THE INCREASE IN PRICES IS\nTO INCREASE SUPPLY BY INCREASING OUTPUT. UNFORTUNATELY,\nMEXICO IS A RELATIVELY POOR COUNTRY AND IT IS NOT\nPOSSIBLE TO BRAKE DEMAND OR REDUCE CONSUMPTION.\n4. IN SEVERAL YEARS, THE BASIC INVESTMENTS IN SUCH AREAS\nAS STEEL, ENERGY AND FERTILIZER WILL BEGIN TO PAY OFF IN\nTERMS OF INCREASED OUTPUT. THE NATURE OF INVESTMENTS IN\nTHESE AREAS ARE SUCH THAT THERE IS A LONG LEAD TIME BEFORE\nFULL PRODUCTION CAN BE ATTAINED. THIS SAME TIME SPAN IS\nNECESSARY TO RESTRUCTURE AND ORGANIZE\nAGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION. (COMMENT: THE PAST\nADMINISTRRATION JUSTIFIED INCREASES IN PUBLIC SPENDING\nAND SUBSEQUENT INFLATION BY MAINTAINING THAT EVENTUALLY\nTHE FRUITS OF PUBLIC SECTOR INVESTMENTS WOULD REDUCE\nINFLATION. THE NEW GROUP SEEMS TO BE SAYING THAT THIS IS\nSTILL SEVERAL YEARS OFF.)\n5. THE GOVERNMENT WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRIVATE SECTOR\nPLANS, EVEN IF THIS MEANS INVESTEMENTS IN NON-PRIORITY\nAREAS. THE PRIORITY AREAS ARE FOODSTUFFS, ENERGY, STEEL,\nPETROCHEMICALS, FERTILIZERS, CAPITAL GOODS AND BASIC\nCONSUMPTION GOODS.\n6. REGARDING OIL, MEXICO IS EXPORTING 150,000 BARRELS\nA DAY, THEREBY EARNING $700 MILLION A YEAR, WHICH IS\nHELPING THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS AND FINANCING IMPORTS\nOF ESSENTIAL GOODS. OIL IS NOT BEING EXPORTED\nINDISCRIMINATELY, BUT RATHER OIL IS A RESOURCE THAT\nMUST BE USED RATIONALLY. IT IS NOT BEING WASTED, AND\nTHE COUNTRY WILL NOT BE IMPOVERISHED IN THE FUTURE.\n7. PUBLIC SECTOR AS WELL AS PRIVATE ENTERPRISES SHOULD\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nARTMENT\n80\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nAMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES of\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 00233 0715482\nBE PROFIT-MAKING. PROFITS ARE THE BASIS OF CAPITAL.\nHOWEVER, PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES HAVE BROADER\nRESPONSIBILITIES THAN PRIVATE ENTERPRISES. IN ANY CASE,\nSUBSIDIES FOR PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES SHOULD BE\nTRANSITORY AND OPEN, RATHER THAN PERMANENT AND HIDING\nINEFFICIENCIES.\n8, COMMENT: DE OTEYZAIS VIEWS ON OVERCOMING INFLATION\nTHROUGH INCREASED OUTPUT AND THE NEED FOR TWO YEARS BEFORE\nANY SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS IS MADE ECHO THOSE\nOF THE PRESIDENT (SEE MEXICO 58), AND VERY LIKELY\nINFLUENCED THESE.\nJOVA\nBERALD FORD LIBRARY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nARA\nAIRGRAM\n770001-1004\nRS/R\nREP\nAF\nARA\nmexico\nOriginal to be Filed in\nDecentralized Files.\nFILE DESIGNATION\nEUR\nFE\nNEA\nCU\nUNCLASSIFIED\nA-33\nINR\nE 2\na\n10\nHANDLING INDICATOR\nTO\n:\nUS DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHDC\nFBO\nAID\nINFO:\nEMI\nUS DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WASHDC\nAMEMBASSY, MEXICO\nSS\nAMCONSUL, GUADALAJARA\nINTERNATIONAL MINE CENTER\nAGR\nCOM\nRB\nINT\nFROM\nAMCONSUL, MONTERREY\nDATE: December 21, 1976\nE. O, 11652: NA\nLAB\nTAR\nTR\nXMB\nTAGS:\nPINT, ECON, MX\nSUBJECT\n:\nMONTHLY HIGHLIGHTS REPORT, DECEMBER, 1976\nAIR\nARMY\nNAVY\nOSO\nREF\nMONTERREY A- 32 OF NOVEMBER 23, 1976\nUSTA\nNSA\nCIA\nSUMMARY\nMonterrey area residents reacted favorably to\nSUGGESTED DISTRIBUTION\nPresident López-Portillo's call for hard work,\nhis lack of rhetorical excess, and his favorable\nJAN 6 AM 11 43\ncomments on private investment.\nPRI candidate César Santos has been declared winner\nof the Monterrey mayoral election but his PAN\nopponent Pablo Emilio Madero continues to charge\nelection fraud.\nPOST ROUTING\nTO:\nAction\nInfo.\nInitials\nLand expropriations by the Government last month\nAMB\nPO\nin Sonora led to a wave of land invasions in the\nDCM\nMonterrey consular district and to a one day\nHOL\n\"businessmen's strike\" that attracted widespread\nsupport.\nECON\nCONS\nProtesting higher fares, Monterrey area students and\nADM\nposesionarios seized over one hundred privately-\nAID\nowned busses, provoking a brief suspension of\nUSIS\nservice by bus owners.\nARTMENT OF STATE\nNuevo León Governor Zorrilla Martínez has been\nsubjected to increasing criticism on issues such\nDEC 20 AM 9:19\nas the municipal elections, bus seizures, and his\nFILE\nprecipitate dismissal of the head of Monterrey's\nFAORC /DAY WC\nwater company.\nDate:\nFORM\nUNCLASSIFIED\nFor Department Use Only\nInitials:\n10-64 Ray DS - 327\nIn\nOut\nDrafted by:\nDrafting Date:\nPhone No.:\nContents and Classification Approved by:\nECON/COMM: THCarter/RLGlass: mlg\n12/17/76\nCG: FXLambert\nClearances:\nBERAMO FORD TIBRARY\nPa 2 of 7\nNCLASSIFIED\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nREACTION TO LOPEZ-PORTILLO\nMonterrey businessmen, industrialists and political columnists\nbreathed a sigh of relief when José López-Portillo assumed the\nPresidency on December 1. The tone of his inaugural address\nwas well received, particularly his favorable comments on private\ninvestment. Local editorial opinion lauded both the style and\nsubstance of his comments and particularly welcomed his lack of\nrhetorical stridency, which distinguishes him so clearly from\nhis predecessor. The new administration's firmness in dealing\nwith invasions of private land by squatters was well received.\nImportant business groups have supported López-Portillo's public\ncall for a wage policy based on actual cost of living increases\nand they are watching carefully to see what action he will take\nwhen minimum wages are adjusted in January. Another plus for\nthe new President is his appointment of a respected regiomontano\nas foreign minister and his selection of Monterrey's popular\nlame-duck mayor to a senior post in the national administration.\nOverall, Lőpez-Portillo's inaugural call for hard work as the\nsolution to Mexico's problems fell on very receptive ears in a\nregion which prides itself on its industriousness.\nELECTION OF SANTOS RATIFIED, PANISTA PROTESTS CONTINUE\nTwo weeks after the December 5 election, Partido Acción Nacional\n(PAN) mayoral candidate in Monterrey, Ing. Pablo Emilio Madero,\ncontinues to claim that he was fraudulently deprived of victory\nby the machinations of the ruling Partido Revolucionario Insti-\ntucional (PRI). In what many local observers consider the most\ncorrupt municipal elections in recent memory, the PRI has been\naccused of widespread abuses, including double and triple voting\nby príistas, threats and intimidation against PAN poll-watchers\nand sympathizers, and the sudden reappearance of \"lost\" ballots\nand tally sheets at hastily-called meetings of the local Juntas\nComputadoras (JC).\nPAN's strategy has been to appeal directly to Federal authorities\nto seek a recount of what the PAN has characterized as the \"spu-\nrious, illegitimate, bastard vote count\" of the Junta or a complete\nannulment of the elections. PAN and various private citizens\nand groups have sponsored advertisements and open letters to\nPresident José López Portillo as well as to Gobernación Secretary\nLic. Reyes Heroles. Concurrently, the panistas are mounting an\nextensive publicity campaign within Monterrey, aimed both at\nUNCLASSIFIED\nGERRLD FORD LIBRARY\nPa 3 of 7\nUNCLASSIFIED\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\npresenting what the party considers conclusive proof of a\nMadero victory and at challenging the vote claims of the PRI.\nBumper stickers reading \"I voted for Madero\" abound. In\nattacking the Junta, Madero and the PAN have been joined by\na number of newspaper columnists, who have taken great pains\nto argue the mathematical improbability of the Junta's vote\ncount. PAN is also protesting the awarding of mayoral victories\nto the PRI in the Monterrey suburbs of Garza García and Santa\nCatarina. In Garza García, which has had PAN mayors for the\npast nine years, PAN complaints center on two precincts in which\nballots disappeared from the polling places on the day of the\nelection and mysteriously reappeared at a hastily-called meeting\nof that town's Junta Computadora to which PAN representatives\nwere not invited. PAN candidate (and former Mayor) Junco\naccompanied Monterrey PAN mayoral nominee Madero to Mexico last\nweek to present his case to the Gobernación Secretary. Garza\nGarcía panistas have mounted a series of mass demonstrations\nin the municipality, both in front of the residence of State\nGovernor Zorrilla Martínez and in various local plazas. PAN\nis also contending that widespread PRI intimidation of its poll-\nwatchers and sympathizers is sufficient to invalidate the PRI\nvictory in the Santa Catarina suburb.\nThe PAN was successful in retaining the mayoralty of the indus-\ntrial suburb of San Nicolás de los Garza, where Ing. Jesús\nHinojosa T., was elected decisively on December 5. However,\nthe PRI won in all outlying towns in the State.\nLAND SEIZURES\nPresident Echeverría's expropriation of 100 thousand hectares\nof farmland in Sonora prompted a quick and coordinated response\nfrom this area's business community. Leaders of Monterrey's\nCámara Nacional de Comercio (CANACO), Cámara de la Industria de\nTransformación de Nuevo León (CAINTRA) and the Centro Patronal\nexhorted businessmen to close their doors on November 24 in a\none day \"sympathy strike\" in support of the Sonora landowners.\nBusinessmen's organizations in Saltillo and Torreón made similar\nappeals. Spokesmen of the businessmen's associations called the\nexpropriation a \"flagrant violation\" of the constitution and\nclaimed that the Sonora incident \"proved that the executive\nbranch is all-powerful, with a servile legislature and an impotent\njudiciary\".\nUNCLASSIFIED\nBERALD FORD CARADA\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPage 4 of 7\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nResponse to the strike call was impressive. Downtown Monterrey\nwas deserted with nearly all retailers shut down. All the\nindustrial conglomerates in Monterrey closed their doors to\nthe public, except the Fundidora steel mill, which is part\ngovernment-owned, Banks and gas stations stayed open. Eighty\npercent of commercial establishments were reported shut down\nin both Saltillo and Torreón.\nEcheverría's land expropriations in Sonora triggered campesino\norganizations in the consular district to initiate \"occupations\"\nof private landholdings. The Federación de Obreros y Campesinos\nin Durango seized more than 100 thousand hectares of cattle\nland alongside the Panamerican Highway on November 29. The\nsquatters explained that their action was timed for the last\ndays of the Echeverría administration because they feared López\nPortillo might not tolerate such land invasions. Most of the\nsquatters were peacefully expelled hours later. Evictions\nof illegal squatters also took place in rural Nuevo León and\nin urban Saltillo and Torreón.\nGOVERNOR ZORRILLA DRAWS INTENSIFIED CRITICISM\nCriticism directed at Nuevo León Governor Pedro Zorrilla Mar-\ntínez intensified during the month. Local newspapers increas-\ningly provided a public forum for accusations against the\nGovernor, with representatives of bus owners blaming him per-\nsonally for some 27 million pesos in losses suffered as a result\nof bus seizures, spokesmen for the PAN blaming him for \"cooking\nup the monumental electoral fraud\" perpetrated against their\nparty, and various private sector sources faulting his frequent\nabsences from the state, his \"unconstitutional\" conduct in\nreplacing the manager of the local water company, and his\nfailure to defend regiomontanos against Echeverría's verbal\nattacks. The Governor, a protegé of Echeverría, always staunchly\ndefended the former President in his frequent confrontations\nwith \"regiomontano\" business leaders. Now that Zorrilla Mar-\ntínez has lost his patrón in Mexico City, his numerous local\nopponents feel free to attack him without restraint.