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Mexican Immigration Case Study

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The consequence of this process was that there was a lopsided development process in North America. The increasing capital mobility and the investments in the United States in the South of the Border were met with repressive efforts limiting the cross-border movements of the Mexicans. However, despite this limitation in mobility the establishment of NAFTA had led to an increase in the number of Mexicans seeking employment in the United States. The signing of the treaty also saw collective firms under neoliberalism in Mexico being privatized and the elimination of agricultural subsidies. This move increased the number of peasants who went out to seek opportunities elsewhere. The emigration pressures and the restrictive border policies affected the processes and patterns of Mexico-US migration (Douglas & Patricia, 3).
NAFTA is also seen as part of the neoliberal reforms linking the United States, Canada, and Mexico in a regime of free trade. The policy on the Mexican side aims at easing the entrance of foreign capital and …show more content…

The structural adjustments in the industry and the observed increase in competition led to the collapse of the sugar industry in Mexico as farmers turned into American based products to replace sugar. At a time when Mexico was transitioning into NAFTA, the United States undertook to convert into high-fructose corn syrup to absorb the overproduction. The influx of the high-fructose corn syrup into Mexico coupled with the low prices for sugar across the world was a big factor contributing to the collapse of the sugar industry in Mexico. NAFTA reduced the ability of Mexico to sell its surplus sugar across the border with an approximate of 1 million tons of sugar per year. The poor performance of the sugar industry led to some farmers abandoning their agrarian lands in sugar production and engaged in the production of blackberries (Donna,

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