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Mayors in Network. The New Power Driving Investment
In 2026, as the Mexico–United States relationship heats up over rules, compliance, migration, and competition for nearshoring, the Network of Women Mayors in Ibero-America has shifted from a symbolic initiative to an economic asset. The reason is straightforward: competitiveness is no longer decided only in ministries, but at the municipal level. Permits and timelines, everyday security, care systems, water, mobility, digitalization of procedures, public procurement, and th

Editorial
Apr 64 min read


The Battle for the City of the Future. Why Chile and Brazil Are Accelerating While Mexico Still Defines Its Smart Model
Talking about smart cities in Latin America is no longer about screens, sensors, and futuristic promises. It is about productivity, foreign trade, energy security, investment attraction, and the ability to integrate into global value chains connecting Mexico with the United States, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania. In a context of slower regional growth, the issue has moved beyond aesthetics: the IMF projects Latin America and the Caribbean will grow by 2.2% this year, with

Editorial
Apr 14 min read


Osaka and Querétaro. The quiet alliance that could redraw Mexico’s industrial map
The real connection between Osaka and Querétaro does not emerge from diplomatic rhetoric, but from an increasingly valuable productive alignment: both economies understand that modern competitiveness is built on advanced manufacturing, efficient logistics, and sector specialization. Osaka remains one of Japan’s major industrial hubs, combining research, materials processing, production, and assembly; its ecosystem reports around 1,000 annual collaborations between universitie

Editorial
Mar 313 min read


Alexandria - Progreso. The maritime route Mexico is taking too long to see
Africa is no longer a marginal note in the global conversation—it is becoming one of the century’s major geoeconomic bets. For Mexico, that shift matters more than public policy debates often admit. The combination of rapid urbanization, expanding trade, port infrastructure upgrades, and new logistics alliances is repositioning several African cities as hubs of business, innovation, and diplomacy. Within this landscape, Alexandria stands out for its historical weight and mode

Editorial
Mar 303 min read


Money Under the Microscope. Gender-Lens Financing That Can Win the New Economy
In 2026, international financing with a gender lens has stopped being a “corporate social responsibility” topic and become a hard lever of competitiveness. The reason is pragmatic: capital markets, development banks, and large investors are rewarding projects that measure impact , reduce risk, and raise productivity. Few agendas deliver returns as clearly as those that close gaps in labor participation, access to credit, and women’s economic security—especially in the places

Editorial
Mar 273 min read


Los Angeles–Guadalajara. The diaspora that could become a cultural and investment powerhouse
For years, the relationship between Los Angeles and Guadalajara was viewed almost exclusively as a story of migration, nostalgia, and remittances. That perspective is no longer sufficient. Today, we are looking at a binational corridor with the real capacity to generate value across four layers at once: identity, creative industries, cultural trade, and investment. This is no longer just about Mexicans in California and people from Guadalajara connected to their communities i

Editorial
Mar 234 min read


Mexico Accelerates Toward Europe. The Modernized Agreement That Could Redraw Trade, Investment, and Technology
The modernization of the agreement between Mexico and the European Union should no longer be seen as a delayed diplomatic formality, but as a strategic repositioning move. After both parties concluded negotiations in January 2025 and the European Commission formally presented proposals for its signing and conclusion in September 2025, the debate in 2026 has shifted from whether the agreement is beneficial to how quickly it can transform Mexico’s global integration. Mexico’s F

Editorial
Mar 194 min read


Mexico Between the Dragon and Washington. The New Power Struggle with China That Will Redefine Industrial Cities
Mexico’s evolving economic relationship with China can no longer be understood as a simple story of cheap imports or trade diplomacy. Today, it is a far more complex triangle: Beijing seeks to maintain its footprint in manufacturing, technology, and electric mobility; Washington aims to close any backdoor access to its market; and Mexico is trying to turn that tension into investment, jobs, and productive capacity without jeopardizing the upcoming USMCA review. This dynamic p

Editorial
Mar 183 min read


State 33 is ready. The Mexican Diaspora Becomes a Strategic Asset for Local Governments
For decades, the Mexican diaspora was largely viewed as a source of remittances and a consular issue. That perspective is now outdated. Today, Mexico’s local governments face a far broader asset: a transnational network of talent, investment, political influence, cultural consumption, and business connections that can strengthen the country’s position with partners across the Americas, Europe, and Africa. The scale of this phenomenon speaks for itself. In 2023, 10.9 million M

Editorial
Mar 174 min read


Tijuana – San Diego. The Border That Produces and Shakes Global Trade
The narrative around the Mexico–United States border is often trapped between migration, security, and political tension. But there is another story—quieter, yet far more strategic: Tijuana–San Diego as a single advanced production platform. It is no exaggeration to say that this strip now operates as a global factory where Mexico contributes industrial speed, technical talent, and export capacity, while California adds design, capital, services, technology, and market access

Editorial
Mar 173 min read


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