Articles

Revisiting NAFTA: Reality for Mexico’s Small Corn Farmers

Broholm, Sergio

As part of its attempt to modernize the economy and encourage private investment, the Mexican government under President Salinas de Gortari negotiated provisions in the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that were designed to ease Mexico’s corn sector into free trade with the United States. Most of these provisions and promises of domestic reform were not implemented or carried out to their full potential, leading to a wide gap between how experts publicly predicted small-scale corn farmers would adjust to trade liberalization and how they actually have. These discrepancies have had harmful effects on areas ranging from the environment to income equality to Foreign Direct Investment.

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Title
The Journal of Politics and Society

More About This Work

Academic Units
Helvidius Group
Economics
History
Publisher
Helvidius Group of Columbia University
Published Here
February 12, 2014