Monday, December 30

Claudia Sheinbaum is set to make history when she is sworn in as Mexico’s first woman president, while inheriting challenges to quell violence from organised crime and reduce a hefty deficit in Latin America’s No. 2 economy.

Sheinbaum, the 62-year-old scientist and former mayor of Mexico City, will be inaugurated at a ceremony in Mexico’s Congress on Tuesday for a six-year term lasting until 2030.

Political watchers and analysts predict she will urgently look to calm investors since the passing of a controversial judicial reform pushed by outgoing President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Markets will be looking to Sheinbaum for “a predictable and investment-friendly policy and regulatory framework,” said Alberto Ramos, head of Goldman Sachs Latin American economic research.

“Disciplined management of the budget and of state-owned enterprises, progress on public security, and safe-guarding the integrity of key institutions will be key to preserving market sentiment and sovereign debt ratings,” Ramos said, emphasising the importance of state energy firm Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex).

The November presidential elections in the United States, Mexico’s largest trading partner, could add to market volatility, especially if former President Donald Trump, who has vowed to increase tariffs on Mexican goods, wins.

Sheinbaum’s government will also present its first budget before November 15, which is expected to be highly scrutinised for clues on whether Sheinbaum will make good on commitments to reduce the fiscal deficit to 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product from 5.9 per cent, where it is predicted to close the year.

Lopez Obrador, whose six-year term began in 2018, managed to double Mexico’s minimum wage, reduce poverty and unemployment, broaden the base of social programs and oversee a previous strengthening of the peso. Touting these successes boosted his popularity and helped usher Sheinbaum, his protégé, to a landslide victory in the June elections.

Sheinbaum, however, who has promised “continuity with change,” will inherit the largest budget deficit since the 1980s and lagging economic growth.

Experts have said Mexico’s economy will require a tax reform to increase revenues, though Sheinbaum has said publicly she does not plan a sweeping tax overhaul.

Instead, she has said she will pursue other options, including improving the efficiency of tax collection at customs.

https://thewest.com.au/politics/mexico-about-to-swear-in-its-first-woman-president-c-16246841

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