As equities commence the dramatic autumn slump I've been anticipating in recent weeks, it is uninspiring to witness the standard of political debate in the US Presidential election. It seems that neither candidate is aware of, or at least willing to articulate, the tectonic shifts taking place in global financial power which threaten to severely limit the room for maneuver of the incoming administration. Roosevelt said America should talk quietly to the world but carry a big stick; now a big begging bowl is more appropriate. We hear references to Iran and Russia as geopolitical challenges, but nobody is talking yet about a bigger threat right on America's doorstep: the potential implosion of the Mexican state.
There are two pressing issues that are putting intolerable stresses on the Mexican economy and society; the first is the huge escalation in drug related violence and corruption, as US support for the Colombian war on drugs has displaced Cartel activity into Mexico, now the primary base for cocaine shipments in the region. The revenues involved are estimated by the DEA to have reached over $40bn a year (or about 25% of all official exports), financing very effective private armies, and rampant high level corruption.
In recent months, ever more daring assassinations have included high ranking policemen and District Attorneys, including the head of the Federal police in May (equivalent to killing the head of the FBI). Criminal kidnappings have reached epidemic proportions and now threaten much of the urban middle class, and law enforcement bodies are so thoroughly corrupted that they are often complicit in these crimes.
The second crisis relates to collapsing oil production and hence state revenue; the biggest Mexican oil field, Canterell, has seen production tumble 37% in a year and down 50% from its 2004 peak, equivalent to 1.2m barrels a day. For US energy security this is a full blown emergency; this field was a 'Supergiant', as big as the four largest discovered in US Gulf waters combined and Mexico is currently the third largest oil exporter to the US, after Saudi and Canada.
Amazingly, Mexican production fell 10% and oil exports dropped over 16% in the first 7 months of 2008. The faster decline in exports reflects soaring domestic demand. Canterell may be down to just 600k b/d with a couple of years, with devastating implications for Mexican tax revenues; 40% of all revenues are generated by oil, and Pemex, the state oil monopoly, pays an effective 61% tax rate. The company has been plundered by politicians for decades, and the resulting underinvestment is now proving disastrous, exacerbated by the fact that foreign companies with superior technology and experience have been barred by statute from involvement.
Some economists estimate that Mexico will run out of oil within just 7 years, implying a near halving of the tax base just as hugely wealthy criminal warlords step up their challenge to Federal authority.
Oil exports will certainly have dried up on that timeframe. The balance of resources between the government and criminal groups will deteriorate rapidly in coming years, and the US may face a de facto criminalized narco-state as a neighbor with violence spilling across its Southern borders. Other implications would include a massive surge in illegal immigration from the current estimated 450,000 a year as impoverished Mexicans flee both declining living standards and rampant lawlessness, and the US losing energy security by becoming even more dependent on oil shipped huge distances from the Persian Gulf and West Africa.
Ironically, the success of US policies to support the Colombian government now threaten to undermine the strategically far more important Mexican one, a classic case of the law of unintended consequences in action. It will take more than that fancy new border fence or oil drilling in Alaska to address the looming crisis that will almost inevitably explode by the end of the new President's first term.
I have been bearish of emerging markets in general in recent months, and Mexico is one of the most vulnerable to capital flight as the combination of falling oil prices and production creates a fiscal crisis in 2009.
Disclosure: None
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This article has 13 comments:
- Alan von Altendorf
- 257 Comments
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Sep 07 06:56 AM- fatcat
- 433 Comments
Sep 07 07:30 AM- jcordes
- 47 Comments
Sep 07 09:06 AM- Stephanie
- 15 Comments
Sep 07 09:53 AM- paulk8756
- 882 Comments
Sep 07 12:22 PM- jegan ;-)
- 672 Comments
Sep 07 02:03 PMHowever, it may already be too late. Large multi-nationals are already scaling back their drilling and exploring in favor of buying back their stock, and those that might have been inclined are busy with Brazil, or as recently noted, diagonally tapping in to Mexico's supply in the Gulf with one of the world's largest rigs.... "He who snoozes, loses!" ..
jegan ;-)
- cjwirth
- 42 Comments
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Sep 07 02:35 PM- STS
- 1 Comment
Sep 07 02:49 PMOil production has been steadily declining, due to antiquate equipment, which is a result of a) nearly 90% of profits have to be payed in taxes to the federal government and b) corrupt government officials. This is now being adress by the current Calderon Administration, however since Mexico is a democartic country, it had to battle fierce discusions and proposal to the reviteliasation and restructuring of the OIL industry. A consensus has been found and detailes are being worked out, which will take a few more months till the process starts. Having said that, spanish Repsol Oil conglomarate is already deeply involved and you might be surprised to know that China is already on the ground and many PRC nationals are working in some sectors of the industry (as outsourced manpower resources).
And don't forget gasoline is heavy subsidiesed considering that the mayority of gas is refined and processed in the US and India.
As for the drug war, 40bn USD is about the right figure. The 40bn USD are generate from sales in the US. This is a huge industry and can only work with corrupted US politicans from congress to municiplities, not to mention police and certainly the US banking systems.
So do not worry anymore...it has spread over the boarder along time ago. Where do you think the sofisticated drug armies get their hard and software from? Only the US sometimes with a detour via Iraq. weapons are purchased in US and shipped to Mexico.
as it looks like the root cause of the drug violence is not Mexico, but the United States of America.
Mexico's biggest vunerability is it's heavy dependency on the US. 75% of all it's exports go to USA. This is about to change Asia was neglected by mexcian industries and government. I have seen first hand agri product exporters, which only supplied US clients, which again re-exported the Mexican product for a multiple to Asia clients, cut the intermediatery and go straight to China, South East Asia and middel east.
Kidnapping is a serious problem and so is corruption and poverty. Sean Maher is partially right. Columbians drug criminals have relocated to Northern Mexico and caused territorial disputs with mexican cartels.
The main crime activity zone is 150 miles from the north and south the boarder. The terrible killing on the south side is a result of the current Calderon government to effort to stop the violence. It will take time and lot's of blood. It needs guts and determination to change. Something that is absolutly wanting in the US.
- Paul0616
- 2 Comments
Sep 07 05:21 PMOn the other hand, I am not sure how the average Mexican citizen benefits from oil revenues. It could be that 95% of revenues are hoarded by the oligarchs, and they occasionally build a road and a soccer stadium to pacify the masses.
- Paul0616
- 2 Comments
Sep 07 05:23 PMOn the other hand, I am not sure how the average Mexican citizen benefits from oil revenues. It could be that 95% of revenues are hoarded by the oligarchs, and they occasionally build a road and a soccer stadium to pacify the masses.
- icurhuman2
- 1 Comment
Sep 10 05:43 AMWorld Peak-Oil production is here and there's nothing that can be done to stop the decline; the best that could be done is to reduce demand, but only at the expense of world industrial expansion. A new way of looking at economics will have to be embraced, it will be called The Economics of Permanent Decline in the Age Of The Scavenger.
- Tinman
- 45 Comments
My Website
Sep 10 10:02 AMI'm sure TB Pickens would be ecstatic to put nat gas on the market at a break even of $2.50/gal equivalent. I'm amazed that the market thinks oil is a bargain at $100. Very short memories, I suppose.
- Itsonlymoney
- 82 Comments
Sep 12 04:35 PMSome of that $40B in drug money is spent here in the US on guns which are used against the Mexican police. We could help the situation by following the money to the gun dealers. I'm with Stephanie and think that decriminalization of drug use will deprive the bad guys of funding. But not in this administration even though legalization is pure Reaganomics.