Coverage:
1–15 December 2025
• Policy stance is turning more interventionist: higher effective protection via tariff legislation and a step-up in statutory labour costs via the 2026 minimum wage decision.
• Inflation re-accelerated in November: the headline remains within range, but core is still firm complicating the case for rapid monetary easing.
• Real economy signals are mixed: industry is a two-speed story (construction stronger; manufacturing softer), whilst formal employment hit a new record.
• Services remain a stabiliser: tourism printed a record October and a solid year-end holiday outlook, even as remittances softened—adding nuance to the consumption narrative.
1) Trade policy: Congress advances tariff increases on non-FTA imports
On 11 December, Mexico’s Congress moved forward with changes to the General Law of Import and Export Taxes (LIGIE), raising tariffs (reported at 5%–50%) across a large set of products imported from countries without a trade agreement—framed as support for domestic production and a response to trade imbalances, with implementation expected from 1 January 2026.
For corporates, this is an immediate landed-cost and sourcing event, increasing compliance complexity in the near term while creating incentives for supplier re-routing, origin optimisation and (where feasible) local substitution.
2) Labour policy: Minimum wage reset for 2026 raises the cost floor
On 3 December, CONASAMI agreed a 13% increase in the general minimum wage (from MXN 278.80 to MXN 315.04 per day) and a 5% increase in the Northern Border Free Zone (from MXN 419.88 to MXN 440.87 per day), effective 1 January 2026.
The practical implication is not only a higher statutory floor, but potential wage-ladder compression, higher services costs and renewed focus on productivity, workforce design and price pass-through capacity—especially in labour-intensive sectors such as hospitality, retail, logistics and light manufacturing.
3) Inflation: November prints higher; core remains sticky
INEGI reported November CPI at 3.80% y/y (with 0.66% m/m), whilst core inflation registered 4.43% y/y—a reminder that the disinflation path remains uneven, particularly in services.
For decision-makers, the key issue is second-round risk into early 2026 as labour costs rise and trade measures potentially lift selected input prices, reinforcing the likelihood of a cautious (rather than aggressive) easing profile.
4) Industry: October IMAI rebounds month-on-month, but remains down year-on-year
INEGI’s IMAI showed industrial activity up 0.7% m/m in October (seasonally adjusted) but down 0.7% y/y, consistent with a “two-speed” industrial cycle.
Construction has been carrying momentum more than manufacturing. For investors and operators, this keeps the focus on where growth is actually being generated (projects, infrastructure and services linkages) versus where margin and volume pressure could persist (export-sensitive and inventory-heavy manufacturing segments).
5) Labour market: Formal employment reaches a new record (IMSS)
Official communications reported that, as at 30 November 2025, Mexico reached 22,837,768 formal jobs affiliated with IMSS (a record level), with a high share of permanent posts.
This matters because a resilient formal labour base supports credit quality and consumption stability, but it also tightens the operating environment for employers precisely as the statutory wage floor rises—making productivity and retention strategy a more material component of 2026 execution.
6) Remittances: October declines year-on-year, tempering the consumption tailwind
Banxico-reported figures cited in financial press indicate that October remittances totalled roughly US$5.635bn (-1.7% y/y), while cumulative inflows for January–October 2025 were about US$51.3bn (-5.1% y/y).
Given remittances’ role as a consumption backstop in multiple states and income brackets, the signal for corporates is not necessarily demand weakness everywhere, but greater regional dispersion and higher sensitivity for mass-market categories.
7) Tourism: Record October performance and a constructive year-end holiday outlook
SECTUR reported a record 8.30 million international visitors in October 2025 and an associated economic inflow of roughly US$2.44bn.
It later projected 4.96 million hotel-room tourists for the 20 December 2025 – 11 January 2026 holiday period (+5.3% vs the prior year period).
Taken together, tourism continues to function as a services stabiliser into year-end, with direct implications for airlines, hospitality, destination retail and local employment—although profitability is increasingly shaped by labour costs and operating frictions such as capacity, infrastructure and security perception.
MexStrategy View (brief)
Mexico’s investable story became more nuanced: policy is simultaneously lifting cost floors (minimum wage) and signalling greater protection for domestic industry (tariffs), whilst macro conditions remain manageable but not frictionless.
November inflation re-accelerated and core stayed elevated, and the real economy continues to split between stronger construction/services and softer manufacturing.
With formal employment at a record and tourism printing both a record October and a supportive holiday outlook, the near-term base case remains resilient.
However, 2026 execution will be won by firms that can actively manage input costs (including tariffs and wages), maintain compliance discipline, and protect margins through pricing, productivity and operational redesign.
This newsletter is provided by MexStrategy LLC for general informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, legal or tax advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security, instrument, or asset. The content reflects MexStrategy’s views as of the publication date and is based on publicly available information that MexStrategy believes to be reliable; however, we do not represent or warrant its accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Any forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain, and actual outcomes may differ materially. Readers should conduct their own independent analysis and consult qualified professional advisers before making any business, investment, or policy decisions. MexStrategy and its affiliates may have business relationships or positions related to the topics discussed.