Made in Mexico’ increasingly means high-tech motors,
Made in Mexico is increasingly more likely to mean cars than clothes
as the country’s manufacturing sector moves away from the low-skill,
high-volume production lines of the past toward more sophisticated
products.
Times are tough for the assembly-for-export plants known
as maquiladoras clustered along the U.S. border, a region that has lost
economic muscle in the face of competition from China, successive U.S.
recessions and drug war violence.
But there are signs of a turnaround elsewhere. Mexico is winning back
U.S. import market share and an energetic new government promises deep
economic reforms in pursuit of 6-per-cent annual growth.
Key to
the revival is a shift in activity from the border toward more high-tech
manufacturing in central states far from the drug gang turf wars and
smuggling routes.
New foreign investment, especially in the auto
industry, heads increasingly to Guanajuato and Aguascalientes states,
northwest of Mexico City. Together with neighbouring Queretaro – home to
a small but booming aerospace cluster – and San Luis Potosi, they are
shaping up as Mexico’s next-generation manufacturing hub.
Boosting
productivity and adding local content is crucial to Mexico’s goal of
breaking out of the emerging market B-list and narrowing the income gap
with advanced economies, as countries such as China and car making
competitor South Korea have done.
Bucking an overall trend of
falling productivity, the central states already have a similar
manufacturing output to the four border states of Baja California,
Coahuila, Chihuahua and Tamaulipas with about one-third of the work
force.
On Guanajuato’s Federal Highway 45, heavily travelled by
trucks heading north to the U.S. border, a gleaming new factory stands
where corn and beans used to grow.
German car maker Volkswagen AG
will employ 700 skilled workers and produce 330,000 engines a year at
its $550-million (U.S.) plant, joining foreign companies such as Japan’s
Nissan Motor Co. Ltd., Honda Motor Co. Ltd. and Mazda Motor Corp. which
are also building new factories on Mexico’s fertile central plains.
The
new operations, drawn to the region by cheap wages and living costs,
abundant land, good highways and incentives from local governments, are
helping to transform an area once known as the nation’s breadbasket into
a hive of factory activity.
“We are having a real boom here now
with the automotive industry,” said Vanessa Cordero, commercial director
of the Castro del Rio industrial park, which was built on a former
asparagus farm some 20 minutes’ drive from the new VW plant.
“(Japanese
car makers) tell all their suppliers to set up in Guanajuato by
such-and-such a date. That’s why we have a tsunami of Japanese companies
arriving in the state.”
Volkswagen occupies 70 hectares of the
1,000-hectare industrial park Puerto Interior, flanked by cornfields on
one side and a new airport on the other. The site also houses a new
Pirelli SpA plant mainly making tires for the U.S. market.
“We’re
not looking for clients, they come to us,” said Oswaldo Antillon,
logistics manager at Puerto Interior, where on-site facilities include: a
customs house, health-care centre, two electricity substations, three
wells, a polytechnic with 2,000 students and a railway station.
Although
the average murder rate in the central states was high at 16 murders
per 100,000 people in 2012, compared to one in China and 2.6 in South
Korea, it is half that of the four border states.
Executives from
aerospace giant Bombardier Inc. say they have had no security problems
at their glistening white plant in Queretaro, where the Canadian company
is building roughly 85 per cent of the composite skeleton for the
Learjet 85.
“From a strategic point of view, Mexico is a very
important operation,” said Bombardier plant quality manager Norman
Thompson. Bombardier can truck the parts made in Queretaro to Wichita,
Kan. for final assembly in two days and the roads are well policed, he
said.
In years past, many young people in the region could aspire only to a minimum wage job earning 60 pesos ($4.87) per day.
Now
factories needing skilled workers have spawned specialized training
centres like Queretaro’s aerospace university and Puerto Interior’s
National Polytechnical Institute campus.
The polytech helped
establish a senior high school to bridge the gap between local secondary
schooling and the rigours of an engineering degree. Students, 95 per
cent from nearby towns, then spend five years at the polytech, where
tuition is free.
“Before, most of the local population did not
even have a medium-level education, only primary school, and they worked
in agriculture or migrated to the U.S.,” said campus director Aldelmo
Emmanuel Reyes. He says a new engineering graduate can earn five times
the minimum wage, rising to 10 to 20 times more after five years.
Sergio
Hernandez, 20, is about to finish a two-year program blending senior
high school with on-the-job-training at auto part maker Schaeffler AG to
become a production line supervisor.
Before that, he worked for
two years at a machinery workshop after secondary school. He says his
employment chances have improved “incredibly” since he started the
course: “I have work experience that can be documented, and my high
school diploma.”
New auto plants under construction, including an
Audi AG plant in nearby Puebla, will employ more than 13,000 people.
Officials say five times more jobs will be created down the track as
factories source parts from Mexican-based suppliers, such as Honeywell
International Inc., which hired 10 per cent to 15 per cent more staff at
its Mexicali plant after winning a turbocharger contract for VW.
Auto
parts makers such as Japan’s Jatco and Germany’s Hella are also setting
up shop and manufacturing services provider North American Product
Sharing Inc. expects up to 200 auto suppliers to flock to the region in
the next three years.
With the “Made in Mexico” component in
value-added exports currently less than 70 per cent, experts say more
local content is essential to a permanent break with the reassembly
model.
“It’s very, very important for Mexico to make that shift,”
said veteran investor Mark Mobius, who oversees $51-billion in emerging
market assets at investment manager Franklin Templeton Investments and
is looking to increase investment in the country.
“You could add
another one or two percentage points to (annual) economic growth because
increasing productivity and a move to higher value-added means higher
exports, more income and higher foreign reserves.”
The new auto
plants should boost vehicle production by almost a quarter by 2017, when
IHS Global Insight predicts Mexico will become the top U.S. light
vehicle importer.
In the last three years, manufacturing jobs in
the four central states have risen 30 per cent and the region posted
faster growth than Mexico as a whole between 2009 and 2011.
Although
transport, especially autos, is the main industry, L’Oréal SA opened
its biggest ever hair colour factory in San Luis Potosi in December,
employing 400 people, and Beiersdorf AG is investing $130-million in
Silao to make Nivea and Labello products such as body lotion, lip balm
and shower gel.
The world’s largest yogurt maker, Groupe Danone
SA, is extending its facilities in Irapuato, near Silao, where new
villas overlook an 18-hole golf course.
But the central region
faces growing pains as the flood of new operations puts pressure on
labour supply and infrastructure and states will need to lift investment
to support big new factories as well as the housing and services needed
by workers.
Investment banker Carlos Sales, whose Cuasar Capital
helped Aguascalientes secure $55-million to build extra gas pipelines
and highway connections for a Nissan plant to open in late 2013, said
investment would be easily recouped in extra tax revenue.
But more
needs to be done. Australian investment bank Macquarie Group Ltd.,
which specializes in infrastructure, said Mexico needed to accelerate
plans to bring in gas from the United States and replace expensive,
inefficient and dirty oil-fired electricity production.
“(Mexico
has to) put in place the right structural parameters to let private
investors come in and invest in those pipelines and make sure there is
enough gas there to generate electricity and for industry that wants gas
directly,” said Mark Ramsey, head of Latin America for Macquarie
Capital.
“There’s not enough electricity generated for the growth that’s expected.”
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