Today that narrative is changing. Mexico’s advantage is no longer defined only by wages, but by its ability to support complex supply chains, respond quickly to disruptions, and provide skilled technical talent close to the United States.
As global supply chains reorganize and companies rethink production strategies, Mexico is increasingly positioned as a manufacturing, engineering, and innovation platform within North America. The country is strengthening its domestic supplier base and expanding industrial ecosystems that support both production and technical development.
The idea of Mexico as a "low‑cost" manufacturing destination has been reshaped by a combination of monetary, regulatory, and fiscal changes.
In 2021, the Mexican peso averaged about 19.6 pesos per dollar. More recently, it has remained closer to 17 pesos per dollar — an appreciation of roughly 10%.
For multinational companies operating with budgets in U.S. dollars, this stronger currency has increased local operating costs, including payroll, utilities, and domestic logistics. Rather than being a temporary shift, this reality has pushed companies to move beyond reliance on a weak currency and instead compete through operational efficiency and modernization of industrial assets.
At the same time, labor policy has introduced several consecutive increases to the minimum wage, gradually changing cost structures across industrial plants. While Mexico remains competitive compared to the United States, the advantage is no longer based primarily on low‑skilled labor. Instead, it increasingly relies on a technically trained workforce whose real wages have grown about 10% annually in key industrial regions.
This wage pressure is combined with a stricter fiscal environment. Companies operating under the maquiladora regime (IMMEX) have seen adjustments to transfer‑pricing methodologies, particularly through the "Safe Harbor" scheme that establishes minimum taxable profits of 6.5% over costs and expenses.
As a result, competitiveness increasingly depends on the ability to manage operational complexity. Errors in invoicing, origin documentation, or customs classification are no longer minor administrative issues — they represent significant financial risks in an environment of stronger regulatory oversight.
Mexico is therefore being chosen less for payroll savings and more for its speed of response and supply‑chain resilience in the face of global disruptions.
Under the current administration, Plan Mexico represents one of the most significant industrial transformation strategies in the country’s modern economic history, signaling a shift away from the traditional assembly‑focused model.
The plan seeks to reduce dependence on imported low‑value components and strengthen domestic supplier networks capable of supporting technological sovereignty.
The government has set ambitious goals, including raising domestic content in public procurement to 50% and ensuring that sectors such as textiles, footwear, and furniture source at least half of their inputs locally.
The strategy also links fiscal incentives directly to knowledge transfer and the integration of Mexican small and medium‑sized enterprises (SMEs) into global value chains.
Plan Mexico also includes large‑scale public and mixed investment totaling approximately 5.6 trillion pesos during the current administration, with the goal of increasing total national investment to 25% of GDP.
These investments are focused on building the physical and digital infrastructure needed to support advanced manufacturing, and are concentrated in eight strategic sectors:
| Plan Mexico Pillar | Target or Objective |
|---|---|
| Domestic Content | 15% increase in national participation across automotive, aerospace, and electronics supply chains |
| SME Integration | Ensure that 30% of SMEs gain access to preferential financing |
| Healthcare Sovereignty | National production of vaccines and specialized medical equipment |
| Technical Talent | Additional 150,000 engineers and technical professionals trained annually |
| Digitalization | National digital platform aimed at reducing permitting timelines from 2.6 years to roughly 1 year |
These targets illustrate how Mexico’s industrial policy is shifting from simple export manufacturing toward building domestic capabilities, technical talent, and stronger regional supply chains.
Mexico’s industrial progress is increasingly visible through regional clusters that have reached levels of maturity comparable to leading manufacturing hubs around the world. These ecosystems show how Mexico’s value proposition has evolved from basic manufacturing to collaboration, engineering capability, and complex production.
Mexico’s new role in North America is becoming clearer through initiatives such as Plan Mexico 2025–2030 and the development of industrial clusters like Querétaro and Tijuana.
However, moving from assembly to innovation does not happen automatically. Companies need strong industrial environments that support manufacturing, engineering, and research activities.
The traditional low‑cost model is gradually fading. In its place, a new stage is emerging — one shaped by efficient operations, skilled talent, and stronger control over technology within North American supply chains.
A Mexican government program that allows companies to temporarily import materials and components duty‑free for manufacturing and export.
A tax methodology that establishes minimum profit margins for maquiladora operations to ensure compliance with international transfer‑pricing regulations.
A geographic concentration of companies, suppliers, universities, and institutions that specialize in a specific industry, improving productivity and innovation.
The relocation of manufacturing or supply‑chain activities closer to the final consumer market, particularly within the North American region.
Yes. While labor costs have increased, Mexico’s competitiveness increasingly comes from supply‑chain resilience, proximity to the U.S. market, and technical talent.
The strategy seeks to strengthen domestic suppliers, increase national content, and position Mexico as a hub for advanced manufacturing and technological development.
Clusters provide access to specialized suppliers, skilled labor, and research institutions that improve productivity and innovation.
Gradually, yes. The country is expanding into higher‑value activities such as engineering, product development, and technology integration.