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Economy grows below expectations in September
In September, economic activity increased 1.2% over the same month last
year, according to the global indicator for economic activity (IGAE,
Indicador Global de la Actividad Económica). The actual reading was once
again below expectations, which had the economy growing at an annual rate
of 2.4%. According to seasonally adjusted data, the economy barely
expanded at all, with the economy “growing” 0.04% over the preceding
month. Nevertheless, the September reading was above the August
performance (-0.7% year-on-year) and all sectors improved over the
preceding month. Agriculture increased at an annual rate of 7.6% (August:
-1.6% yoy) and services added 2.0% over the same month last year (August:
+0.6% yoy). The industrial sector dropped 0.6% (August: -2.9% yoy).
Economy ailing along in third quarter despite record growth in United
States
Because of the below-expectations September reading, the third quarter
performance also remained significantly below estimates. In the third
quarter, the economy expanded by 0.4%. On an annual basis, this meagre
reading is still twice the 0.2% growth rate of the second quarter.
However, seasonal factors distort the result. According to seasonally
adjusted data, the economy actually contracted 0.36% over the preceding
quarter compared to 1.19% growth in the second quarter. While below
expectations, the third quarter slump confirms the underlying trend
discussed in previous editions of the LatinFocus Consensus Forecast,
namely, that the Mexican economy is lagging far behind the rebound
observed in the United States. In fact, the distance could hardly be
bigger. In November, third quarter growth estimates for the United States
were revised upwards from the already buoyant 7.3% to 8.2%. This
represents the highest growth rate in almost two decades and stands in
stark contrast to the ailing Mexican economy. What is most concerning,
however, is that the recovery in the United States is also seizing the
manufacturing sector, which so far had lagged behind the rest of the
economy. With the Mexican economy depending mostly on U.S. demand for
manufactures, this de-linking development is disconcerting as it suggests
that relocations of manufacturing activities to China are having a larger
effect on the overall economy than anticipated.
Manufacturing worst performing sector
The de-linking of U.S. and Mexican industries is reflected in
manufacturing. In the third quarter, manufacturing was the weakest sector
of the economy, as activity declined 3.6% over the same period last year.
The third quarter industry reading is better than the 4.6% contraction
observed in the second quarter. However, just as for the overall economy,
seasonal factors misrepresent actual developments. According to seasonally
adjusted data, the manufacturing industry contracted 1.1% over the
preceding quarter, following on a 0.1% decline in activity in the second
quarter. Moreover, the maquiladora industry, which mainly serves the U.S.
economy, deteriorated on an annual basis from a 0.6% contraction in the
second quarter to a 4.1% decline in the third. This suggests that the
manufacturing sector and the Mexican economy as a whole will continue to
face an adverse environment. The persistent slump in the manufacturing
industry is dragging down the entire industrial sector. In the third
quarter, industry as a whole, which also comprises mining, construction as
well as electricity, gas and water, declined 2.0% over the same quarter
last year, following a 3.0% contraction in the second quarter.
Services grow at slightly faster clip than in the second quarter
Services, in contrast, expanded 1.5% over the third quarter 2002, slightly
better than the 1.3% growth observed in the second quarter. The
improvement was notable in all sub-sectors except public services, which
contracted 0.4%, following on 0.9% growth in the second quarter. Financial
services experienced the strongest expansion, adding 4.2% over the same
quarter last year (Q2: +3.9% yoy) and transport, storage and
communications services gained 2.7% (Q2: +1.0% yoy), amid robust growth in
telephone services. Commerce, restaurants and hotels left the 0.3% decline
observed in the second quarter behind and expanded 0.4% in the third
quarter. According to the National Statistical Institute (INEGI), the
positive development was due mostly to higher domestic sales activities,
particularly in manufactures destined to external markets.
Outlook continues to deteriorate
With activity in the manufacturing industry subdued, the outlook for the
Mexican economy remains clouded. Consensus Forecast panellists sliced
another 0.3 percentage points from the fourth quarter growth forecast to
the current 2.0% growth. As a result, the full year projection also
dropped a notch compared to last month’s projection to 1.4%, continuing
the trend of deteriorating prospects that has characterised the whole
year. Moreover, the de-linking of the Mexican and U.S. economy is
overshadowing the outlook for 2004. Despite improving growth prospects for
the United States, the outlook for Mexican GDP growth dropped 0.2
percentage points compared to last month’s projection to 3.3%. |