The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - ¡Viva Chihuahua! - The Future of Mexico || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: November 29, 2024I'm overlooking the city of Chihuahua, Mexico as I record today's video. This city is just one of many that is preparing for a post-China world, and you can probably hear all that preparation going on... in the background... Join the Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihan Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/viva-chihuahua
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Hey everybody, Peter Zine here coming to you from Chihuahua City in central Chihuahua in Mexico.
I just finished a community development presentation, which are some of my favorite,
because it allows me to kind of crawl inside of an economy and look at it from the inside.
And I thought this would be a great backdrop to talk about the future of American industrial development,
specifically in terms of what we're going to do as the Chinese system breaks down.
Right now, the Chinese produce about half of all manufactured goods by value in the world.
and as the Chinese demographic bomb collapses and implodes the entire economic system,
we're going to have to find alternatives.
And places like Chihuahua City, which are under massive construction right now
to help compensate for the coming shortage,
are one of the few places that actually are a good fit for the United States.
Not only do we have NAFTA and NAFTA 2, which was negotiated by former president,
now future President Trump, so we know it's something he's broadly okay with.
There's a proximity issue.
Also, a lot of this hard work has already been done.
The northern Mexican states all already trade more with the United States than they do with the rest of Mexico.
In many ways, they've already become integrated into our economic system.
But each of them has their own story.
Places like Monterey or Tijuana or Perez are directly across the border from places like the Texas Triangle or San Diego or El Paso,
and so have a more traditional integration story
where products go back and forth and back and forth
doing whatever finishing work needs to be done.
Here in Chihuahua City, it's a little different.
Chihuahua is a landlocked state,
and the Chihuahua City is right in the middle of it,
and it's a four-hour drive just to connect city of size,
and then like a 12-hour drive from there to get anywhere else.
So this is not a city that can integrate in the traditional sense.
They have to do most of the work themselves,
which means they do go into different industries,
normally when you have a place in say Monterey or Juarez,
you're going to bring in a degree of American managers
and especially American technology
in order to plug in labor in the local Mexican community
to whatever is across the border in the United States.
Here that's not the case.
Here they have to move up the value-added chain
to do more value-added themselves
and send more finished products and more finished components
onto whoever the final finisher in the manufacturing chain
or final consumer happens to be.
So while they do things like automotive, which of course the Mexicans are great at,
they also do a lot of aerospace, and I'd argue that the facilities here are in many ways
more technologically advanced than what Airbus uses in most of Europe.
They also design mid-tier semiconductors, meaning this is one of the few places of Mexico that actually
has a knowledge economy.
And when it comes to things like semiconductors, they don't have the population to have a fab plant
for themselves, but they take the semi-finished semiconductors that come from a place like, say, Phoenix,
And they do the testing and the packaging and incorporate them into intermediate products,
which is a much higher value add process than a mere fab facility.
Put it all together, and Chihuahua City not only has the highest productivity output per hour of input of labor in Mexico.
It's above that of about a third of the American states,
and it's above that of every single Canadian province.
So while we prepare for a post-China world, places like Chihuahua are,
aren't only hitting the ground running, they already have a lot of the infrastructure in place.
And the construction you're hearing is new industrial parks going up left and right.
