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Mexico Has Money Ready for Expatriate Investment

More news stories on Mexico and Latin America

Mariana Alvarado, Arizona Daily Star (Tucson), April 2, 2009

Hoping to entice expatriates to invest in start-up businesses south of the border, the Mexican government is putting up more than $8 million this year to help them open a store, bakery or other small business in their hometowns.

Known as the Productive Assets Project, Mexico’s aim is to help its citizens living in the U.S. get a project up and running with the hope that if expatriates return to Mexico, they have a sound business.

The government will match up to $21,500 to help start a home-based business or even construction on a shop, Martha Esquivel, of the Mexican social development office in Los Angeles, said in a telephone interview.

To be eligible, expatriates must be Mexican citizens and members of a committee of countrymen living abroad. There are no restrictions on the type of business that can qualify for the funding, Esquivel said.

The financing is not a loan, said Esquivel. The interest-free government award doesn’t have to be repaid and doesn’t require collateral.

Instead, the money awarded by the government must be reinvested in an expatriate club within three years, Esquivel said.

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Original article

Email Mariana Alvarado at malvarado@azstarnet.com.

(Posted on April 7, 2009)

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Comments

1 — ranger wrote at 9:13 PM on April 7:

“Hoping to entice expatriates to invest in start-up businesses south of the border, the Mexican government is putting up more than $8 million this year to help them open a store, bakery or other small business in their hometowns.”

I don’t believe a word of it. Mexico was too backward and self-absorbed in drug cartel payoffs to give up any of it to peons, and now that they’re crashing economically with the rest of the world they won’t have even a nickel to throw anybody’s way. For certain they won’t give up their bribes.

Senor politician will continue to drive his big, expensive vehicle, with his mistress on the side, pocketing thousands from the drug gangs, so he has no interest in helping someone he considers a complete fool for coming back to a place that can’t even provide potable drinking water for its peons, let alone money for business start up.

Look for Mexico to be overtaken by the drug gangs in the next couple of years. Since most of the politicos are on drug payrolls right now, the only change we might notice is a new El Presidente and a few new faces in government circles.


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