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Logistics Will Be the True Engine of Growth in Latin America
Latin America is not losing competitiveness because of a lack of investment. It is losing it because it does not know how to move that investment. That is the uncomfortable paradox few want to acknowledge: growth exists, capital is arriving, yet logistics—the invisible infrastructure that connects everything—remains the weakest link. For years, the region’s economic narrative revolved around manufacturing, natural resources, and macroeconomic stability. Today, that conversa

Editorial
Apr 224 min read


Australia and Mexico: the “Zero-Waste” Alliance That Could Redefine Trade in 2026
In 2026, the circular economy stopped being a green slogan and became a hard competitiveness issue: whoever secures materials, recycles and reuses better, and turns waste into industrial inputs wins on costs, resilience, and market access. For Mexico—deeply embedded in North American manufacturing—the question is no longer whether it should circularize its economy, but with whom it can accelerate. Australia emerges as a less obvious yet strategically powerful partner: it comb

Editorial
Feb 194 min read


Border 2026: When Migration Policy Decides Who Works… and Who Wins
In 2026, the Mexico–United States border ceased to be merely a humanitarian barometer and once again became an economic control board. This is no exaggeration: every adjustment to admissions, asylum processing, deportations, or legal entry pathways has an immediate effect on labor availability, operating costs, and the competitiveness of the industries that sustain the border region. And when labor moves—or is immobilized—so do the supply chains that connect Mexico with its t

Editorial
Feb 63 min read


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