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Mexico Agriculture and Fishing Overview
Mexico Facts
Mexico is located in southern North
America. It is a country of more than one hundred million
inhabitants bordering the United States, Belize and
Guatemala. Mexico is known for its magnificent gorges, jungles,
rapids, volcanoes and canyons.
Capital: México
Official language: Spanish
Currency: Mexican peso
Passport and visa: Mexico does not require a
tourist visa for Finnish citizens. You can stay in the country
for up to six months at a time.
Time difference to Finland: - 8
Climate: Cancun's warmest month is July and the
least rainfall is in April. The temperature stays between +27
and +35 degrees Celsius all year round.
Agriculture and fishing
Mexico is largely made up of mountainous
landscapes and semi-deserts, which means that only a
limited part of the area is suitable for cultivation.
Agriculture now contributes only a few percent of the
gross domestic product, but it still employs about every
eighth employee.
- CountryAAH:
Comprehensive import regulations of Mexico. Covers import prohibitions and special documentation requirements for a list of prohibited items.
Small farmers especially in the south grow most corn,
beans and squash to house needs, using old-fashioned
methods. About half of the cultivated land belongs to
ejidos, state-owned cooperatives where
individual farmers have the right to use the land. These
ejidos were created by old haciendas through land reform
during the first half of the 20th century (see Older
history). At the same time, some haciendas were cut up
into small farming units for private farmers. In
addition to small-scale and often inefficient
agriculture, there are capital-intensive and high-tech
large farms that grow for export. In the north there are
large cattle ranches.
In addition to corn, sorghum, wheat, rice, oats,
potatoes and soybeans are important crops for the
domestic market. Agave cactus is grown for the
production of alcoholic beverages, including tequila.
For export, coffee, cotton, fruit, tomatoes, sugar cane,
tobacco and vanilla are grown. Mexico is also the
world's largest producer of avocado, which, like cocoa,
originated here. For Mexico defense and foreign policy,
please check
themotorcyclers.

The waters off the coast of Mexico are rich in
seafood. In recent years, investments have been made,
not least in fish farming, and both catches and exports
to mainly the United States have increased. The Mexicans
themselves do not eat much fish, but the state is trying
to encourage increased consumption.
FACTS - AGRICULTURE
Agriculture's share of GDP
3.3 percent (2018)
Percentage of land used for agriculture
54.6 percent (2016)
2019
December
Indigenous people support regional railways
December 17
President Andres Manuel López Obrador receives local support for plans on a
regional railroad that is intended to boost tourism and economic development in
poor parts of southern Mexico. Activists and some groups of indigenous people
have criticized the plans for lack of environmental analysis. But when hundreds
of local referendums and unofficial town councils are held, support for the
project will be about 92 percent of around 93,000 who participate. The intended
"Mayan train" will connect places like Cancún with archaeological sites such as
Palenque and Chichén Itzá and transport both passengers and goods.
Ex-security minister arrested in the US
December 10
Former Security Minister Genaro García Luna is arrested in the US, accused of
receiving millions in bribes from the Sinaloa cartel. García Luna was minister
of President Felipe Calderón's government from 2006 to 2012, responsible for
public safety and for the federal police. According to prosecutors, he
guaranteed safe smuggling routes for the drug body, as well as access to
sensitive information. Cartel members must on two occasions hand over up to $ 5
million in cash to him personally.
New version of free trade agreement signed
December 10
Mexico, the United States and Canada once again sign a new version of the
free trade agreement that will replace Nafta from 1994, even though it was
considered ready already a little over a year earlier (see September
2018). The first version of the agreement called T-MEC in Mexico (and
the USMCA in the US) encountered patrol primarily in the United States, where
Democrats demanded, among other things, strengthened labor law guarantees. The
first version was ratified only by Mexico (see June 2019).
Mexico will also first ratify the new agreement, already on December 12.
November
Violence causes Trump to call for war
November 5
A brutal assault on Mormons arouses dismay even in violent Mexico, as well as
in the United States, as the victims had American as well as Mexican
citizenship. The day after nine women and children were found dead in a
burnt-out car near the US border, US President Donald Trump says the United
States is ready to support Mexico in a war on drug cartels and "wipe them off
the face of the earth." President López Obrador, who has declared an end to the
"war" on drugs thanks for the offer but says that war is "irrational". Several
children in the Mormon family that were affected were also injured in the attack
described as a massacre. It is unclear why the Mormons were subjected to the
assault.
October
HD judges depart
October 3
A judge in the Supreme Court, Eduardo Medina Mora, resigns on suspicion of
the millions he has transferred to bank accounts in the United States and the
United Kingdom. Media reports in June reported $ 5.2 million that Medina Mora
transferred, money he has not declared. Medina Mora has previously been Minister
of Justice, Minister of Security and US Ambassador.