\nBUS DISPUTES AGAIN\nUrban transportation disputes broke out once again in Monterrey\nwith the seizure of busses by dissident students and posesiona-\nrios Close to 150 busses were seized in protest against\nhigher bus fares. Bus owners retaliated by withdrawing their\nUNCLASSIFIED\nTIBRASY GERALD Fard\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPage 5 of 7\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21,1976\nremaining busses from service. Public schools closed for\nseveral days during the stoppage and absenteeism and tardiness\nmounted in business enterprises. On December 9 University\nRector Todd helped mediate an agreement which included the\nreturn of all but eight of the seized busses, which were\nretained as \"hostages\", a freeze on the new bus fares, a\nrestoration of student discounts, and an improvement of bus\nmaintenance and routes.\nPOLITICAL MISCELLANY\nThe Saltillo and Torreón campuses of the Autonomous University\nof Coahuila (AUC) appear to be back to normal after the peaceful\nresolution of student seizures of several university buildings\nand the settlement of a strike by State education employees.\nIn Saltillo, the ten-day student occupation of the rectory\nbuilding ended on November 21 when the University Rector agreed\nto discuss the reinstatement of several professors who had been\nsuspended. Also in Saltillo, striking AUC administrative workers\nwere dislodged from the School of Nursing by students who were\nconcerned over the loss of the fall semester. In Torreón,\nmedical students seized the administrative building ir protest\nof the choice of the director of the AUC's Children's Hospital.\nA pledge by the Rector to reconsider the appointment led to the\nstudents' decision to leave the building after 24 hours.\nECONOMIC MISCELLANY\nRapid inflation continues. The Economic Research Center of the\nState University estimates a six percent hike in the local\nconsumer price index for the month of November alone. The\nCenter calculates that consumer prices rose 25.5% between November\n1975, and November, 1976. Food prices rose 19%, lodging 19%,\nclothing 31%, and transportation 56%.\nLeaders of three influential Monterrey business organizations\nhave publicly recommended a new system of wage control based\non actual cost of living increases. They propose establishing\na system wherein labor contracts will contain a clause for a\ncost of living escalator computed on a quarterly or semiannual\nbasis. They claim their proposal will eliminate wild estimates\nand predictions of inflation which are used to justify unreason-\nable wage demands. What they are advocating seems to be a\ndetailed version of the vague proposal in López Portillo's\ninaugural address calling for a link between salaries and the\ncost of living.\nUNCLASSIFIED\nGERALD FORD LIERANT\nge 6 of 7\nUNCLASSIFIED\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nLocal auto sales are at rock bottom. The director of the\nlocal association of auto dealers stated that 20 car\ndistributorships in the area had sold only seven 1977 cars\nduring the month of November. The cheapest 1977 model costs\n85 thousand pesos and credit is still tight. Meanwhile, auto-\nmotive repair and maintenance shops are reported doing a\nbooming business. To stimulate new car sales, the auto associa-\ntion has recommended that part of the Central Bank's reserves\nbe devoted to rediscounting car loan paper.\nAn agricultural team from the Soviet Union studying Mexican\nprograms for the biological control of plant diseases visited\nthe La Laguna region (centered around Torreón, Coahuila) for\none week in late November. Heading the Soviet delegation was\nthe USSR's Agricultural Attaché in Mexico, Dr. Anatoli Kiruschev.\nThe group visited a number of ejidos and the Mexican Center\nfor the Reproduction of Beneficial Insects.\nOutgoing Monterrey Mayor Leopoldo González Sáenz has been\nappointed Subsecretary for Public Works in the López Portillo\nadministration. In a statement to the press following his\nappointment, \"Polo\" noted that the functions of the Secretariat\nof Public Works would be substantially upgraded in the government\nreorganization plan espoused by López Portillo in that respon-\nsibility for \"Asentamientos Humanos\" would be incorporated into\nthe new \"superagency\". Public Works would also absorb or over-\nsee a number of heretofore independent decentralized agencies\nand commissions.\nThe rapid growth in size of the Autonomous University of Nuevo\nLeón (UANL) in recent years may soon be reversed. Rector Luis\nE. Todd has asked the University Council to begin limiting\nenrollment in August, 1977. Todd has also approached State\nGovernor Pedro Zorrilla Martínez with the idea of creating both\na new state university and a \"colegio de Bachilleres\". Meanwhile,\nthe university continues in financing difficulty. Blaming\ndelays in the receipt of some 16 million pesos from the state\ngovernment, Todd recently stated that the university has\ninsufficient funds to pay the Christmas bonuses due to its more\nthan three thousand employees.\nArea citrus farmers are distressed because of overproduction\nand attendant weak prices. They also claim distress because\nof restricted exports to the United States. The local citrus\norganizations estimates 650 pesos per ton as the industry's\nbreak-even price, while current prices per ton have fallen to\n300 pesos. The citrus organization also concedes that the\nhigh quality of U.S., Spanish, and Israeli oranges militates\nagainst Mexican export prospects.\nUNCLASSIFIED\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nUNCLASSIFIED\nPage 7 of 7\nA-33 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nThe directors of the Public Health Service and the Family\nPlanning Program estimate that the birthrate of 44-45 per\nthousand which prevailed until 1974 fell to 40.8 in 1975.\nThey explain that the Mexican Institute of Social Security\nalone has thus far inserted over 2000 loops, prescribed pills\nfor close to 6000 patients, and sterilized nearly 2000 men\nand women.\nLAMBERT\nUNCLASSIFIED\nFOR & 076330 BRARY ar\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\n1977 JAN 25 AM 10: 02\nRECEIVED January 24, 1977\nOFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN\nFROM: TO: Ted Chairman Truman Burns EMT\nAttached is the latest cable on the US/Mexican Relations.\nAttachment: Mexico 804\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Executive\nwhich provides that \"A documen,\nalassification BI thest as\nHighest classifier\nLIBRARY GERALD ? FORD\nPUPARTMENT\nOF\n1a\nSTATE\nMEXICO\nDepartment of State\nOF AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL 9627\nEMT\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 EUR-12 ISO-00 CIAE-00 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01\nINR407 L-03 NSAE-00 NSC-05 PA-01 PRS-01 SP-02 SS-15\nUSIA-06 AID-05 COME-00 EB-08 FRB-03 TRSE-00 XMB-02\nOPIC-03 CIEP-01 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 SCA-01 SCS-03\nDEAE-00 SNM-02 FEA-01 INT-05 OES-06 AGRE-00 VO-03\nINSE-00 STR-04 /121 W\n2123532 004259 /64\nR 2122317 JAN 77\nreturn to\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9836\ninternational ase Information Center\nINFO AMEMBASSY OTTAWA\nALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH\nzatt,\nC 0 N F I D E N T I 1 SECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 804\nEO 11652 : GDS\nTAGS : PFOR US MX\nSUBJ : US/MEXICAN RELATIONS\nSUMMARY a SUBSECRETARY OF POREIGN AFFAIRS, LIC JOSE JUAN\nDE OLLOQUI, MET WITH THE MEMBERS OF THE FSI SENIOR SEMINAR\nON JANUARY 17, TO PROVIDE AN OVERVIEW OF US/MEXICAN\nRELATIONS. DEOLLOQUI SPOKE EXTEMPORANEDUSLY, INFORMALLY\nAND OFF-THE-RECORD FOR NEARLY FORTY-FIVE MINUTES AND ANSWERED\nQUESTIONS. SUMMARY FOLLOWS. END SUMMARY.\n1. HE BEGAN BY NOTING THAT MEXICO WAS ENCOURAGED BY RECENT\nINDICATORS THAT THE US ECONOMY IS STRENGTHENING, PARTICULARLY\nAS REFLECTED IN A LOWER RATE OF INFLATION AND DECREASED UNEMPLOYMENT.\nNOTING THAT NEW MEXICAN AND US ADMINISTRATIONS ARE ASSUMING\nPOWER NEARLY SIMULTANEOUSLY, HE EMPHASIZED THAT NOW IS THE\nTIME FOR A NEW START IN DEVELOPING CLOSER POLITICAL AND\nECONOMIC TIES BETWEEN THE US AND MEXICO. AS A CLOSE\nNEIGHBOR, DEVELOPMENTS IN THE US HAVE AN IMPORTANT IMPACT\nON MEXICO. FOR PRAGMATIC REASONS, THEREFORE, MEXICO\nDECLASSIFIED\nE.O. 12958 SEC. 3.6\nMR07-117, #20; state lts 2/22/08\nLIBRARY GERALD R. FORD\nBY dal NARA DATE 3/10/08\nCONF IDENTIAL\nyou\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nDEPARTMENT\nOF\nSTATE\nUNITED\nand\nDepartment of State\n/\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z\nCONSIDERS IT IMPORTANT TO MAINTAIN AND STRENGTHEN ITS\nRELATIONS WITH THE US. ALONG WITH CANADA, HE SAID,\nMEXICO \"BELONGS TO NORTH AMERICA. \" HE IMPLIED THAT THIS\nREALITY SHOULD BE REFLECTED IN SOME FORM OF CLOSER\nUNION OR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE US AND ITS CLOSEST\nNEIGHBORS. MEXICO AND CANADA, AS BORDERING COUNTRIES,\nHAVE COMMON INTERESTS AND CONCERNS IN DEALING WITH THE\nUS. AS A RESULT, DE OLLOQUI INDICATED, IT WOULD BE TO\nTHE BENEFIT OF ALL THREE COUNTRIES TO DEVELOP A TIGHTER\nRELATIONSHIP IN THE FUTURE, RECOGNIZING, OF COURSE,\nTHAT MEXICO IS ALSO A LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRY AND A MEMBER\nOF THE THIRD WORLD.\n2. IN ITS FOREIGN RELATIONS DE OLLOQUI SAID MEXICO\nSHOULD TAKE ITS ATLANTIC POSITION MORE SERIOUSLY. ONE\nOF OUR COASTS OVERLOOKS THE CARIBBEAN WHICH IS AN\nIMPORTANT US SECURITY BELT, HE SAID, MENTIONING PUERTO\nRICO AND THE CANAL ZONE. SINCE MANY OF THE NEWLY\nINDEPENDENT ENGLISH-SPEAKING NATIONS HAVE NOT YET FOUND\nTHEIR PLACE IN THE HEMISPHERE, MEXICO CAN EXERT A\nPOSITIVE INFLUENCE IN THIS AREA LOOKING ALSO TOWARD ITS\nRELATIONS WITH THE PACIFIC AREA, MEXICO IS PARTICULARLY\nINTERESTED IN MAINTAINING CLOSE TIES WITH THE PHILIPPINES,\nJAPAN AND INDIA, IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE, MEXICO UNDER\nTHE NEW ADMINISTRATION OF LOPQZ PORTILLO, WILL\nPLACE INCREASING EMPHASIS ON STRENGTHENING TIES WITH\nTHE OTHER NATIONS OF LATIN AMERICA. (NOTE : DE OLLOQUI\nDID NOT INDICATE HOW MEXICO WOULD RECONCILE SOME FORM\nOF SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH THE US AND CANADA WITH\nITS DESIRE TO DEVELOP CLOSER TIES WITH LATION AMERICA.\nOTHER MEXICAN CONTACTS, HOWEVER, HAVE SUGGESTED IN\nRECENT DAYS THAT MEXICO, BECAUSE OF ITS UNIQUE GEOGRAPHIC\nAND ECONOMIC TIES WITH THE US, COULD PLAY AN IMPORTANT\nPOLITICAL ROLE AS A MEDIATOR AND INTERPRETER BETWEEN THE\nUSG AND THE REST OF THE HEMISPHERE.) DE OLLOQUI OBSERVED\nTHAT MEXICO DURING THE LAST SIX YEARS HAS DOUBLED ITS\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9-66\nof\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nSTATE UNITED MAME AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nCONF IDENT\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z\nDIPLOMATIC RELATIONS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD AND PURSUED\nA MORE ACTIVE FOREIGN POLICY. HE FELT THIS WAS A\nPOSITIVE DEVELOPMENT AND DID NOT SEE ANY CONTRADICTION\nBETWEEN THIS LARGER WORLD ROLE AND MEXICO'S DESIRE FOR\nCLOSER RELATIONS WITH THE US.\n3. DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED CONFIDENCE THAT THE POLITICAL\nAND ECONOMIC FUTURE OF MEXICO, NOTWITHSTANDING ITS\nCURRENT FINANCIAL PROBLEMS, IS BRIGHT. EMPHASIZING THAT\nTHE COUNTRY IS POLITICALLY STABLE, HE EXPRESSED HOPE THAT\nTHE GOVERNMENT WOULD BE SUCCESSFUL IN EMERGING FROM ITS\nPRESENT ECONOMIC PLIGHT BY CONTROLLING INFLATION THROUGH\nSTRICTER CONTROL OF EXPENDITURES, INCREASING ITS\nEXPORTS TO THE us, AND ATTRACTING MORE us TOURISM.