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U.S. Trade Specialists 

  

Bright Express International
Co., Ltd.

The Durable And Reliable Future
Star
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Matson Shipping (Shanghai)
Co., Ltd.

Fast & Reliable
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Golden Fame Logistics
Holding Limited

Integrated logistics freight services
between Hong Kong and the PRD
region.
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CASA China Limited Shenzhen

Call Anytime, Service Anywhere.
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S.F. Systems (Qingdao) Ltd

Global Vision Local Focus - "We're
here for you and we're there for
you.
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Shenzhen Shining Ocean Int'l
Logistics Co.,Ltd

We Carry to Wherever the Purple
Light Rises.
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RS Logistics Limited

We provide a full scope of logistics
services and act as a trouble-
shooter for you in all logistics-
related issues.
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Bon Voyage Logistics Limited

Little seeds can give birth to great
forest.
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US Trade Representative highlights concerns with China's WTO   compliance    More....

Tales from the chicken wars: How trade talks ease rules without actually
  doing so
  
More....

Mexico announces programme to fight textile and apparel imports   
  
More....

 

Mexico in flux of change as it finds more elevated role for itself
in world trade

 


AFTER more than a decade of neoliberal, trade-friendly government, a new era of protectionism is gripping Mexico, whose people voted two years ago for the return of the leftist Institutional Revolutionary Party.

This was the party that ruled Mexico from 1929 to 2000, and under whose stifling protectionist nationalism cramped economic freedom to such an extent that revulsion towards its increasingly authoritarian ways brought in the reforming neoliberalism of President Vincente Fox, who headed the National Action Party.

But that ended when Fox's party was voted out in 2012 as the mood of Mexico darkened after the 2009 financial crisis and became introspective, no longer able to surf waves of prosperity buoyed by world trade and the increasing benefits of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

In January, Mexico passed a raft of anti-free trade laws that may yet run afoul of World Trade Organisation (WTO). There has been a widespread perception that the opening up had gone too far. Demand growth from its biggest trading partner, the United States, had slackened and falling oil prices soured the public mood, given that Mexico is the world's 11th biggest petroleum producer.

The new anti-trade laws are aimed at combatting "unfair trade practices" affecting the textiles and apparel. The measures, including soft loans for equipment upgrades and more customs hoops for importers to jump through and another delay in scheduled tariff reductions on footwear and apparel.

At the same time, Mexico benefits from a migration of manufacturing from China in recent years. This has also been a process of "nearshoring", as retailers preferred to have manufacturing under greater control closer to their retail shelves particularly in a time of slow steaming.

But this hardly helped move Asian shipping volumes and what surviving throughput there is, comes through Manzanillo (pop 161,000), its biggest port, serving Mexico City (pop 8.8 million) and Guadalajara (pop 1.4 million). Then there is its chief rival, 344 kilometres or 218 miles down the coast, called Lazaro Cardenas.

Ten years ago Lazaro Cardenas (pop 179,00) which lifted 1.05 million TEU in 2013, became the great hope of ocean carriers and global port operators, like Maersk's APMT and Hong Kong's Hutchison Port Holdings.

This hope was based on the notion that the Asian cargo flow would soon overwhelm the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, not to mention the truck routes and rail lines. All the negatives of the existing system were paraded as the horrors of tomorrow, and Lazaro Cardenas was trumpeted as the great escape.

The idea was to create an end-run around the SoCal horrors. Instead going along the rail lines of the clogged Southern Corridor, heading south east all the way to El Paso, Texas, before turning north east, the new regime would skip California altogether.

Instead cargo would land at Hutchison or APMT terminals in Lazaro Cardenas, be loaded Kansas City Southern trains and move directly to where the cargo wanted to go - to the promised consumer-rich lands east of the Mississippi.

But it has been something of a bumpy ride for Lazaro Cardenas since. In November 2013, the Mexican military took the reins from the port in an attempt to crack down on surrounding drug war. The port also saw a significant loss of its market share to west coast ports in Canada and the US in the first half of 2014.  Only last month did the authorities decriminalise much of the steel export volume to China, allowing legitimate consignments through once more.

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