August
Nearly 5,000 in secret tombs
More than 3,000 secret graves have been found with victims of the drug war in
Mexico since 2006, according to official data from the National Search Committee
set up in 2018 to help Mexicans find missing relatives. Remains after a total of
4,874 have been found in the 3,025 locations. This is the first time a survey
has been made of secret burial sites and how many victims have been found. Many
of them have remained unidentified.
July
The finance minister resigns in protest
July 9
Finance Minister Carlos Manuel Urzúa Macías leaves his post and writes in a
letter that economic policy has been contradictory. Urzúa warns of "extremism",
from both right and left. Both the currency and the stock exchange fall
according to his message. Mexico's economy shrank by 0.2 percent during the
first quarter of the year. New finance minister becomes Arturo Herrera
Gutiérrez, a choice that, according to the credit rating agency Moody's, can
help calm investors.
Former oil manager called for
July 5
An arrest warrant is issued for former Pemex state oil chief Emilio Lozoya,
who is suspected of bribery. Lozoya is said to have received $ 10 million from
Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht, who reportedly paid bribes to
politicians across Latin America. Lozuya's wife, sister and mother are also
suspected of being involved in the corruption case. Lozoya was Pemex Chief and
Leading Advisor to President Enrique Peña Nieto 2012–2016. It is unclear where
he is.
Expulsions increase by one third
July 2
Mexico expelled 33 percent more people in June than in May, the migration
authority said. The increase to close to 22,000 comes after pressure and threats
of sanctions from US President Donald Trump.
June
Sharpened efforts at the US border
June 24th
Defense Minister Luis Cresencio Sandoval states that nearly 15,000 soldiers
and members of the National Guard are now stationed at Mexico's border in the
north, and that migrants trying to enter the United States are arrested and then
handed over to migrants. Sandoval explains the handling at a press conference
where President Andres Manuel López Obrador is also present. But a few days
later, the president rejects the statement that security forces should have been
ordered to arrest migrants. Already, migrants have been stopped on their way
through the country, but Mexican authorities have not prevented people from
crossing the border.
Mexico ratifies trade agreements
June 19
As the first country, Mexico ratifies the new North American Free Trade
Agreement USMCA, which will replace Nafta (see September 2018).
New tours around the airport building
17th of June
A court in the state of Mexico orders the government to stop construction of
the new airport at Santa Lucia Air Base (see May 6, 2019) and at the same time
prevent further demolition of the previously planned major airport in Texcoco.
According to the judge, the rebuilding of the Santa Lucia base must be halted
until "all permits" are clear, as 147 separate targets have been raised around
the building with reference to, among other things, environment and safety. The
court decision is a setback for President López Obrador.
New journalism murder makes Mexico deadliest this year
June 11
Journalist Norma Sarabia is shot to death outside her home in Tabasco.
Sarabia, who was a criminal reporter for Tabasco Hoy magazine, is the sixth
journalist to be murdered in Mexico so far this year. That's more than in any
other country, according to Reporters Without Borders.
Migration settlement blows customs threat
7 June
US President Donald Trump announces that the sanctions against Mexico that he
threatened to impose have been postponed "indefinitely" after a settlement
reached on migration. The message comes after three days of negotiations in
Washington. Mexico has now pledged to strengthen security at the border with
Guatemala and to a greater extent than previously housed Central Americans while
the United States is processing their asylum applications. Trump and Republicans
call the deal a breakthrough, while some observers claim that it does not
contain anything that Mexico has not already committed to.
Measures to stop the migration of migrants
6th June
The government decides to strengthen surveillance against Guatemala by 6,000
members of the National Guard, stop new caravans and state that bank accounts
belonging to 26 suspected human traffickers should be frozen - all in an attempt
to meet US demands for sharpened efforts to stop the flow of migrants through
the country. Those who get their accounts frozen are suspected of organizing
migrant caravans from Central American countries to the border in the north. So
far this year, 300,000 people have entered southern Mexico, of which 51,000 have
been arrested, according to the government. Some have been sent back. In the
United States, authorities say the Border Police arrested 144,000 people in May,
the highest figure in 13 years.
May
Trump threatens with penalties
30 May
In an unexpected spell, US President Donald Trump is threatening with 5
percent duty on all goods from Mexico as of June 10, unless Mexico stops the
flow of Central American migrants across the US border to the south. Customs
duties will then be increased incrementally every month until they reach 25
percent in October. The threat causes the person to fall and the markets in both
countries react negatively. President López Obrador says Mexico is doing what it
can to stop migrant flows. According to the government, another quarter of a
million migrants would have reached the border unless Mexico took action.
The United States abolishes steel and aluminum duties
May 17
US President Donald Trump announces that the steel and aluminum tariffs
introduced in June 2018 are now being removed. In the settlement that has been
reached, both Mexico and Canada have pledged to withdraw complaints against the
United States that the World Trade Organization has received.