\n4. DE OLLOQUI WAS QUITE CONCERNED AT WHAT HE\nDESCRIBED AS THE DISTORTED COVERAGE OF MEXICO IN THE\nUS PRESS AND SPECIFICALLY CITED THE SENSATIONALIST\nTREATMENT OF LAST NOVEMBER'S COUP RUMORS AS AN EXAMPLE.\nHE MENTIONED THE DECLINE IN TOURISM AS A PARTICULAR\nCONCERN ATTRIBUTABLE IN LARGE PART TO UNFAIR PRESS\nPUBLICITY. INDEED, HE WENT EVEN FURTHER, SUGGESTING\nTHAT THE SEPT. 1 DEVALUATION WAS LARGELY DUE TO THE\nADVERSE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF A SINGLE US NEWSPAPER\nREPORT (I.E. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL)AND NEGLECTING\nTO MENTION THE UNDERLYING FINANCIAL FACTORS.\n5. REGARDING TOURISM HE PROFESSED ANNOYANCE AND\nCONCERN AT THE STATE DEPARTMENT'S DECEMBER ACTION IN\nRELEASING, ALLEGEDLY WITHOUT CONSULTATION, A STATEMENT\nTO TOURISTS ABOUT THE DANGERS OF TRAVELING IN MEXICO.\nCHE DID NOT MENTION THAT STATEMENT DEALT ONLY WITH\nSINALOA.) HE ALSO EXPRESSED CONCERN THAT MEXICAN\nEFFORTS TO INCREASE EXPORTS MIGHT PROVOKE US CHARGES\nTHAT MEXICO IS DUMPING INTO THE us MARKET. IN A MORE\nPOSITIVE NOTE, HE EXPRESSED OPTIMISM THAT MEXICO HAS NEARLY\n&\nFORD\nGERALD\nLIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9-66\nDEPARTMENT OP STATE\nDepartment of State\nOF STATES AMERICA UNITED NAME\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 04\nMEXICO 00804 01 OF 02 212324Z\nALL THE ECONOMIC RESOURCES REQUIRED FOR DEVELOPMENT. FOR\nEXAMPLE, HE SAID, OIL IS NOT A LIMITING FACTOR AND\nCONTRIBUTES IMPORTANTLY TO MEXICO'S ECONOMIC GROWTH.\nHE SAID MEXICO HAS NOTHING TO GAIN FROM BECOMING A\nMEMBER OF OPEC, SINCE IT CURRENTLY DERIVES ALL THE\nBENEFITS WITHOUT ANY OF THE LIABILITIES OF MEMBERSHIP.\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9-66\nDEP STATE ; A\nDepartment of State\nOF STATES AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL 9625\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 2123342\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 EUR-12 ISO-00 CIAE-00 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01\nINR-07 La03 NSAE-00 NSC-05 PA-01 PRS-01 SP-02 SS-15\nUSIA-06 AID-05 COME-00 E8-08 FRB-03 TRSE-00 XMB-02\nOPIC-03 CIEP-01 LAB-04 SIL-01 OMB-01 SCA-01 SCS-03\nDEAE-00 SNM-02 FEA-01 INT-05 DES-06 STR-04 AGRE-00\nVO-03 INSE-00 /121 W\n212353Z 004417 /64\nR 212231Z JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9837\nINFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH\nAMEMBASSY OTTAWA\nc\ne\nN\nIDE\nN\nTAL\nSECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 0804\n6. COMMENTING ON US POLICY TOWARD LATIN AMERICA UNDER\nTHE CARTER ADMINISTRATION, DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED THE\nHOPE THAT THE USG WOULD REFRAIN FROM FORMULATING NEW\nSLOGANS WITHOUT MEANING AND ADOPT A MORE OPEN AND\nFRANK RELATIONSHIP TOWARD MEXICO, WHICH ISTHE US'S\nFOURTH LARGEST MARKET. HE SAID THAT THERE IS A FEELING\nIN MEXICO THAT THE US TAKES IT FOR GRANTED. GIVEN\nTHEIR GEOGRAPHIC PROXIMITY AND THE IMPORTANT ECONOMIC\nTIES BETWEEN BOTH COUNTRIES, THIS SHOULD NOT BE THE CASE.\nMEXICO IS PARTICULARLY CONCERNED ABOUTITS \"THREE\nBILLION DOLLAR TRADE DEFICIT WITH THE US\". AND BELIEVES THAT THE\nUSG MUST DO SOMETHING TO CLOSE THE GAP. IN THIS CONTEXT,\nHE AGAIN CITED THE NEED FOR GREATER ACCESS TO US MARKETS\nAND FEWER TRADE RESTRICTIONS ON MEXICAN EXPORTS.\n7. TURNING TO THE ISSUE OF MIGRANT WORKERS, DE OLLOQUI\nSAID THAT SERIOUS ECONOMIC PROBLEMS IN MEXICO CAN ONLY\nAGGRAVATE THE SITUATION. MEXICO, HAVING IDENTIFIED THE\nAREAS OF PRINCIPAL OUTWARD MIGRATION, NEEDS TO DEVELOP\nWAYS TO INVEST IN AGRO-INDUSTRIES THAT WILL PROVIDE\nx\nGERALD\nFORD\nCONF IDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9-66\nDEPARTMENT\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nOF STATE AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 212334Z\nGREATER DEMPLOYMENT AND REDUCE THE INCENTIVE FOR SUCH\nMIGRATION. DE OLLOQUI, HOWEVER, DISPUTED THE ATTITUDE\nOF THOSE IN THE us WHO SEE MEXICAN MIGRATION TO THE US\nAS A NEGATIVE FACTOR. HE CLAIMED THAT THE US ECONOMY\nIN THE SOUTHWEST NEEDS MIGRATORY WORKERS WHO ARE WILLING\nTO TAKE LOWER PAYING JOBS. HE DENIED THAT THESE\nWORKERS CONSTITUTE A SERIOUS BURDEN ON US WELFARE\nSERVICES OR THE ECONOMY, INDEED, HE CLAIMED THAT THEY\nHELP PUT MARGINAL LANDS IN PRODUCTION AND CONTRIBUTE\nTO THE US SERVICE INDUSTRY. IN SUM, HE\nURGED THAT THE US REFRAIN FROM ANY STEPS THAT MIGHT\nRESULT IN A MASSIVE DEPORTATION OF MEXICAN WORKERS.\n8. IN A RELATED COMMENT, DE OLLOQUI EXPRESSED THE\nHOPE THAT THE US WOULD NOT TAKE ANY MEASURES THAT WOULD\nPROVE HARMFUL TO BORDER INDUSTRIES IN MEXICO BECAUSE\nTHE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF CLOSURE COULD INDIRECTLY\nLEAD TO A LOSS OF SOME 35, 000 JOBS ON THE US SIDE OF\nTHE BORDER (PRESUMABLY DUE TO A REDUCTION IN PURCHASE\nOF US GOODS BY MEXICAN WORKERS).\n9. DE OLLOGUI SAID THAT MEXICO WELCOMES FOREIGN,\nPARTICULARLY US, INVESTMENT UNDER REASONABLE RULES,\nADDING THAT IN CONTRAST TO OTHER COUNTRIES MEXICO DOES\nNOT CHANGE THE RULES OF THE GAME ANDINDEED HAS BEEN\nQUITE FLEXIBLE IN THE APPLICATION OF THESE RULES TO\nMAINTAIN NECESSARY INVESTMENT.\n10. IN SUMMARY, DE OLLOQUI SAID THAT THE USG COULD\nPLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN STRENGTHENING RELATIONS WITH\nMEXICO BY (A) HELPING TO CORRECT THE CURRENT TRADE IMBALANCE,\n(B) FACILITATING MEXICO'S ACCESS TO FINANCIAL\nMARKETS (HE SPECIFICALLY CITED A FLEXIBLE US ATTITUDE\nIN THE IDB AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL LENDING ORGANIZATIONS,\n(C) AVOIDING MEASURES THAT WOULD HARM BORDER\nINDUSTRIES, AND (D) MAKING GREATER EFFORTS TO SEE\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nDEPARTMENT\n%\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nOF STATE UNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 212334Z\nTHAT THE US PRESS HAD A BETTER INFORMED AND OBJECTIVE\nATTITUDE TOWARD DEVELOPMENTS IN MEXICO. WHILE OUR\nINTERESTS DO NOT ALWAYS COINCIDE, DE OLLOQUI SAID,\nTHE US AND MEXICO ARE ALLIES ON BASIC ISSUES AND MUST\nHAVE A BETTER RELATIONSHIP.\n11. COMMENT:\nWHILE DEOLLOQUI SPOKE PERSONALLY AND INFORMALLY,\nIT IS PROBABLE THAT HIS GENERAL VIEWS REFLECT OFFICIAL\nGOM THINKING WHICH IN ONE FORM OR ANOTHER MAY SURFACE\nDURING PRESIDENT LOPEZ PORTILLO'S ANTICIPATED VISIT TO\nWASHINGTON. MOST OF THE BASIC THEMES TOUCHED UPON BY\nDE OLLOQUI WERE PREDICTABLE AND CONSISTENT WITH THOSE\nEXPRESSED BY OTHER GOM OFFICIALS OR THE PRESS.\n12. NOTEWORTHY AND INTRIGUING, HOWEVER, WAS HIS EARLY\nAND POINTED REFERENCE TO SOME FORM OF SPECIAL BOND OR\nRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND ITS TWO\nNEIGHBORS -- MEXICO AND CANADA. IT IS DIFFICULT TO\nFATHOM WHAT DE OLLOQUI HAS IN MIND. THE CANADIAN DCM\nRALPH BRANSCOMBE (PROTECT SOURCE) SUBSEQUENTLY CONFIRMED\nTHAT DE OLLOQUI HAD SURFACED THE SAME VAGUE CONCEPT OF\nA NORTH AMERICAN UNION DURING A RECENT MEETING HE\nREQUESTED WITH CANADIAN AMBASSADOR LANGLEY. THE CANADIANS,\nSURPRISED BY THE MEXICAN APPROACH, ARE BAFFLED BY WHAT KIND\nIF INTERPRETATION THEY SHOULD GIVE IT IN THEIR REPORTING\nTO OTTAWA. WE WILL BE DISCUSSING THE QUESTION WITH THEM\nFURTHER. AT THE AMBASSADOR'S JANUARY 17 RECEPTION FOR\nTHE SENIOR SEMINAR, FONSEC AMBASSADOR GONZALEZ DE LEON\nINDICATED THAT THE CONCEPT OF A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP\nBETWEEN THE US AND MEXICO/CANADA DATES BACK TO THE EARLY\n50'S AND COMMENTED THAT IF PACKAGED PROPERLY, IT COULD BE\nREVIVED AND MADE POLITICALLY ACCEPTABLE IN MEXICO.\n13. AT THIS POINT WE ARE NOT IN A POSITION TO JUDGE\nR.\nDEPALD\nFORD\nLIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nDEPARTMENT\n%\nSTATE\n*\nDepartment of State\nOF STATE AMERICA UNITED NAME\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 04\nMEXICO 00804 02 OF 02 2123342\nWHAT, IF ANYTHING, IS BEHINDDE OLLOQUI'S INITIATIVE IN\nRAISING THE IDEA OF A NORTH AMERICAN UNION. IT MAY BE,\nHOWEVER, THAT MEXICO VIEWS THIS APPROACH AS A POSSIBLE\nPOLITICAL BASIS FOR REQUESTING AND JUSTIFYING SPECIAL us\nECONOMIC TREATMENT FOR MEXICO, PARTICULARLY IN THE AREA\nOF EXPORTS. WHATEVER MAY BE BEHIND DE OLLOQUI'S REMARKS,\nTHE FACT THAT HE RAISED THE POSSIBILITY OF A SPECIAL\nRELATIONSHIP CERTAINLY INDICATES THE SHIFT IN MEXICAN\nOFFICIAL THINKING WHICH HAS OCCURRED SINCE FORMER\nPRESIDENT ECHEVERRIA LEFT OFFICE,\nTHOMPSON\nleteckvw\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9-56\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\n1977 JAN 26 PM 5: 06\nRECEIVED\nJanuary 26, 1977\nOFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nFROM: Ted Truman\nChairman Burns EMT\nAttached are the latest cables on Mexico.\nAttachment: Mexico 874\nMexico A-34\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this document is due\nto the Inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Exacutive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document.. shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component.\"\nLIBRARY GERALD R. FORD\nDEPARTMENT OF STATE\nmexico\n*\nSTATE UNITED name AMERICA\nDepartment of State\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n4962\nEMT\nSS\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 00874 251821Z\nACTION ARA-10\nINFO OCT-01 ISO-00 CIAE-00 COME-00 EB-08 INR-07 LAB-04\nNSAE-00 SIL-01 TRSE-00 OMB-01 FRB-03 AID-05 XMB-02\nPRS-01 PA-01 USIA-06 1050 W\n25\n252011Z 040394 /46\nR 251724Z JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHOC 9879\n#\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 0874\nINTERNATIONAL INFORMATION CENTER\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: ELAB, EGEN, MX\nSUBJ: JLP INAUGURATES WORKERS BANK AND HAILS LABOR/MANAGEMENT\nCOOPERATION\n1. PRESIDENT LOPEZ PORTILLO OFFICIALLY INAUGURATED THE\nWOKERS BANK (BANCO OBRERO) IN A LARGE CEREMONY HELD ON\nTHE MORNING OF JAN 21, GOM AUTHORIZATION OF THE BANK FULFILLES\nA JLP DECEMBER 1 INAUGURAL SPEECH PROMISE AND TWENTY-YEAR\nGOAL OF ORGANIZED LABOR. THE BANK WILL BE AN INSTITUTION OF\nDEPOSIT, SAVINGS AND LOAN AVAILABLE FOR USE OF ALL WORKERS\nWHETHER OR NOT ORGANIZED. CTM LEADERS CLAIM THAT INITIAL\nCAPITAL OF 100 MILLION PESOS HAS BEEN 50 TO 60 PERCENT\nSUBSCRIBED \"EXCLUSIVELY FROM MAJOR MEXICAN UNIONS\" AND THAT\nTHERE IS NO GOM OR PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION. GOM\nAUTHORIZATION INCLUDES SUPERVISION AND INSPECTION BY THE\nNATIONAL COMMISSION OF BANKING AND INSURANCE.\n2. JLP USED THE INAUGURATION AS A FORUM FOR PRESENTING A NEW\nDECREE AUTHORIZING THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE TO NEGOTIATE WITH\nINDUSTRY FOR THE PRODUCTION OF 90 BASIC COMMODITIES AT LOW PRICES\n(SEPTEL) AND FOR FAILING WHAT HE TERMED A \"SOCIAL PACT\"\nWHICH IF SUCCESSFUL WOULD \"CONTROL THE ECONOMIC\nDISORDER CTHAT EXISTS) NOT ONLY IN MEXICO.\"\nFORD is GERALD LIBRARY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n0\nFORM\nDS.1652\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nSEALS UNITED NAME AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 00874 251821Z\nAFTER PRAISING ORGANIZED LABOR FOR ITS RESPONSIBLE ROLE\nIN REFRAINING FROM DEMANDS FOR INFLATIONARY WAGE\nINCREASES, AND ITS HISTORIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE COUNTRY,\nJLP ANNOUNCED THAT \"WE NOW HAVE A FIRST AND BEAUTIFUL\n(HERMOSA) RESPONSE FROM THE PRIVATE SECTOR. COMMERICAL\nAND INDUSTRIAL ESTABLISHMENT HAVE OFFERED US A\nPOPULAR ALLIANCE FOR PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION. \"\n3. COMMENT: WHILE JLP SPOKE EFFUSIVELY OF THE POPULAR\nALLIANCE AND THE \"SOCIAL PACT\" AS IF BOTH LABOR AND THE\nPRIVATE SECTOR HAD MADE MAJOR NEW COMMITMENTS, (IN\nDECEMBER THE GOM NEGOTIATED TEN INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS WITH\nTHE PRIVATE SECTOR AND LABOR CONSENTED TO ONLY 9-10\nPERCENT NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE INCREASES, BOTH OF WHICH\nFELL UNDER THE \"POPULAR ALLIANCE\" RUBRIC), THERE IS NOTHING\nTANGIBLE YET. WE BELIEVE JOP WAS SIMPLY JAWBONING ON THIS OCCASION,\nHOPING TO KEEP ALIVE A FRAGILE SPIRIT OF COOPERATION WHICH BOTH\nLABOR AND MANAGEMENT HAVE SHOWN, A PROBLEM IS THAT LABOR'S\nFOREBEARANCE ON WAGES IS MORE VISIBLE AND DEMONSTRABLE\nTHAN IS MANAGEMENT SUCCESS AT CONTROLLING PRICES -- HENCE\nTHE FANFARE SURROUNDING THE WORKERS BANK (TO WHICH GOM\nAPPARENTLY IS MAKING NO FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTION) THE\nPRESIDENTIAL PRAISE OF LABOR'S BEHAVIOR, AND JLP'S ATTEMPTS\nTO SHOW THAT MANAGEMENT TOO IS ACTING RESPONSIBLY.