The author explains that the Federal Government’s Infrastructure Investment Plan reflects an accurate diagnosis of the need to close structural gaps through schemes that combine public and private resources, while emphasizing that factors such as physical and legal security, energy, connectivity and water availability will be decisive in consolidating investor confidence.
The column also examines the role of capital markets in the recent economic strategy, including sovereign issuances and transactions carried out by state-owned productive enterprises, as signals of a coherent financial policy. Finally, it highlights that, in a global environment shaped by nearshoring, Mexico’s main challenge is not to generate promises, but to maintain consistency, execution and continuity in public policies in order to materialize growth opportunities.
Consult the full content of the Column here.