The avocado moratorium and the hybrid regime in Mexico

Published 2022년 2월 15일

Tridge summary

Mexico's democracy ranking has been downgraded by The Economist from 'flawed democracy' to 'hybrid regime' due to President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's efforts to increase executive power and claims of electoral authority bias. The country's democratic values and civil liberties are deemed low, with journalistic threats and cartel involvement adding to the concern. The U.S. has imposed a moratorium on avocado imports from Mexico, attributed to cartel issues, impacting the avocado industry's dynamics. This situation highlights Mexico's paradox of authoritarianism and lack of control over its territory, affecting the U.S. avocado industry and consumer prices in Mexico.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

I apparently made a misstatement in yesterday’s column.I referred to Mexico as “a full-blown democracy.”It turns out that I was wrong—at least if you go by the Economist’s ranking of levels of democracy across the world. It has recently demoted Mexico from “flawed democracy” to “hybrid regime,” right in between Honduras and El Salvador.The reason? “Mexico’s president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador [ALMO], continued his efforts to concentrate power in the executive branch. In August, López Obrador said he would seek a total reform of the country’s electoral authorities, considering them biased against his government, and said they are at the service of anti-democracy,” The Economist noted.On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 at the bottom (e.g., North Korea) and 10 at the top (Norway comes closest), Mexico fell by .5 points in 2021 to 5.57.The ranking is based on five criteria: electoral process and pluralism, functioning of government, political participation, political culture, and civil ...

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