\nJOVA\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nFORM\nDS.1652\nDEPT. DISTRIBUTION\nCORIGIN/ACTION\nPARTMENT OF STATE\nmexico\nEB\nAIRGRAM\n770008-1900\nRS/R\nREP\nAF\nARA\nr\nOriginal to be Filed in\nDecentralized Files.\nFILE DESIGNATION\nEUR\nFE\nNEA\nCU\nceym\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n/ A-34\nINR\nE\nP\n10\nHANDLING INDICATOR\nTO SP.\nFADRC/DA/WC\nL\nUS DEPT. OF STATE, WASHDC\nEMT\nFBO\nAID\nS/IL\nUS DEPT. OF COMMERCE, WASHDC\nSS 20 :Z Wd E- NVC LL\nINFO:\nAMEMBASSY, MEXICO\nAMCONSUL, GUADALAJARA\nDEPARTMENT OF STATE\nPLEASE\nTO\nCENTER\nAGR\nCOM\nFRB\nINT\nFROM\nAMCONSUL, MONTERREY\nDATE: December 21, 1976\nE.0.11652:\nNA\nLAB\nTAR\nTR\nXMB\nTAGS:\nECON, PINT, MX\nSUBJECT :\nBUSINESSMEN'S ROUNDTABLE REPORT, DECEMBER, 1976\nAIR\nARMY\nNAVY\nOSD\nREF\n:\nMONTERREY'S A-31 OF NOVEMBER 12, 1976\nUSIA\nNSA\nCIA\nEB\nSUMMARY\n03 OHWY 61 NAME\nSUGGESTED DISTRIBUTION\nThe first two weeks of the López Portillo adminis-\ntration received a high rating from the nine local\nexecutives who participated in the latest in a series\nof Businessmen's Roundtable discussions, held at the\nMonterrey Consulate General on December 16. Govern-\nment agricultural policies, removal of tax incentives\nfor exports, and the Government's record of payment\nwere, however, of concern. Most executives saw 1977\nPOST ROUTING\nas being an austere year, with sharply higher costs\nTO:\nAction\nInfo.\nfor labor and raw materials, a mixed sales picture,\nInitials\nAMB!\nprice controls, and dangers of severe inflation\nPO\nidentified as their major worries. Prospects for\nDCM\nretailers and producers of consumer goods were,\nPOL\nnevertheless, reported as generally bright. The Round-\nECON\ntable participants criticized the recent general 28%\nCONS\nwage increase, hoped for moderation in the minimum\nADM\nwage revisions, recommended a strong role for company\nexecutives in labor relations, and offered examples\nAID\nof the infiltration of their workforces by outsiders.\nUSIS\nConsul General Lambert began this month's Roundtable\nby offering an overview of US/Mexican relations during\nthe Carter/López Portillo Presidencies. Each of the\nbusinessmen then made his presentation in turn.\nFILE\nAction Taken:\nBERALD FORD LIBRARY\nDate:\nFORM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nFor Department Use Only\nInitials:\n10-64\nDrafted by:\nRWY\nDS-323\n17\nIn\nOut\nDrafting Date:\nPhone No.:\nContents and Classification Approved by:\nECON/COMM:THCarter/RLGlass:mlg\n12/20/76\nAPO/DCasteel\nClearances:\nPage 2 of 8\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nREACTION TO LOPEZ PORTILLO\nMonterrey Roundtable participants were generally optimistic about\nPresident José López Portillo, basing their hopes on his inau-\ngural address and his cabinet-level appointments. The senior\nexecutive of a firm which manufactures cranes said that he was\nimpressed by the \"sincerity and directness\" of the inaugural\nspeech and was gratified by its lack of \"rhetoric\". A steel\npipe manufacturer said that he admired the \"simplicity\" of the\nspeech and believed that the President wrote most of the text\nhimself. He predicted that López Portillo would not move sharply\nto the right but would at least stick closer to the center. He\nwas also encouraged by reports that López Portillo had privately\nconsulted with former Presidents Díaz Ordaz and Alemán just prior\nto the inauguration.\nThe cabinet nominations were generally well received. The crane\nmanufacturer said that all but one of the appointments were\n\"worthy of confidence\". However, the appointment of Muñoz Ledo\nas Secretary of Education puzzled him since he feared the impact\nof this \"leftist\" on Mexican youth. The steel pipe manufacturer\ninterjected that moving Muñoz Ledo out of the Presidency of the\nPartido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) tended to \"freeze him\nout of power\", especially since his two strong undersecretaries\nin the Education Secretariat would exert a restraining influence.\nMoreover, the appointment of Muñoz Ledo was a political necessity\nto placate Mexican leftists. This appointment may also help\nmaintain peace among Mexican leftists and, if not, give López\nPortillo a fine excuse to dismiss Muñoz Ledo.\nOne large and important unknown is López Portillo's approach\nto wage policy. Roundtable participants are anxiously awaiting\nthe Government of Mexico's January, 1977, minimum wage revision.\nThere was a general concurrence that 1976 wage settlements had\noutstripped price inflation. An automobile parts manufacturer\nsaid that he expected an eight to twelve percent minimum wage\nhike in January and felt that anything over ten percent would be\ninflationary and could lead to a further devaluation. A ceramics\nmanufacturer opined that if López Portillo does not hold the\nwage increase to under twelve percent, his factory will be\nseriously hurt. A manufacturer of stainless steel tubing volunteered\nthat this would be a \"good time for the GOM to squelch wage in-\nflation\" through a merely symbolic wage hike, certainly not more\nthan eight to ten percent. The manufacturer of steel pipe said\nthat he had understood that the GOM and the International Monetary\nFund had agreed to a post-devaluation wage hike of only 15%,\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPage 3 of 8\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nDecember 21, 1976\nwhich was violated by the Government's 23% wage settlement.\nHe had also heard rumors that the GOM would soon start a policy\nof paying salary increases in bonds to minimize their infla-\ntionary impact. Press reports of a 38% increase in the 1977\nFederal Budget also inspired several observations. The steel\npipe manufacturer noted that the budgetary discipline was so lax\nin the previous administration that Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX)\nexceeded its budget ceiling midway through the year. He was\nconfident that López Portillo will \"enforce the budget\". A\nmanufacturer of ceramics feared a big increase in GOM spending\nand hoped that López Portillo would \"impose budget discipline\".\nThe steel pipe manufacturer was optimistic about agreements being\nformulated between the Government of Mexico and the country's\nprivate sector. The agreements, he said, will include provisions\nto stop the Government from duplicating the efforts of the\nprivate sector. He has also heard that chambers of commerce are\npressuring the new President to drop the retail sales of CONASUPO,\nthe public sector purchaser and distributor of certain basic\nfoodstuffs.\nThe new Administration's policy on agriculture was of acute concern\nto the executive from an edible oils firm. Expropriations and\nland invasions by squatters are threatening Mexico's bread basket\nand will force the GOM to import large and costly quantities of\nfoodstuffs. Besides the loss of production during the current\ncrop year, the executive also expressed longer term fears that\nthe land's productivity will be permanently damaged. Although\n1977 will be a poor year for agriculture, he nevertheless is\ngenerally optimistic about the López Portillo administration over\nthe longer run. The Government is an unreliable customer according\nto the pipe manufacturer, whose company faced massive order cuts\nwhen PEMEX exceeded its budget ceiling in July, 1976. A pump\nmanufacturer added that his firm had also faced sudden order\ncancellations from PEMEX. He was also upset when the GOM's\nSecretariat of Water Resources suddenly cancelled a sizable\npump order so that it could divert the funds to one of President\nEcheverría's pet projects. One participant added that an order\nfor two hundred taxis by Fomento Metropolitano (FOMET) in Mon-\nterrey was cancelled after the distributor had purchased the\nvehicles. According to him, the increased criticism of Nuevo\nLeón Governor Zorrilla Martínez by the newspaper El Diario is\ndue at least in part to this action, since the same organization\ncontrols both the automobile distributorship involved and the\nnewspaper.\nA lamp manufacturer who recently arrived in Mexico had the most\npessimistic view of the country's future. His pessimism was\nFORD & LIBRARY GERALD\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPage 4 of 8\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nDecember 21, 1976\nbased mainly on the cancellation of export subsidies, GOM\npatent infringements and the new Patent and Trademark Law,\nand the requirements for greater Mexican content in manufac-\ntures. He conceded that Mexico's wage rates are generally\nlow enough to permit exporting, but he feared that such restric-\ntions and \"harassment\" would discourage export activity.\nBUSINESS CONDITIONS\nAlthough there was some bright spots, the general business out-\nlook for 1977 was described as being somewhat pessimistic, with\ncash flow problems, the inability to \"pass through\" higher\nmaterials and wage costs because of Mexican Government price\ncontrols and competitive market conditions, and financial and\nwage uncertainties contributing to the pessimism. Several\ncompany representatives stated that their firms were in for a\nyear of belt-tightening and austerity. Over the longer term there\nwas considerable optimism. Many participants admitted that the\npeso devaluations and resultant wage and supplies increases\nhave had a negative effect on their prospects for 1977.\nWhile the crane manufacturing company has enough of a backlog\nto keep the plant operating throughout 1977, most of the firm's\norders were received before September 1. The company had quoted\nfixed prices for these contracts and consequently has been hard\nhit by escalating costs. The executive admitted that the company's\naccounts payable had lengthened and that henceforth the firm\nwould quote primarily on a \"cost at time of delivery\" basis.\nThe manufacturer of steel pipe stated that his firm is now paying\n54% more for the steel used in the majority of his firm's opera-\ntions. A manufacturer of ceramic tile now faces significantly\nhigher prices for the raw materials it must import from the\nUnited States. The manager of the firm making lightbulbs bemoaned\nthe sharply higher prices the firm has been required to pay for\nits imports of tungsten wire.\nThe manager of a company making automobile parts noted a sharpening\ndichotomy in his 1977 sales picture, The 30-40% of his business\nrepresented by sales of original equipment to automobile assemblers\nhas suffered greatly because of the virtual stagnation in sales\nof 1977 model cars. Car prices have increased more than 50% for\nthe 1977 models. Chevrolet Novas rose from some eighty thousand\nto one hundred and thirty thousand pesos, for example, and Ford\nLTDs rose from one hundred and forty thousand to over a quarter\nof a million pesos in price. The clampdown on the availability\nof credit has also hurt his business. According to him, automobile\nproduction has been drastically reduced, and several automakers\nare unwilling to fix future production schedules. In contrast,\nPage 5 of 8\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nDecember 21, 1976\nthe replacement parts component of the firm's business is\nexperiencing higher sales, primarily because more and more\ncarowners are having their existing vehicles repaired. For\nthe autoparts firm, the added demand for its replacement part\nbusiness has cushioned somewhat the adverse effects of the\ndevaluations.