Mexico's auto industry has benefitted enormously from the
country's membership in the North American Free Trade Agreement,
the head of an industry chamber said. "It's one of the sectors
that has most benefitted," said Cesar Flores, executive vice
president of Mexican auto industry association AMIA. The U.S., Mexico
and Canada signed the Nafta in late 1992.
The agreement has opened Mexico's auto industry up to $20
billion in investment that has streamed in just during the last six
years, and most major auto companies have manufacturing centers in the
country, AMIA said. Toyota Motor Corp., one of the last to arrive, broke
ground on its first Mexican plant earlier this year. Exports, 95 percent
of which head to the U.S. and Canada, have grown rapidly.
In 1990, Mexico exported around 180,000 vehicles, whereas in the
first 11 months of 2002 manufacturers in Mexico have sent 1.23 million
units abroad. More than four models, including the new Volkswagen
Beetle, are exclusively manufactured in Mexico. The industry contributes
about 2.4 percent of Mexico's $600 billion gross domestic product,
AMIA said.
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