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Searching For Modern Mexico: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Global Economy

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Published by Floricanto Press
www.FloricantoPress.com
www.LatinoBooks.Net
#LatinoBooks

Nathaniel Parish Flannery holds a Master's degree in International Affairs from Columbia University, has been researching and writing about Mexico since 2007, and published articles with Fortune, The Atlantic, Foreign Affairs, Outside, Boston Magazine, Pacific Standard, and The Guardian. He started as a Latin America analyst on Wall Street. He has written for several think tanks and research groups including the Americas Society / Council of the Americas, The Economist Intelligence Unit, IHS Global Insight, Albright Stonebridge Group, Oxford Business Group, and the Open Society Foundation.

While working on this book Nathaniel visited indigenous communities in the mountains of Chiapas and Oaxaca in southern Mexico, rode along with cartel-fighting vigilante gunmen in Michoacan, and sat down with taco chefs and CEOs in Guadalajara and Tijuana. He is a coffee aficionado, a mezcal drinker, an avocado devotee, and a long-time fan of beer and tacos. In Searching for Modern Mexico, he brings substantive economic and political analysis to Mexican life through intrepid fieldwork and narrative storytelling.

290 pages, Paperback

Published July 5, 2019

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Carlos.
2,709 reviews78 followers
July 26, 2022
This was an interesting exploration of the current political/economic realities in Mexico. Flannery uses 4 case studies (coffee in Chiapas, Mescal in Oaxaca, avocados in Michoacan and craft beer in Guadalajara) to examine the inequality and mistrust of political institutions that undermine the potential of Mexico’s economy. In each case he presents the difficulties faced by the people trying to make a living and the lack of governmental support in dealing with things like organized crime, small business development and monopolistic practices. He interweaves other factors, like language and ethnic barriers in southern Mexico, or the abuse of militant unions in stifling reform, to give the reader a complex and nuanced view of the paradoxes that seem to crop up when studying Mexico. It was definitely an interesting work that is well worth the read and was welcoming of an uninformed but curious reader.
Profile Image for Gregory.
Author 18 books12 followers
January 13, 2020
I enjoyed Nathaniel Parish Flannery's Searching for Modern Mexico: Dispatches From the Front Lines of the New Global Economy (2019). The bulk of the book is really about how rural Mexico is doing on the front lines of the global economy. And for the entire book, if you're a small business owner, how can you survive? This means a varying combination of opportunity, dislocation, structural constraints, and violence.

The first chapters look at rural Mexico: coffee in Chiapas, mezcal in Oaxaca, and avocado in Michoacán. Flannery digs deep into the stories of specific people, their businesses, and the regional context, which often includes fear. Not surprisingly, Michoacán is the most extreme, with local gunmen creating a fragile "peace" by force against cartels. But there is also economic uncertainty based on the fact that local entrepreneurs see how the Mexican government has done nothing to help them integrate into the global economy. There is a lot of demand for these products in the U.S., but especially in Chiapas, farmers are scattered and don't know how to get government assistance, either economic or technical.

The Mexican state is absent, more at least mostly so. It's not helping the southern part of the country develop economically and it's not providing anywhere close to adequate security despite claiming to, so informality reigns. Further, corruption becomes the norm.

The avocado chapter reminded me of the Mexico trip I took in 9th grade (in the mid-1980s) that included visiting Uruapan, in Michoacán. Now if you do a news search for Uruapan you get story after story about grisly murders, and U.S. schools are not sending their kids there.

Then he shifts to beer in the larger cities of Guadalajara and Tijuana, a conscious choice to highlight the inequalities that still characterize Mexico. He briefly adds the taco vendors that feed the maquila industry to show the two-tiered nature of the economy. This is where we see that the Mexican state is also failing to facilitate financing, as the major banks are owned by billionaires and are not interested in funding entrepreneurs. Those billionaires also control the market, so that Oxxo convenience stores (which are everywhere) and supermarket chains have exclusive contracts with giant beer companies that shut out local producers. Monopolies strangle the economy.

Flannery shows the challenges all these entrepreneurs face and it would be really interesting to follow up in 5-10 years. Could they advance in the ways they hoped? Did structural conditions wear them out? In short, how much can the Mexican government do for them?

From http://weeksnotice.blogspot.com/2020/...
Profile Image for Theodore Kinni.
Author 11 books39 followers
October 2, 2019
Terrific, first-hand reporting on Mexico's "brutally unequal" economy told thru three of its most familar products: coffee, avocados, and mezcal.
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