\nBesides the improved market prospects for automobile replacementt\nparts, the tile company executive reports that his business is\ncurrently \"booming\" and that his plant is running at 100% of\nproduction capacity to meet current demand and reduce a three\nmonth backlog. The executive is guardedly optimistic, citing\nreports that the Carter Administration will cause a \"building\nboom\" in the United States, the firm's principal export market.\nThe executive stated that nearly forty percent of the firm's\noutput is currently being exported, a factor which has in part\ncompensated for rising costs for imported raw materials. To\nmaintain these exports, the executive admitted that his firm\nhas been offering an eight percent discount for its exports\n(quoted in dollar terms) to the US. The executive criticized\nthe GOM's removal of tax incentives to export, stating that, for\nhis firm to remain competitive, the incentives would have to\nbe reinstated or the peso would have to depreciate further vis\na vis the dollar.\nSeveral participants reported the markedly better sales and\nprofit picture in the retail sector of the Mexican economy.\nWhile formerly heavy purchases of consumer goods and foodstuffs\nby Mexicans in the United States have dropped significantly,\ndomestic wage hikes and more recently the sizable Christmas\nbonuses paid to workers have stimulated domestic sales. A\ncutlery manufacturing firm's executive admits that his sales\n(in terms of number of pieces) have risen 15% in the past six\nmonths. Again, the total picture for the firm is mixed, however,\nsince the same company also manufactures industrial springs.\nThe company's sales of springs to autoparts manufacturers have\nfallen sharply. In contrast, sales of springs to producers of\nconsumer goods have remained good. Another participant mentioned\nthat there now existed waiting lines for popular consumer\ndurables such as washing machines. A third businessman commented\nthat, with rapidly rising wages at the lower income levels,\nthere was occurring a marked shift in income distribution from\nthe middle class and toward the working class.\nFrom the businessmen's comments, it was clear that no consensus\nexisted as to when the Government of Mexico might reinstitute a\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPage 6 of 8\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nfixed parity for the peso and, if so, its rate of exchange.\nOne businessman predicted that the current rate of some twenty\npesos per dollar would persist for several months. Another\ndescribed the current situation as a \"manipulated float\" and\nsaw a return to a fixed parity within four to six months. On\nthe other hand, the cutlery and spring manufacturer is estimating\nthat the peso will fall to the thirty to one level by yearend\n1977. Most of the executives believed that the soon to be\nannounced minimum wage levels for 1977 would be a good barometer\nfor the movement of the peso.\nLABOR RELATIONS\nGeneral criticism of the 23% wage hike \"recommended\" last Sep-\ntember, hope that the minimum wage increases to be announced for\nJanuary would be moderate, and concern over workforce infiltration\nwere the main themes discussed by the Roundtable participants.\nThere was widespread agreement that the 23% wage increase decreed\nin September was excessive and unjustified. The manager of a\ncompany producing cranes for the steel industry stated that his\nworkforce had received a 17% wage boost in July, 1976, and opined\nthat a six to eight percent increase in September would have fully\ncompensated for the increase in the cost of living between July\nand late September. The 23% increase came at a particularly bad\ntime, in his view, especially since companies now have to use a\nmuch higher base in computing the Christmas bonuses of workers.\nThe chief executive of a company producing food products stated\nthat his workforce had received an 18% wage increase in August,\n1976, but nevertheless received the full 23% less than a month\nlater. In the case of the company producing ceramic tile, salary\nrevision negotiations were in progress when the 23% decree was\nannounced. A late September agreement to raise wages by 30%\nincluded the 23% recommendation. Besides being critical of the\n23% wage increase, the manager of the pump producing company also\ncriticized the recent shift from biennial to annual salary revi-\nsion negotiations.\nThe food processing executive raised the point that too often\nplant managers and executives shunned involvement in labor contact\nnegotiations and instead relied on labor relations lawyers. He\nwas critical of this practice, opining that lawyers tend to\nfollow the \"path of least resistance\" in many cases and generally\nhad less incentive than plant managers to reach a settlement\nfavorable to the company. The executive from the pipemaking\ncompany agreed, stating that many outside lawyers would accept\na \"bad settlement rather than a good fight.\" He offered the\nexample of Fundidora Monterrey which, according to him, has for\nmore than twenty years not given adequate management attention\nto contract revision negotiations. He fears that, for the Fundi-\ndora, the process ma' e irreversible.\nPage 7 of 8\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nDecember 21, 1976\nVarious Roundtable participants related their experiences\nregarding actual or attempted infiltration of their work-\nforces by outside agitators. The manager of a company making\npumps stated that a strike by his \"white\" (independent) union\nagainst the company in March, 1976, was political rather\nthan economic in nature and was instigated by outsiders from\nthe Frente Auténtico de Trabajadores and the Mexican Communist\nParty. He was particularly critical of interference by radical\nmembers of Section 68 of the Miners' Union, the most politically-\nactive of the unions representing workers at Fundidora Monterrey.\nThese groups also sought to intertwine the cause of the strikers\nwith those of posesionarios and students, organizing several\njoint demonstrations to pressure the pumpmaking company. Accord-\ning to the executive, the state labor conciliation board sup-\nported his efforts to settle the strike and combat the infiltra-\ntion. After settlement of the two week strike, the company\nfired twenty of its two hundred forty workforce which it had\nidentified as troublemakers, including several employees that\nhad been with the company for more than ten years. Despite the\nreduced workforce, plant productivity subsequently rose because\nof the better work environment.\nThe executive of a company producing stainless steel products\nreported a similar experience. He stated that his union, affil-\niated with the Confederación de Trabajadores Mexicanos (CTM),\nwas helpful in isolating and removing the troublemakers by\ndenying them membership in the union, which was a prerequisite\nto employment with the company. The executive of the company\nproducing lamps stated that his labor situation (with a CTM-\naffiliated union) was generally good but that he was also con-\nsidering the dismissal of a small group of identified trouble-\nmakers.\nA number of participants stated that their companies had laid\noff some portion of their workforces in recent months. The\npipemaking company executive offered the most dramatic story,\nreporting that his workforce had dropped from 1500 to 800 since\nmidyear, primarily because of sharply reduced orders (and a few\ncancelled contracts). The executive noted that his business\nwas classified in the \"construction\" field, thus permitting\nthe relatively easy hiring and firing of eventuales, or temporary\nworkers. The majority of those laid off by the firm were in\nthis category. Since there was no requirement to pay severance\n8\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nFORD a LIBRARY 828410\nTIMILED OLLICIET nee\nPage 8 of 8\nA-34 from MONTERREY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nDecember 21, 1976\nLedayremeur\nbgl\nMOLKELS pl MOLE IN\nbenefits when eyentuales are dismissed, the company was able\nto reduce its workforce without major cost or legal challenges\nby its workers through the state labor arbitration panel. The\nexecutive noted that most of the plant's workers that were\ndismissed were able (with company assistance) to find employ-\nment elsewhere.\nBOWG of IN\nV\nweyers'\ncue 9 SW9JT dronb of\nAge doog prif\nbrognorud\nCIN-\nDO embjoyment CASTEEL\ngoulted cyew IN S\nMS8 perbin] TU твотестий sug скопрувшукога pl\nMICP FUG ge WEXTCOUOB (CIN)\nreborreq S H6 WEETT-\n01 9 combany Бтодлотод brognofa\nof FUG perfer MOLK\nrequest MOLKIOLCS bygus pecurae\nusq peeu MICU cue comboul IOL WOLG few AGGIS!\n98 embjoyees FUST\nEMGUIA of IfB CMD progreg gorfl MOLKIOICS митор IF usq\nFTOU yore. of cue FMO Meek BFITKG' cue comber}\nboffeg UTS CO FUG eug comper spo THETTERS-\nTud CO cue EXECUDING are afgre Jupor CONCITION posto anb-\nJOTUF CO biessnie FUG bmubwsyrud combsum yocotg-\narry cpoBo of borseronsiros guq OLAGNISING BGAGIST\nLugas dronba vjao sondur to FUG сялае of FUG affirers\nSCFTAG of cue nutous tebreseurrud MoKKeΓa SC\nшешрете of 28 of FHS WINGIS, AUTOU' cpe word\nHe M98 CRIFICS] OF pl 1991991\nfye EXCUCS ge sug FUG WEXICON COMMUTER\nFUSU GCOVOLSTC TU sug Mge ph oncergere ELOW\nadgives FUG combeny TU W9LCU Jase' M92\nbrube accept fuge S EFIIKG pl UTS \"MPITE\" (Tugebenqeuc)\ngorces pl oncerge LUG wyugder of S combonA\nredurgtud усслет or accombreg of FUGIL MOIK-\nASTIONE колиссерте rejereg exberreuces\nDecemper ST' Jase\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nV-34 WOMLEBEX\n3 8\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS\nOF THE\nFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM\n1977 JAN 31 PM 4: 46\nRECEIVED\nJanuary 31, 1977\nOFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN\nTO:\nFROM: Ted Truman\nChairman Burns EMT\nAttached is the latest cable from Mexico.\nAttachment: Mexico 1018\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense classification of this decument is due\nto the inclusion of 01 Covernment information\nofficially classiting main Executive Order 10501\nwhich provides that 3 document shall bear a\nclassification at tratt 88 high as that of its\nhighest classified combonant.\"\nFORD is GERALO LIBRARY\nBRANTMENT OF STATE\n*\nDepartment of State\nOF SEALS UNITED MARK AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n0144\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 01018 280032Z\nACTION ARA-10\nTNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP=02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05\nCIEP-01 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00\nFRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01\nPA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 W\n2808257 077315 /17\nR 2723327 JAN 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9952\nTNFO TRSY WASHDC\nALI US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH\nInternational Please Information Center\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO 1018\nE.O. 11652: N/A\nTAGS: EGEN MX\nSUBJ: PROGRAM TO PROVIDE 90 BASIC PRODUCTS AT LOW PRICES\nREF: (A) 76 MEXICO 15646, (B) 75 MEXICO 15754;\n(C) MEXICO 0874\n1. SUMMARY: ON JANUARY 21, LOPEZ-PORTILLO SIGNED DECREE\nAUTHORIZING SECRETARY OF COMMERCE TO SIGN AGREEMENTS WITH\nVARIOUS INDUSTRIES TO PROVIDE 90 BASIC CONSUMPTION ARTICLES\nAT LOW PRICES. PRESIDENT'S COMMENTS AT SIGNINF IMPLIED\nTHTS WOULD BE A SACRIFICE BY INDUSTRY TO COMPENSATE FOR\nRESTRAINT IN WAGE DEMANDS. MEASURE LABELED AS A MEANS\nTO REDUCE PRICES. END SUMMARY.