New airport building inaugurated
May 6
A ceremony is being held to begin the redevelopment of Santa Lucia Air Base
to a new civil airport, a project that has been supported in a contentious
referendum (see October 28, 2018). President López Obrador is
participating in the ceremony, which is held despite there being little evidence
that any major construction work will begin in the near future. Critics believe
a second major airport near Mexico City will create difficult challenges, as all
planes will have to fly out and in from the same weather because of the high
mountains surrounding the city on the other three sides.
April
Mass arrest of migrants
April 24
Police are apprehending nearly 400 Central Americans in the state of Chiapas
in the south, in what is said to be the most extensive strike to date against
migrants en route to the United States. The arrested included a so-called
caravan with around 3,000 people, most of them from Honduras. The flow of
Central Americans trying to get through Mexico to the United States has
increased sharply in recent months. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly
threatened to close the border unless Mexico stops the tide. In Mexico, fewer
and fewer people are now getting visas for humanitarian reasons, and according
to official data, 15,000 people have been sent back to their home countries in
just the past month.
Strengthened security after massacres
April 22
President López Obrador decides to strengthen the military presence in
Veracruz, three days after a massacre at a birthday party in which 13 people
died. One child, five women and seven men were shot dead by one of the mafia
gangs fighting for control of drug smuggling in the state. New statistics have
just shown that the number of murders hit a new record during the first quarter
of the year, when 8,493 people were killed. This was almost 10 percent more than
the corresponding period in 2018.
March
Apologies for the Spanish conquest
March 26
President López Obrador, in a letter to Spain's King Felipe and Pope Francis,
apologizes for the human rights violations committed during the Spanish conquest
500 years ago. López Obrador notes that the indigenous peoples of Mexico were
subjected to massacres (see Older History). He says in a speech at a Mayan
temple in Tabasco that it is time for reconciliation, but that Spain and the
Catholic Church should apologize first. However, the Spanish Government
immediately rejects the proposal.
The president does not promise to stand for re-election
March 19
President López Obrador signs a letter promising Mexicans not to try to
circumvent the constitution's ban on re-election. The reason is that political
opponents claim that he intends to do just that, because halfway into the
six-year term, he wants to hold a referendum on whether he should stay the
period out.
"Journalist murder should be reported as war crime"
the 12th of March
The Press Freedom Organization Reporters Without Borders (RUG) wants the
International Court of Justice (ICC) to investigate 102 murders of journalists
committed between 2012 and 2018 in Mexico, citing the murders as crimes against
humanity. Fourteen journalists have disappeared during the period. According to
RUG, the murders and kidnappings form part of a conscious and systematic
campaign against a part of the civilian population: journalists. The
organization believes that both presidents Felipe Calderón and Enrique Peña
Nieto are obviously accomplices. Only ICC member states, prosecutors and the UN
Security Council can make formal notifications to the court, so RUG hopes that
the current president Andrés Manuel López Obrador will do so.
February
National Guard decision
February 28
Calls for the establishment of a National Guard with 50,000 members to combat
the drug cartels; Critics fear it means further militarization of the fight
against the armed gangs. Within a week, the proposal, which comes from President
López Obrador, has been ratified by half of the states, which means it can come
into force. In most states, the president's party has Morena majority.
King of drugs is dropped in the United States
February 12
A New York federal court finds Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, former leader of
the Sinaloa cartel, guilty of all ten counts of drug smuggling. According to
prosecutors, Guzmán earned $ 14 billion during his years in the drug trade when
he ruled over smugglers, kidnappers and murderers. During the three-month trial,
many have testified that Guzmán himself practiced serious violence. A witness
who described himself as Guzmán's right-hand man, Alex Cifuentes, has also
claimed that former President Enrique Peña Nieto received $ 100 million from
Guzmán in 2012. Peña Nieto has rebuffed previous allegations of corruption that
emerged during the trial, which began in November 2018. Guzmán arrested under
spectacular forms (see January 2016) and was extradited to the
United States in January 2017. The penalty announced in July 2019 will be life
imprisonment as expected.
January
The president says the drug war is over
30th of January
President López Obrador declares that the "war on drugs" is over and that the
army will no longer have the task of arresting drug kings. Critics, however,
point out that the military has not been withdrawn from the streets, as López
Obrador promised during the election campaign. He also wants to create a
national guard, which could lead to permanent militarization of the country.
Explosion at leaking fuel line
January 18
Dozens of people perish in a violent explosion at a leaking gas line north of
Mexico City. People had poured in to fill containers with gasoline that spurted
out, probably since thieves drilled holes in the pipeline. Many are severely
burned and die later: two weeks after the accident, the death toll is reported
to be 125. Gasoline shortages have occurred since President López Obrador began
a hard-fought effort to stop the extensive fuel thefts in the country. Several
large oil pipelines have been shut down and at least three senior employees of
the oil company Pemex have been arrested, the days before the accident. Pemex is
estimated to have lost $ 3 billion in 2017 due to fuel thefts, which has created
an extensive black market.
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