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dc.contributor.authorVelasco-Yáñez, David
dc.date.accessioned2015-07-10T18:38:18Z
dc.date.available2015-07-10T18:38:18Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationVelasco-Yáñez, D. (2012). Jorge Enrique in Mexico: will he leave his home?, en Gasper F. Lo Biondo, S.J. y Rita M. Rodriguez, (coord.), Development, Values, and the Meaning of Globalization: A Grassroots Approach. Woodstock Theological Center. Washington, DC: Georgetown University.es
dc.identifier.isbn978-0-578-09942-2
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11117/2323
dc.descriptionThis book was born out of the hope that Jesuits around the world could build a network based on shared experience of the plight of poor people caught in the throes of economic globalization. It is addressed to all those who work in any way to help achieve sustainable development and confront the challenges of deep-seated poverty. The book, which features eleven people whose lives were altered by globalization, is the result of the work done in the Global Economy and Cultures (GEC) project at the Woodstock Theological Center (WTC) at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. in collaboration with Jesuit social centers from around the world.This chapter: Jorge Enrique’s life changed dramatically when the tire factory where he worked, Euzkadi, shut down. Located in El Salto, Mexico, the factory was owned by a multinational company and in the past had had a strong labor union. It was a very good job for Jorge Enrique, with better wages and benefits than many other places in Mexico. But in 2001, the owners said that Mexico’s new lower import duties allowed cheaper foreign tires to enter the country and they couldn’t compete without concessions from labor. Now in his thirties, Jorge Enrique is involved with his union’s efforts to force the factory’s reopening. He wonders if he should go back to work in the United States, which he did when he was younger. It would be easy for him, because he has a “green card” − a legal entry visa. The old Mexican economic system crashed in 1982 under the weight of mounting international debt and fiscal deficits. It was a closed economy; domestic production was protected by high import tariffs and major industries were often in government hands. The immediate response to the crisis included severe economic austerity measures backed by loans from the IMF. This was followed by economic restructuring, particularly after 1988, marked by privatizations and liberalization of international trade and investment. Over the next decade, these measures were supported by Mexico’s implementing the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations and, in 1996, signing the North American Free Trade Area Agreement (NAFTA) with the U.S. and Canada. Mexico’s economic restructuring affected El Salto. Foreign companies made new investments − Continental Tire of Germany bought Euzkadi − and old plants, like the textile factory where Jorge Enrique’s father worked, had to close. In the country as a whole, the already ongoing migration to the U.S. accelerated as agriculture’s contribution to the economy fell by nearly two-thirds, down to 4 percent of GDP by 2000.es
dc.description.sponsorshipITESO, A.C.es
dc.language.isoenges
dc.publisherWoodstock Theological Centeres
dc.rights.urihttp://quijote.biblio.iteso.mx/licencias/CC-BY-NC-2.5-MX.pdfes
dc.subjectMovimientos Socialeses
dc.subjectNeoliberalismoes
dc.subjectGlobalizaciónes
dc.subjectEuzkadies
dc.subjectMigraciónes
dc.subjectSocial Movementses
dc.subjectNeoliberalismes
dc.subjectGlobalizationes
dc.subjectMigrationes
dc.subjectPovertyes
dc.subjectPobrezaes
dc.titleJorge Enrique in Mexico: will he leave his home?es
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartes
rei.revisorr
rei.peerreviewedYeses


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