\n2. THE LOPEZ-PORTILLO ADMINISTRATION IS NOW MOVING TO\nGET INDUSTRY TO SIGN AGREEMENTS BY WHICH THEY WILL\nPROVIDE 90 BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS AT FIXED PRICES, AT\nBOTH WHOLESALE AND RETAIL LEVELS. PRICE OF GOODS TO\nRE BASED ON DIRECT AND INDIRECT COSTS AND A \"REASONABLE\"\nPROFIT TO BE DETERMINED BY NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN\nFORD & GERALD LIBRARY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n3\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nDEPARTMENT OF STATE\nDepartment of State\nSTATES UNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01018 2800322\nINDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT.\n3. THE PRODUCTS COVER SOME PREPARED FOODSTUFFS, SCHOOL\nSUPPLIES, HYGIENIC SUPPLIES,\nHOUSEHOLD GOODS AND CLOTHING. THE PRODUCTS RANGE\nFROM TOILET PAPER TO BICYLES TO PLASTIC SANDALS.\n4. THERE WILL BE NO FISCAL INCENTIVES TO PRODUCE THESE\nTTEMS, BUT NECESSARY IMPORT PERMITS WILL BE GRANTED\nAND THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE CAN \"RECOMMEND\" TO OTHER\nGOM AGENCIES THAT CERTAIN OTHER FACILITIES SUCH AS\nFINANCING BE MADE AVAILABLE. THE GOODS WILL BE\nDISTRIBUTED THROUGH EXISTING RETAIL OUTLETS. SECRETARY\nOF COMMERNCE SOLAND SAID THAT THE LARGE RETAIL CHAINS\nHAD AGREED TO HANDLE THESE ITEMS AT LOWER PROFIT MARGIN.\nSMALL RETAILERS WILL BE ABLE TO BUY THE ITEMS AT A\nDISCOUNT.\n5. SINCE THE PRODUCTS WILL BE SOLD THROUGH EXISTING\nRETAIL OUTLETS, ANYBODY WILL BE ABLE TO PURCHASE THE\nTTEMS, THOUGH THE PROGRAM IS AIMED LARGELY AT THE\nURBAN WORKER. THE GOM HOPES TO HAVE AT LEAST\nSOME OF THE ARTICLES ON STORE SHELVES WITHIN 90 DAYS.\n6. THIS AGREEMENT WITH PRIVATE INDUSTRY SUPPLEMENTS\nTHE TEN AGREEMENTS SIGNED IN MID-DECEMBER. AT THAT\nTIME. THERE WAS REFERENCE TO AN ELEVENTH AGREEMENT\nON BASIC CONSUMER GOODS, BUT IT WAS NOT SIGNED\nAPPARENTLY BECAUSE OF THE LARGE NUMBER OF INDUSTRIES\nINVOLVED. NEGOTIATIONS WITH VARIOUS INDUSTRIES\nWERE BEGUN BY THE LOPEZ-PORTILLO TEAM LAST SUMMER.\nAGREEMENT HAD BEEN REACHED ON 20 OR SO PRODUCTS PRIOR\nTO THE DEVALUATION. THE NEGOTIATIONS ARE NOW GOING\nON BETWEEN INDUSTRY ASSOCIATIONS AND THE GOVERNMENT.\n7. WHILE THE GOVERNMENT DOES NOT EXPECT INDUSTRY TO\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n3)\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nTRANTMENT OF STATE\nOF STATE UNITED AMERICA\nDepartment of State TELEGRAM\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 01018 280032Z\nPRODUCE THESE BASIC GOODS AT A LOSS, IT EXPECTS\nINDUSTRY TO MAKE MINIMAL PROFITS. IN EXCHANGE THE\nGOVERNMENT WILL PROBABLY INCREASE PRICE CEILINGS FOR\nHIGHER PRICED GOODS.\n8. IT IS NOT CLEAR TO US HOW THIS MEASURE WILL REDUCE\nPRICES, OR HOW FLEXIBLE GOVERNMENT WILL BE IN LETTING\nPRICES CHANGE FOR THE 90 BASIC PRODUCTS ONCE THEY HIT\nTHE MARKET. THUS FAR, WE HAVE NOT HEARD ANY MAJOR\nCOMPLAINTS FROM BUSINESSMEN, IN PART BECAUSE SEVERAL\nTO WHOM WE HAVE SPOKEN SAY THE DISCUSSIONS ARE STILL\nPRELIMINARY. ON BUSINESSMAN NOTED THAT USING COMMERICAL\nRETAIL CHAINS AND KNOWN PRODUCT NAMES IS BETTER THAN\nBEING FORCED TO PRODUCE SPECIAL BRANDS FO RESALE\nTHROUGH THE GOM-OWNED CONASUPO RETAIL STORES.\n9. GOM OBVIOUSLY IS ANXIOUS TO CASH IN ON ITS IMPLIED\nPROMISE TO LOWERPRICES. GOM OFFICIAL TOLD US THAT\nTHE SEVEN MAJOR RETAIL CHAINS IN MEXICO WILL OFFER\n35 ARTICLES AT SPECIAL PRICES BEGINNING JANUARY 31.\nTOVA\nFORD & LIBRARY GARALO\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n6\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9,66\n10\n[c. 2-77?]\nRESTRICTED\nRESTRICTED\nHANDLE THE ATTACHED DOCUMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH INTERNAL\nINFORMATION SECURITY PROCEDURES FOR RESTRICTED INFORMATION\nFORD i GERALD LIBRARY\nRESTRICTED\nTAGS:\nEGEN, EFIN, MX\nRESTRICTED\nSUBJECT: CURRENT ECONOMIC SITUATION\nACTION: SECSTATE WASHDC\nINFO:\nTREASURY\n1. SUMMARY. Economic activity in Mexcio has slowed\ndown, with output running slightly below mid-76\nlevels. GOM appears to be concentrating its. energies\non replacing the outgoing bureaucracy and effecting\n\" an administrative reform program. While JLP has publicly\nstated that 1977 will be an economically difficult year\nand that Mexico needs a new development strategy, there\nhas not been much discernable progress in developing\neither a short-term or long-term economic strategy.\nPrivate sector seems to be adopting a wait and see atti-\ntude before undertaking new investments. END SUMMARY.\n2. The rate of growth of industrial activity began to\nslow in mid-1976 in response to the Bank of Mexico's\ntight credit policies. The industrial production index\npeaked in June, and has run at lower levels through\nOctober, the latest date for which it is available. The\nOctober index is 140.7 below levels prevailing in this\nmonth in two previous years. Partial data for November\nis mixed with some industries showing increases in unit\nsales.\nRESTRICTED\nLIBRARY GERALD ? FORD\nRESTRICTED\n2\n3. Mexico's gross domestic output is estimated to have\ngrown about 3% in real terms from 1975 to 1976. Most of\nthis growth would have been in the first half of the year\nwith total output more or less holding steady in the\nsecond half. The price deflator is estimated to have been\nabout 20%. The preliminary Bank of Mexico data on\nnational accounts will be available by end-February.\n4. Actual price data is now available for the year 1976.\nThe year to year increase in the CPI was 15.8%. The\nDecember to December 1976 increase was 27.2%. The increase\nin the WPI was more marked, 22.3% on a year to year basis\nand 45.9% from December to December. This reason for\nthis is that the WPI is heavily influenced by raw\nmaterial prices, most of which trade at or close to world\nprices.\n5. Lopez Portillo has publicly stated that the first six\nmonths of 1977 will be particularly difficult and that\nMexico must find a new development strategy. While he\nadmits that economic problems are the most pressing,\nthere is no public evidence that the government has a\ncoherent short-term economic strategy. GOM policy makers\nare working on various policy options, but have not yet come\nto any conclusions as far as we know. JLP's first two\npriorities appear to have been a restoration of confidence,\nlargely through words, and administrative reform. The\nlatter has meant\nthat in addition to filling positions\nFORD i LIBRARY GERALD\nRESTRICTED\n3\nto a fairly low level in the bureaucracy, new lines of\ncommand are being drawn with resultant confusion over\nresponsibilities, information flow, etc. Administration\nis reportedly JLP's strong point and first love judging. from\nthe priority he has given to administrative reform. The\nmajor loser in this reform at least with respect to control\noyer spending and trade policy appears to have been JLP's\nstepping stone to the Presidency, the Finance Ministry.\nThe biggest gainers would appear to be the new Budget and\nPlanning Ministry (ex-Presidency) and the Patrimony and\nIndustrial Development Ministry. The significance of adminis-\ntrative reform in the context of this message is the impact\nit might have on the economic policy-making process and on\nthe level of government expenditure.\n6. The economic policy-making process in the new government\nis not yet clearly defined. At the present time the Minister\nfor Budget and Planning, Carlos Tello, appears to be the\npreeminent, though not necessarily dominant advisor to the\nPresident. Tello's economic philosophy appears to favor\nacting against inflation on the supply side. Opposed to him\nare the financial officials from Hacienda and Banco de Mexico\nwho want to reduce inflation by cutting back demand. Key\npresidential advisor Rafael Izquierdo is said to be somewhere\nbetween these two schools of thought. The President seems\nto lean to the former school of thought perhaps because he\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nRESTRICTED\n4\nfears the political consequences that a cutback in per capita\nconsumption and employment might have. Even as Finance\nMinister at the time of the U.S. recession, JLP told the\nAmbassador that Mexico could not afford a recession because\nof the lack of social welfare programs to take care of\nthe unemployed, a theme he continues to repeat.\n7. The JLP administration's first internal policy debate\nis likely to focus on the budget. There is pressure on him\nfrom the Bank of Mexico and Hacienda to reduce expenditures\nas well as to increase revenues, particularly by higher\npublic sector prices. It is possible that the delays caused\nby the administrative reform will impact on the level of\nexpenditures. Whether this will result in permanent savings\nor merely a brief delay in making expenditures is unknown.\nThe outcome of this debate will be the key in determining\neconomic developments later in the year.\nFORD & LIBRARY\n8. Apart from the question of public sector spending,\nthe GOM is faced with the problem of financing a current\naccount deficit which is being forecast at anywhere from\n$1.8 billion to $2.6 billion. In addition to this, the\npublic sector's short-term debt of $4.2 billion has to\nbe rolled over and public sector long-term debt\namortization payments of $1.7 billion have to be refinanced.\nRESTRICTED\n5\n9. Mexico's financial problem is twofold and inter-\nrelated. That is, the GOM not only has to finance a\nsubstantial budget, the size of which will impact on the\nexternal accounts, but it also has to arrange, one way\nor another, for substantial, foreign borrowing.\n10. While senior GOM officials often state that Mexico\ncannot afford a recession, the economy is in a recession\naccording to the informal Mexican definition, i.e., a\nnegative per capita growth rate. Industrial activity may\nbe lower now than it was in last October. This judgment\nis based on the following factors. (1) The industrial\nwork force is probably lower now than last summer. Various\nbusinessmen have told us that they are laying off workers.\n(2) Public sector spending is probably down due to the\nreorganization of the entire public sector. We hear reports\nof major spending decisions being postponed. Public sector\nspending has been the underpinning of Mexico's economic\ngrowth since 1972. (3) Private investment was undoubtedly\naffected negatively by the events of last fall. The lack\nof ability to forecast economic developments with any\ncertainty is affecting investment decisions.\nMany private\nbusinessmen say they are waiting to see specific economic\nmeasures rather than base investment decisions on moral\nsuasion. (4) Foreign exchange transactions are reporting\ndeclining. This may indicate a continued decline in imports\nFORD i LIBRARY GERALD\nRESTRICTED\n6\nthat began last September! (5) Peso and dollar financing\nis not available to Mexico's private sector, nor has it been\nfor some months. The impact of these, plus the delayed\nimpact of the devaluation may be hitting domestic economic\nactivity, particularly in the private sector, harder than\nis generally known.\n11. The picture in the agriculture sector is more difficult\nto discern. Output of some crops may be up whereas output\nof other crops may be down. It is not possible to measure\nthe impact of the land seizures in northwest Mexico, but\nthese were certainly not conducive to increased private\nsector investment in agriculture and may have a negative\nimpact on output in that region.\n12. Our judgments in the preceeding two paragraphs are\nextremely qualitative because of the Lack of current data\non which to base an analysis. However, we think the\nindirect signs of further economic slowdown are significant\nenough to report.