Mexico’s Public Debt Could Reach 58% of GDP by 2030, Says Banco Base
A new forecast warns that Mexico’s debt burden may grow significantly without fiscal reform, raising concerns about long-term sustainability.
A new forecast warns that Mexico’s debt burden may grow significantly without fiscal reform, raising concerns about long-term sustainability.
An uptick in core inflation underscores persistent demand-side pressures, complicating the outlook for monetary easing and squeezing household consumption.
Mexico’s 13th-place global economic ranking underscores macroeconomic stability and sets the stage for President Sheinbaum’s fiscal and growth agenda.
The World Bank has lowered its 2026 GDP forecast for Mexico, citing structural weaknesses that could limit the country’s long-term ...
As Mexico enters the new fiscal year, persistent structural weaknesses and limited policy space weigh on its growth prospects.
Forecasts suggest Mexico’s economy may decouple from the US cycle by 2026, reshaping monetary coordination and macroeconomic policy assumptions.
Mexico’s growth remains reliant on external demand and tight monetary policy, underscoring structural vulnerabilities in its economic model.
Despite slowing growth and persistent inflation, Mexico’s economy remains relatively stable amid global and domestic pressures.
Revised projections from Banxico underscore the need for policy alignment as inflation lingers and fiscal pressures mount.
A stronger trade balance and resilient remittances helped Mexico swing to a current account surplus in the third quarter.
© 2025 Mexico Affairs — a publication of Endow Media Group. All rights reserved.
© 2025 Mexico Affairs — a publication of Endow Media Group. All rights reserved.