Latin America This Week: July 18, 2023
from Latin America’s Moment and Latin America Studies Program

Latin America This Week: July 18, 2023

A new conservative government in Spain would keep Latin America on the EU agenda; falling U.S.-China trade makes Mexico top U.S. partner; Guerrero’s violence spurred by poverty, corruption, and shifting U.S. drug demand.
Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and Spain’s current Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attend an opening speech at the EU-LAC 2023 Business Round Table in Brussels, Belgium, July 17, 2023.
Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and Spain’s current Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attend an opening speech at the EU-LAC 2023 Business Round Table in Brussels, Belgium, July 17, 2023. Yves Herman/Reuters

A new conservative government in Spain would keep Latin America on the EU agenda. Barring an upset, Spain’s political complexion will shift right after July 23 elections, bringing in a moderate-right Popular Party (Partido Popular; PP) and far-right Vox governing coalition. Both PP and Vox have long-standing ties to Latin American parties and politicians, albeit on the right. Vox has partnered with Brazil’s Eduardo Bolsonaro (son of former President Jair Bolsonaro), Colombia’s Democratic Center (Centro Democrático) and various figures on the Peruvian right and far-right in a campaign against “globalists” and progressive policies on social issues, like abortion and LGBTQ rights. The PP has built links to more moderate, right-of-center parties and politicians in the region. The new government will take over not just Spain but the rotating presidency of the European Council for the next six months. Latin America has already been announced as a priority: Spain’s current leadership promising to strengthen supply chains with Latin America and push to ratify the EU-Mercosur trade deal. Expect this focus to continue under the new leadership.

Mexico becomes top U.S. trading partner at start of 2023

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Falling U.S.-China trade makes Mexico top U.S. trading partner. Mexico became the top U.S. trading partner in the first four months of 2023, finally edging out Canada. Recent graphs from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas show that Mexico’s new title has more to do with the steep decline in U.S.-China trade than any boom in cross-border exchanges with the United States. The decline started in the wake of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s (now President Joe Biden’s) tariffs in 2018, which cover some two-thirds of all trade. A surge in demand for Chinese-made laptops, masks, medical supplies, and home improvement products with the onset of COVID-19 in 2020 led to a brief recovery. But the weight of tariffs, export controls, and sky-high container costs reverted China’s gains in just months. Given hardening geopolitics, this commercial distancing will continue.

Guerrero’s violence spurred by poverty, corruption, and shifting U.S. drug demand. Violence erupted in the Mexican state of Guerrero on July 10, when thousands of protesters stormed the state capital, Chilpancingo. Analysts speculated that the mass mobilization was driven by a criminal group, the Squirrels (los Ardillos), as demonstrators demanded the release of two recently arrested leaders of the group. The unrest is now subsiding but it sheds light on the influence, control, and political power of criminal groups in states like Guerrero. It reveals the destabilizing effects of shifting drug demand in the United States for economies and societies far away. The rising use of fentanyl and other synthetic drugs in the United States has led opium prices to plummet, destroying the livelihoods of tens of thousands in Mexico’s premier poppy-growing state.

More on:

Latin America

Spain

European Union

Mexico

Corruption

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