\nGERALD FORD LIBRARY\nRESTRICTED\n7\n13. The GOM is undoubtedly aware of these signs and the\nprospect of continued stagnation or even further declines\nin economic activity may be one of the reasons JLP could\nopt for a relatively high level of public sector spending\neven though this means more foreign financing than would\notherwise be necessary.\n14. The current economic slowdown is a mixed blessing.\nIt should lead to a reduction in the current account\ndeficit and, if there are actual budget savings, make\nattainment of EFF program targets somewhat more likely.\nOn the other hand, JLP is unlikely to be satisfied with a\ngrowth rate of zero to two percent because of what he views\nas the political risks from reduced employment and per capita\nconsumption.\n15. Although a significant turnaround in economic activity\ncould hardly have been expected within two months of taking\noffice, we believe the suspected deterioration in the economic\nsituation could have been mitigated by more positive action\nby the new government. In particular, while JLP has stated\nthat this will be a difficult period, neither he nor other\nGOM spokesmen have laid out in any detail what the Mexican\nbusiness community and public might expect in 1977. This has\nnever been done in Mexico, but it is important in the present\ncontext because the economic policy framework that predominated\nfor over twenty years disappeared with the devaluation.\nBERALD FORD LIBRARY\nRESTRICTED\n8\n16. Some areas where coherent policies have not yet been\ndeveloped are the following:\nA) Exchange rate policy (Fluctuations in\nrates generally attributed to changes in\nsupply and demand. GOM has not said\npublicly that exchange rate might also\nbe determined by such objectives as\nreducing the current account deficit and\nmaking manufactured exports competitive\nin world markets.)\nB) Interest rate policy. (Higher interest\nrates on peso deposits will be necessary\nto retain existing peso financial savings\nand attract more pesos into banking system.)\nC) Fiscal policy. (Ideally, some target\nfigure for budget cuts could be announced\nalong with a revenue increase target. The\ndetails need not be made public at this time.\nThe intention to pursue a less inflationary\npolicy would be reassuring to foreign\nbankers and to local businessmen who want\nfinancial stability.)\nD)\nWage Guidance.\nR.\nDERALD\nFORD\n9\nRESTRICTED\n17. While JLP has prepared the country for bad economic\nnews, he has not provided any details. The economic\nsituation is confused and the economic climate is radically\ndifferent from what it was even a year ago. Confusion\ncomplicates planning and investment. It also delays the\nnecessary structural changes in the economy. The public\ndoes not understand GOM objectives. Without guidance,\nstagnation is likely to last longer than would otherwise\nbe necessary. Further, the foreign banking community is\nunlikely to be as supportive as it could in the light of\nthis uncertainty.\nGERALD R. FORD\nFebruary 4, 1977\nTO:\nFROM: Ted Truman\nChairman Burns EMT\nAttached is the latest cable from Mexico.\nAttachment: Mexico 1104\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense c'assification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Executive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document... shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component.\"\n≤\nGERALO R. FORD THERE\nEMT\nOF\nSTATE\n#\n*\nDepartment of State\nUNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nCONFIDENTIAL 7979\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 01104 0122497\nACTION ARA-10\nTNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC-05\nCIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00\nCOME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04\nSIL-01 AGRE-00 PA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 W\n0202127 012820 /63\nR 9901257 JAN 77 29\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 9991\nTNFO AMCONSUL MONTERREY POUCH\nA\nC\nn\nN\nE\n2\nI\n7\nMEXICO 1104\nPlease return to\ndal 7/25/07\nInternational Information Center\nFO 11652: GDS\nTAGS: EFIN\nSUBJECT: NEED TO ASSURE POTENTIAL INVESTORS\n4. MEXICAN BUSTNESS/BANKING COMMUNITY HOSTED LUNCH\nTANUARY 27 FOR BANK OF AMERICA SENIOR VP VAN LEARDEN,\nWHO REPORTEDLY PUT TOGETHER LAST FALL'S $800 MILLION LOAN\nFOR MEXICO. AMBASSADOR WAS PRESENT. VAN LEARDEN TOLD GROUP\nHE THOUGHT MEXICO WOULD GET THROUGH 1977 WITHOUT SERIOUS\nPROBLEMS, BUT THAT HE WAS CONCERNED ABOUT 1978/79. GOM'S\nPRTORITY NEED NOW, WAS TO REASSURE FOREIGN\nAND DOMESTIC INVESTORS AND LENDERS, AS WELL AS THE IMF\nAND OTHER INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, OF ITS\nSERIOUS INTENT TO OVERCOME ITS PRINCIPAL PROBLEMS, WHICH\nVAN LEARDEN DIVIDED INTO SHORT AND LONGER TERM.\n: HE CHARACTERIZED THE SHORT-TERM PROBLEM AS THE\nNNFD TO PREVENT THE DEVELOPMENT OF A RUNAWAY CYCLE OF IN-\nFLATION SUCH AS HAD HIT CHILE AND ARGENTINA. THIS WOULD, HE\nSATD, REQUIRE SACRIFICE AND RESTRAINT NOW ON PART OF BOTH\nINDUSTRY AND LABOR. AT SAME TIME, PRICE LEVEL OF BASIC MARKET\nBASKET OF THE POOR COULD BE PROTECTED FROM INFLATION THROUGH\nAPPROPRIATE ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES.\n&\nFORD\nGERALD\nLIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nis\n2\nDEPARTMENT\nde\nSTATE\nUNITED\nName\n1)\nDepartment of State\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01104 0122492\n3. IN THE LONG TERM, HE REPORTEDLY SAID MEXICO MUST\nCONTROL ITS POPULATION GROWTH, BRINGING NUMBER OF NEW\nENTRANTS INTO JOB MARKET INTO LINE WITH JOB CREATING\nPOSSIBILITIES OF THE ECONOMY.\n4. VAN LEARDEN EXPRESSED UNDERSTANDING THAT ONLY 58 DAYS\nTN OFFICE WAS OBVIOUSLY INSUFFICIENT TO HAVE DEVELOPED\nPROGRAMS OVER A BROAD SPECTRUM#BUT OF GREATEST PRIORITY\nFOR GOM WAS NEED TO EXHIBIT A FAVORABLE ATTITUDE TOWARD\nINVESTORS, IN PARTICULAR, THE GOM SHOULD CLARIFY ITS\nATTITUDE TOWARD NEW FOREIGN INVESTMENT, ESPECIALLY AS\nMANIFESTED IN IMPLEMENTATION OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT LAW AND\nPATENTS AND TRADEMARKS LAW. AND IT SHOULD ASSURE POTENTIAL\nINVESTORS THAT THE \"RULES OF THE GAME\" WILL NOT CHANGE\nAFTER INVESTMENTS ARE COMMITTED. GOM MIGHT ALSO DEVELOP\nINCENTIVES SUCH A \"REASONABL\" DEPRECIATION (READ\nRAPID) WRITEOFF TO ATTRACT INVESTORS.\n5. WE ALSO UNDERSTAND VAN LEARDEN IS BEING PRESSED TO\nORGANIZE NEW LOAN TO GOM.\nS. AMBASSADOR LEARNED THAT GROUP OF 40 MEXICAN\nBUSINESS AND BANKING LEADERS HAD LENGTHLY SESSION WITH\nPRESIDENT FROM WHICH THEY CAME AWAY HIGHLY ENCOURAGED THAT\nTHE WAR BETWEEN GOM AND PRIVATE SECTOR, PARTICULARLY\nMONTERREY GROUP, WAS OVER. JLP EMPHASIZED THAT PRO-\nDUCTIVITY MUST BE KEY GOAL IN ALL INVESTMENT, BOTH\nPRIVATE AND PUBLIC, AND THAT HE WAS PARICULARLY INTERESTED\nTN INCREASING RATE OF INVESTMENT IN PRIVATE SECTOR INCLUDING\nFOREIGN INVESTMENT.\n7. IN THIS REGARD, PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR RAFAEL IZQUIERDO RE-\nCENTLY TOLD AMBASSADOR THAT THE MONTERREY GROUP WILL SHORTLY ANNOUNCE\nTHE INTENTION TO UNDERTAKE MAJOR INVESTMENTS IN THE\nAGRICULTURAL SECTOR THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY AT INSTANCE\nCONFIDENTIAL\nDEPARTMENT or STATE\nUNITED AMERICA\nDepartment of State TELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\n***\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 01104 012249Z\nOF THE GOVERNMENT.\nPOVA\nFORD & GERALD LIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFebruary 7, 1977\nTO:\nChairman Burns\nFROM: Ted Truman EMT\nAttached are the latest cables on Mexico.\nAttachments: Mexico 1251\nMexico 1306\nMexico 1414\ncc: Governor Wallich\nDefense cirasification of this document is due\nto the inclusion of U.S. Government information\nofficially classified under Exceutive Order 10501\nwhich provides that \"A document... shall bear a\nclassification at least as high as that of its\nhighest classified component.\"\nLIBRARY GERALD R. FORD\n3a\nDECARTMENT\nSTATE\nCAEXICO\nSTATE UNITED AMERICA\nDepartment of State\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nEMT\nCONFIDENTIAL 0499\nRAGE 01\nMEXICO 01251 0220327\nACTION ARA-10\nTNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08 NSC=05\nCIEP-01 SS=15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01 CIAE-00 COME-00\nFRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03 LAB-04 SIL-01\nPA-01 PRS-01 L-03 H-01 1085 w\n0305127 027039 /21\nR 0219207 FEB 77 2\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 0069\nINFO TREASURY WASHDC\nALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO VIA POUCH\nPlease return to\ne\nN\nF\nH\nE\nR\nA\nMEXICO 01251\nInternational Information Center\ndal 7/25/07\nF. 0. 11652: GDS\nTAGS: EINV, EGEN, MX\nSUBJECT: PUBLIC-PRIVATE SECTOR RELATIONS\nREF: (A) MEXICO 1018: (B) 76 MEXICO 15963.\n1. SUMMARY: U.S. BUSINESSMEN ARE CRITICAL OF GOM EFFORT\nTO PRODUCE INEXPENSIVE CONSUMER GOODS AND EVIDENCE SOME\nAPPREHENSION OF NEW GOVERNMENT. PRESUMABLY SHARED BY\nRUSINESSMEN GENERALLY, THIS ISSUE, PLUS CONCERN OVER EXCESS\nPROFITS TAX APPEAR TO BE HINDERING TO SOME DEGREE\nIMPROVED RELATIONS BETWEEN THE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE\nSECTORS. END SUMMARY.\n2. AT AMBASSADOR'S MONTHLY MEETING WITH U.S. BUSINESSMEN,\nLATTER COMPLAINED ABOUT THE GOMIS PROGRAM TO MARKET 90\nBASIC CONSUMTION GOODS AT LOW PRICES. (SEE REF A) GOM\nAPPARENTLY WANTS PRIVATE INDUSTRY TO REDUCE PRICES ON\nEXISITING GOODS AT LOWER PRICE RANGE RATHER THAN DEVELOP\nNEW INEXPENSIVE MODELS. IN EXCHANGE, GOM INDICATES IT\nWILL REMOVE PRICE CEILINGS ON HIGHER PRICED ITEMS.\nGERALD R. FORD LIVER\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nDEPART\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nUNITED STATES OF )\nTELEGRAM\nCONF IDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01251 022032Z\n3. ONE BUSINESSMAN WHOSE COMPANY DEPENDS ON ONE\nPRODUCT FOR 80 PERCENT OF ITS SALES MAINTAINED HE\nCOULD NOT AFFORD TO LOWERE THE PRICE OF THIS ITEM.\nANOTHER, A FOOD PROCESSOR, SAID HE MERELY SUBMITTED\nTO THE GOM HIS LIST PRICES WITH THE COMMENT THAT HIS\nFIRM DOES NOT GIVE DISCOUNTS. ANOTHER EXPRESSED CONCERN\nTHAT EVEN IF COMPANIES PARTICIPATED IN THIS \"VOLUNTARY\"\nPROGRAM THE GOM MIGHT NOT REMOVE PRICE CEILINGS ON HIGHER\nPRICED GOODS. STILL ANOTHER WORRIED ABOUT HOW GOVERNMENT\nRUREAUCRATS WOULD DEFINE A REASONABLE PROFIT,\nWHICH HE MAINTAINS IS ALL HIS FIRM IS MAKING NOW ON THE\nTTEMS FOR WHICH THEY WANT A LOWER PRICE. ONE EXPRESSED\nTHE OPINION THAT THIS PROGRAM REFLECTS THE ECHEVERRIA\nADMINISTRATION'S BELIEF THAT MIDDLEMEN TAKE UNNECESSARILY\nI ARGE PROFITS AND A MISUNDERSTANDING OF THE COSTS OF DISTRIBUTION\nAND RETAILING. SEVERAL BUSINESSMEN MAINTAINED THAT THE\nWHOLE SCHEME WAS DESIGNED BY RETAILERS TO PREVENT THE\nGOVERNMENT FROM EXPANDING ITS OWN RETAIL DISTRIBUTION FACILITIES.\n4. ANOTHER GOVERNMENT ACTION THAT HAS IRRITATED THE\nPRIVATE SECTOR IS THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX. THE EXCESS\nPROFITS TAX WAS FIRST MENTIONED IN THE SEPTEMBER 1,\n1976 INFORME AS A MEASURE TO PREVENT ANY \"UNUSUAL OR\nEXCESSIVE PROFITS RESULTING FROM THE EXCHANGE RATE\nCHANGE OR UNWARRANTED PRICE INCREASES. WE UNDERSTAND\nTHAT ATTEMPTS TO WRITE LEGISLATION THAT WOULD APPLY SO\nNARROWLY FAILED. THE FINAL CONCEPT WAS INCLUDED IN THE\nLATE-DECEMBER TAX REFORM PACKAGE AND WAS NOT DISCUSSED\nWITH ANYBODY OUTSIDE THE GOVERNMENT PRIOR TO ITS\nPRESENTATION TO CONGRESS, TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE.