By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, September 27, 2024
If you want to watch an opportunity slipping away—look
south.
On October 1, Claudia Sheinbaum will
succeed Andrés Manuel López Obrador as president of Mexico—one illiberal
left-wing populist taking over the reins of power from another illiberal
left-wing populist. Sheinbaum is an avowed enemy of the reforms and
liberalization begun at the turn of the century by former President Ernesto
Zedillo, who recently
warned that Mexico is sliding into “tyranny.”
For most of the 20th century, Mexico was a
single-party authoritarian state, without real elections or real political
competition. Until a few decades ago, the president, every member of the
Senate, and every state governor belonged to the same party—the Institutional
Revolutionary Party—which also controlled the economy and managed elections.
Mario Vargas Llosa famously
described Mexico in those years as la dictadura perfecta—“the
perfect dictatorship.” Sheinbaum wants to recapture some of that dictatorial
perfection, reasserting state control over the economy, putting
the judiciary under political control, expanding the domestic role of the
military, etc. Asked by the Financial
Times about such niceties as constitutional checks and balances,
Sheinbaum played the good populist: “The people should decide,” she declared.
Ah, yes, the people: those inconvenient hunks of
meat in whose name every rapacious and self-aggrandizing autocrat who has ever
walked this good green Earth purports to rule.
I like Mexico and have spent a fair bit of time there.
One of the most useful services the country provides is reminding Americans to
be grateful for Canada. And I am not joking about that: Canada is a prosperous,
decently governed, largely quiet country, famously polite and deferential, a
fact that sometimes obscures how tough the Canadians are and what important
allies they have been. As a share of its population, Canada’s casualties in
World War I were nearly 10 times those of the United States.
But Canada is a great neighbor to have in peacetime, too,
with a GDP per capita nearly 30 percent higher than the average in the European
Union as
the International Monetary Fund runs the numbers, a richer country than
Germany or the United Kingdom, and a significantly richer country than France
or Japan. And that isn’t merely a statistical quirk associated with having a
relatively small population: Canada’s GDP/capita is higher than that of the
United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong, or Israel. Canada—not China—is the largest
trading partner for the United States.
Do you know what would make the United States radically
better off: Another Canada, one to the south, where there’s sunshine and
beaches and relative proximity to vital U.S. interests in Central and South
America.
But Mexico is not going to be that prosperous, happy,
decent country. Not without a lot of U.S. help and, to put it bluntly, U.S.
interference—which Sheinbaum
et al. do not want.
Mexico has done well economically in the past four
decades or so. Mexico’s real GDP/capita today is
nearly four times what it was in 1980. Trade has been good for
Mexico. U.S. investment—and other foreign investment—has been good for Mexico.
But the lesson from Mexico is the same as the lesson from China: Prosperity is
not enough. Economic liberalization is a necessary condition for thriving, but
it is not sufficient. Unlike China, Mexico has undergone meaningful internal
political reforms that have paid real dividends, but it has not been
enough.
The American political conversation treats Mexico almost
exclusively as an economic competitor that inconveniently thrives in areas that
put it into competition with politically sensitive U.S. interests (such as
automobile manufacturing) and as a source of immigrants who are, if I may be
forgiven for putting it plainly, mostly unwanted—the consensus there is much
more bipartisan than many of our progressive friends seem to think.
But there is more to Mexico than the Nissan Sentra
(headquarters in Yokohama, factory in Aguascalientes) and the border. And
chaotic and problematic as the border is—and that is a longstanding failure for
a string of American presidents, most definitely including Donald Trump—that
chaos doesn’t begin at the Rio Grande. We don’t have a lot of Canadian economic
refugees looking for work in Home Depot parking lots, and a Mexico that was
more prosperous, more stable, more decent, more liberal, more integrated into
North America, etc., would offer less difficulty at the border. In that
respect, we must also consider that Mexico is an entrepôt for economic
emigrants from other countries seeking to enter the United States. It would be
nice if Mexico were more help with that problem, but Mexico currently lacks
both the incentives and the capacity to be the kind of partner we need on that
front.
I am tempted to write that what the United States needs
is a kind of Marshall Plan for Mexico. But that isn’t quite right: What the
United States needs is a Marshall Plan for Mexico … 30 years ago. “Better late
than never” is a cliché, not a self-evident truth applicable in all
situations.
We have a good idea what a Donald Trump administration
would do in response to the mischief that Claudia Sheinbaum and her allies are
going to make, which is the same thing Trump did vis-à-vis Mexico last time
around: bluster and then basically nothing. What might a Kamala Harris
administration do? Harris will
be at the border today—if she has some big ideas, this is the time to make
them plain.
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