\n(SFE REF B). BUSINESSMEN ARGUE THAT THE GROSS PROFITS\nTAX WOULD BE CONFISCATORY AND UNFAIR IN THAT IT PENALIZES\nCOMPANIES WHOSE PROFITS MAY HAVE INCREASED FOR REASONS\nOTHER THAN THE DEVALUATION, I.E., A RELATIVELY NEW\nCOMPANY THAT FINALLY TURNS A PROFIT. SOME COMPANIES\nARE CONSIDERING A WRIT OF \"AMPAROR(INJUNCTION) AGAINST\nCONFIDENTIAL\nC\nFORM\nDEPARTMENT\nOF\nSTATE\nDepartment of State\nOF STATE AMERICA UNITED\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 01251 022032Z\nTHE EXCESS PROFITS TAX. THIS TAX HAS BEEN DEFENDED\nPRIVATELY BY GOM OFFICIAL AS A QUID PRO QUO FOR THE\n10 PERCENT MINIUMUM WAGE INCREASE. IN THIS REGARD IT SHOULD BE NOTED\nTHAT PRESIDENT PUBLICLY LABELED BASIC CONSUMPTION GOODS PROGRAM AS\nTRADE-OFF FOR WAGE RESTRAINT.\n5. WHATEVER THE MERITS OR FAULTS OF THE BASIC\nCONSUMPTION GOODS PROGRAM AND THE EXCESS PROFITS TAX,\nTHEY HAVE HINDERED SOMEWHAT IMPROVEMENT OF PUBLIC-\nPRIVATE SECTOR RELATIONS AND ENCOURAGED CONTINUED\nSKEPTICISM OF GOM INTENTIONS ON THE PART OF THE LOCAL U.S.\nBUSINESS COMMUNITY WHO ARE LOOKING FOR FAVORABLE\nACTIONS AS WELL AS FRIENDLY WORDS.\nR. ON THE OTHER HAND, THE GOM IS MAINTAINING AN OPEN\nATTITUDE TO BUSINESS COMPLAINTS. FOR EXAMPLE,\nPRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR RAFAEL IZQUIERDO HAS OFFERED\nTO SET ASIDE TWO DAYS FOR INDIVIDUAL HALF HOUR MEETINGS\nTO HEAR ANY COMPLAINTS FROM U.S. BUSINESSMEN AGAINST\nGOM POLICIES, PARTICULARLY AS REGARDS OBSTACLES TO\nFORETGN INVESTMENT. THESE SESSIONS ARE TO TAKE PLACE\nPRIOR TO THE JLP TRIP TO THE U.S.\nJOVA\nR.\nGERALD\nFORD\nLIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nFORM\nDS-1652\nTIMITED\nor STATE\nEMT\nDepartment of State\nUNITED AMERICA NAME\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\n2705\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 01306 0317502\nACTION EB-08\nTNFO OCT-01 ARA-26 ISO-00 AGRE-00 CIAE-00 COME-00 INR-07\nLAB-04 NSAE-00 SP-02 STR-04 TRSE-00 CIEP-01 FRB-03\nOMB-01 L-03 ID-13 NSC-05 SS-15 PA-01 PRS-01 USIA-06\n/081 W\n0403167 041554 170\nR 0317337 / FEB 77 3\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 0097\nTNFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO BY POUCH\nA\nPlease return to\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEXICO\n1306\nInternational Information Center\nFO 11652 : N/A\nTAGS : PFOR ETRO MX\nSUBJ : POSSIBLE TRADE TOPIC FOR LOPEZ PORTILLO MEETING WITH\nPRESIDENT CARTER\nREF : MEXICO 948\n1. BRUCE EVANS, U.S. -CITIZEN PRESIDENT OF MEXICAN IN-BOND TEX-\nTILE PLANTS (ACAPULCO FASHIONS) LOCATED IN CIUDAD JUAREZ AND\nPACATECAS INFORMED EMBOFF FEB 1 THAT PRESIDENT LOPEZ\nPORTILLO PLANS TO RATSE SPECIFIC ISSUE OF U.S. MEXICO\nATERAL TEXTILE AGREEMENT DURING HIS MEETING WITH\nPRESIDENT CARTER. EVANS TOLD EMBOFF THIS MATTER WAS\nDISCUSSED DURING LOPEZ PORTILLO'S MEETING LAST WEEK WITH\nGOVERNORS OF MEXICAN NORTHERN STATES, WHICH WAS ATTENDED\nINTER ALTA BY CHAIRMAN OF CIUDAD JUAREZ PRI PARTY CWHO\nALSO HAPPENS TO BE LAWYER OF IN-BOND PLANTS MENTIONED\nABOVE).\n2. COMMENT: THIS REPORT ABOUT JLPIS INTENTIONS MAY\nRE CASE OF WISHFUL THINKING ON PART OF EVANS, WHOSE\nCOMPANY HAS PERSONAL INTEREST IN OBTAINING LARGER\nR.\nGERALD\nFORD\nLIBITY\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nFORM DS-1652\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nUNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01306 031750Z\nQUOTA FOR TEXTILF CATEGORY 225 (BRASSIERES) ASSEMBLED\nTN MEXICO AND THEN REXPORTED TO U.S. EVANS WAS ONE\nOF THOSE MANUFACTURERS WHOSE APPROACHES TO GOM\nRESULTED IN GOM REQUEST FOR INCREASED TEXTILE CON-\nSULTATION LEVELS AND CATEGORY LIMITS REPORTED IN\nREFTEL.\nTOVA\nLIMITED OFFICIAL USE\nFORM\nDS-1652\nOF\n3b\nPER\nSTATE\nEMT\nDepartment of State\nSTATES UNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nCONF DEI I\n5392\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 050231Z\nACTION ARA-10\nTNFO OCT-01 TSO-00 AGRE-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08\nNSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01\nCIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03\nLAB-04 SIL-01 DHA-02 MCT-01 DODE-00 PM-04 Hm01 L-03\nPA-01 PRS-01 PC-01 CU-02 /095 W\n0502557 066120 170\nR 0500467 FEB 77\n5\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 148\nTNFO ALL USCONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH\nreturn to\nAMEMBASSY CARACAS\nAMEMBASSY GUATEMALA\ninternational Please Information Center\nAMEMBASSY MANAGUA\nAMEMBASSY PANAMA\nAMEMBASSY SAN JOSE\nAMEMBASSY SAN SALVADOR\nAMEMBASSY TEGUCIGALPA\n/Azatt\nC\nY\nSECTION 1 OF 2 MEXICO 1414\ndue 7/25/07\nFO 11652 : GDS\nTAGS : PINT MX PFOR EGEN\nSUBJ: MONTHLY POLITICAL HIGHLIGHTS: JANUARY 1977\nREF : MEXICO 874\n:- SUMMARY: THE LOPEZ PORTILLO GOVERNMENT IS BEGINNING TO\nTAKE HOLD IN SUCH AREAS AS PRIVATE SECTOR-LABOR RELATIONS,\nAGRARIAN UNREST, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, AND DOMESTIC POLITICS\nTHOUGH TERRORISM PERSISTS AND TEACHER UNIONS IN THE UNIVERSITIES\nARE SHAPING UP AS A CHALLENGE. AT THE SAME TIME, THE GCM\nHAS MOVED HESITANTLY AND WITHOUT MUCH SURE-FOOTEDNESS TO DEAL\nWITH WHAT IT RECOGNIZES AS THE MOST PRESSING PROBLEMS, THOSE\nTN THE FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC AREA. END SUMMARY.\nFORD & LIBRARY 076839\nCONFIDENTIAL\n6\nFORM\nDS-1652\n9.66\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nSTATES AMERICA UNITED NAME\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 0502312\n2. LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS IMPROVED: JLP'S MOST\nNOTABLE SUCCESS TO DATE HAS BEEN THE COOPERATION\nELICITED FROM THE PRIVATE SECTOR AND LABOR, BOTH OF\nWHICH HAVE PLEDGED TO TRY TO KEEP PRICES AND WAGES\nDOWN. THE AGREMENT IS FRAGILE, HOWEVER, AND IT REMAINS\nTO BE SEEN WHETHER BOTH SECTORS WILL IMPLEMENT IN\nSPECIFIC ACTIONS THEIR GENERAL PLEDGES TO HELP CONTROL\nINFLATION. (SEE MEXICO 874).\n3. AGRARIAN SITUATION CALMER. WHILE LAND INVASIONS\nHAVE NOT ENDFD (THERE WERE NEW, SMALL ONES IN SINALDA\nIN THE LAST SEVERAL WEEKS, THEIR NUMBERS HAVE DIMINISHED,\nAND STATE AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES ARE REMOVING, SO FAR\nWITHOUT VIOLENCE, CAMPESINOS FROM LANDS INVADED AS LONG\nAGO AS OCTOBER 75. WE THINK THIS REPRESENTS LOCAL\nAUTHORITIES GETTING A NEW SIGNAL FROM MEXICO CITY AND\nACTING ACCORDINGLY. THE GOM IS NOW ACTIVELY BUT QUIETLY\nMEDIATING TN THE SONORA LAND EXPROPRIATION, AND BOTH\nSIDES ARE REFRAINING FROM ANY ACTION WHICH WOULD DISTURB\nTHE TALKS. THERE IS ALSO EVIDENCE OF A POLITICAL HOUSE-\nCLEANING OF ECHEVERRTA LOYALISTS IN THE FOUR MAJOR\nCAMPESINO ORGANIZATIONS, THE REMOVAL OF SALCEDO MONTEON\nFROM THE CNC SEING THE MOST IMPORTANT SUCH CHANGE.\ns. ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM: LOPEZ PORTILLO'S ADMINISTRATIVE\nREFORM MAY BE MORE MEANINGFUL THAN OUR PREVIOUS REPORTS\nWOULD INDICATE. MORE THAN JUST A RESHUFFLING OF\nCABINET RESPONSIBILITIES, THE REFORM IS INTENDED TO\nIMPOSE REAL FISCAL AND POLICY CONTROLS IN THE HERETOFORE FREE-\nWHEELING PARASTATAL AGENCIES, WHO CONSUME HALF THE\nANNUAL BUDGET; BUDGET AND ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES HAVE\nBEEN TIGHTENED TREASURY'S CONTROL OVER THE PUBLIC DEBT\nHAS BEEN INCREASED: AND THERE ARE STEPS BEING TAKEN TO\nUPGRADE THE PROFESSIONALISM OF THE CIVIL SERVICE.\nFATRGRAM FOLLOWS.)\nONF EDENTIAL\nFORM\nDL\n9.66\nOF STATE\nDepartment of State\nSTATE UNITED AMERICA\nTELEGRAM\nOF\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 03\nMEXICO 01414 01 OF 02 050231Z\n5. FIRM HAND ON DOMESTIC POLITICS: GOM INNOVATION IN\nPUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IS NOT BEING REFLECTED IN INTERNAL\nPOLITICS. THE GOM SOLVED THE NUEVO LAREDO ELECTORAL\nPROBLEM IN TRADITIONAL FASHION BY SEATING BOTH PRI\nAND OPPOSITION CONTESTANTS. ALTHOUGH THE SITUATION\nSTILL COULD CHANGE, SO FAR BAJA CALIFORNIA VOTERS ARE\nHAVING TO SHALLOW THEIR UNHAPPINESS OVER THE IMPOSITION OF\nFCHEVERRIA'S SECRETARY OF DEFENSE AS GOVERNOR, LIKEWISE,\nPUERTO VALLARTA VOTERS, WHILE STILL CAUSING HEADACHES,\nARE NOW BEING GOVERNED BY A SIMILARLY UNPOPULAR\nIMPOSITION. PRT PRESIDENT SANSORES HAS SEVERAL TIMES\nSPOKEN OF MAKING THE PROCEDURE FOR SELECTING MUNICIPAL\nCANDIDATES MORE DEMOCRATTC, BUT NO ONE ANTICIPATES REAL REFORM.\nis\nFORD\nGERALD\nLIBRARY\nCONFIDENTIAL\nH\nFORM\nDS-1652\nOP STATE\nUNITED NAME AMERICA\nDepartment of State\nTELEGRAM\nSTATES OF\nCONFIDENTIAL 5380\nPAGE 01\nMEXICO 01414 02 OF 02 050156Z\nACTION ARA-10\nTNFO OCT-01 ISO-00 AGRE-00 SP-02 USIA-06 AID-05 EB-08\nNSC-05 CIEP-01 TRSE-00 SS-15 STR-04 OMB-01 CEA-01\nCIAE-00 COME-00 FRB-03 INR-07 NSAE-00 XMB-02 OPIC-03\nLAB-04 SIL-01 DHA-02 MCT-01 DODE-00 PM-04 H-01 L-03\nPA-01 PRS-01 PC-01 CU-02 /095 W\n0502527 065836 170\nR 050046Z FEB 77\nFM AMEMBASSY MEXICO\nTO SECSTATE WASHDC 149\nTNFO ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO POUCH\nAMEMBASSY CARACAS\nAMEMBASSY GUATEMALA\nAMEMBASSY MANAGUA\nAMEMBASSY PANAMA\nAMEMBASSY SAN JOSE\nAMEMBASSY SAN SALVADOR\nAMEMBASSY TEGUCIGALPA\nN\nA\nL SECTION 2 OF 2 MEXICO 1414\n6. TERRORISM PERSISTS: FOUR TERRORIST INCIDENTS IN\nONE WEEK IN JANUARY SERVED TO REMIND THAT THIS PROBLEM\nHAS NOT GONE AWAY. TWO OF THE FOUR INCIDENTS OCCURRED\nWHEN MANAGEMENT OFFICIALS ATTEMPTED TO REMOVE PERSONS\nDISTRIBUTING 23 OF SEPTEMBER COMMUNIST LEAGUE LITERATURE\nFROM INDUSTRIAL SITES: THE TERRORISTS RESPONDED WITH\nGUNFIRE, KILLING A VISITING U.S. BUSINESSMAN IN ONE\nINCIDENT. WHILE GOM OFFICIALS HAVE EXPRESSED CONCERN,\nNO MAJOR PUBLIC GOVERNMENT FIGURE HINTED AT USG INVOLVE-\nMENT, A REFLEX OF THE ECHEVERRIA ADMINISTRATION.\n7. UNIVERSITY PROBLEMS: EFFORTS BY SELF-PROCLAIMED\n\"MARXIST, ANTI-IMPERIALIST\" ELEMENTS TO UNIONIZE\nUNIVERSITY ACADEMIC AND ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL IN - THE\nLAST YEAR OR TWO HAVE PROGRESSED TO THE POINT WHERE TWO\nFORD\nGERALD\nCONFIDENTIAL\n\"\nFORM\nor STATE\nof STATE UNITED AMERICA\nDepartment of State\nTELEGRAM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nPAGE 02\nMEXICO 01414 02 OF 02 050156Z\nSUCH UNIONS AT MEXICO'S NATIONAL UNIVERSITY (UNAM) ARE\nCONTESTING GOM CONTROL OF THE CAMPUS. UNAM RECTOR\nSOBERON LAST AUGUST SUGGESTED A CONSTITUTIONAL\n\"REFORM\" WHICH WOULD GIVE THE GOM THE LEGAL WHEREWITHAL\nTO HAMSTRING THE UNIONS. LITTLE HAS BEEN HEARD OF THE\nPROPOSAL SINCE THEN, BUT UNION RELATED DISORDERS IN\nTANUARY AT SEVERAL STATE UNIVERSITIES AND IN MEXICO CITY\nMAY REVIVE THE PROPOSAL. HOW THE JLP ADMINISTRATION\nHANDLES THE CHALLENGE IS SHAPING UP AS A POSSIBLY MORE\nREVEALING MEASURE OF ITS ABILITY TO GOVERN THAN HAVE\nBEFN ITS VARIOUS MINOR SUCCESSES TO DATE.\n8. US-MEXICAN RELATIONS: THE WARMING TREND IN U.S.-\nMEXICAN RELATIONS WHICH BEGAN WITH THE DECEMBER VISIT\nOF MRS. CARTER CONTINUED APACE IN JANUARY. MRS. JLP'S\nRECEPTION IN WASHINGTON GRATIFIED MEXICO, FROM THE\nPRESIDENT TO THE MAN IN THE STREET, AND MEXICO WAS\nEQUALLY PLEASED WITH JLP BEING THE FIRST HEAD OF\nSTATE INVITED TO WASHINGTON BY THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION.\n0. WHILE THE CURRENT GOOD FEELINGS ARE GENUINE AND\nPERSONALLY FELT, MEXICO'S DESIRE FOR BETTER RELATIONS\nWITH THE USG HAS ALSO BEEN DICTATED BY MEXICO'S NEED\nFOR US HELP ON ITS ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL PROBLEMS.\nWITH THE JLP VISIT THE GOM APPARENTLY HOPES TO CEMENT\nTHE PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE FIRST FAMILIES,\nAND TO BENEFIT FROM THAT RELATIONSHIP BY, INTER ALIA,\nINFORMALLY LINKING ISSUES. OUR CONVERSATIONS\nINDICATE, FOR EXAMPLE, THAT MEXICO HOPES TO PROFIT\nFROM ITS RECORD OF COOPERATION ON NARCOTICS MATTERS TO\nGET MORE. PERHAPS MASSIVE, HELP ON ITS SHORT RANGE\nFINANCIAL PROBLEMS. WE HAVE THE NAGGING FEELING THAT\nTHE NEW GOVERNMENT FEELS OVERWHELMED BY THE ENORMITY\nOF ITS PRESENT FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC DIFFICULTIES AND IS\nCOUNTING HEAVILY ON US PRIVATE AND OFFICIAL ASSISTANCE TO SEE IT\nTHROUGH ITS HARD TIMES. (A SEPARATE REPORT FOLLOWS.)\nJOVA\nGNFIDENTIAL\nFORM"
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