The U.S.-Mexico Futures Forum
Event Series


The goal of the U.S.-MEXICO FUTURES FORUM is to generate fresh perspectives on a critical set of issues that will be important for each country and central to their relationship. In collaboration with the International Studies Department at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM), we will bring together scholars as well as social and political actors who will be shaping policies, ideas and U.S. Mexican relations in the future.

Sponsored by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Spring 2006

David Shields
“The Mexican Oil Industry: Problems and Policy Options”

Mexico — the sixth biggest oil producing nation in the world and one of the three main oil exporters to the United States — appears to have reached a peak oil scenario in which oil output levels are likely to decline sharply in the near term. Meanwhile, the company, which enjoys monopoly status in the Mexican market, is reaching a crisis point on many fronts, ranging from major indebtedness to corporate governance to aging infrastructure. A number of reform options are available to the next Mexican president, but none of them are easy fixes and all could be thwarted by a divided Congress.

David Shields is a journalist and private consultant on energy matters in Mexico. He is the editor of Energía a Debate (www.energiaadebate.com.mx) and the author of PEMEX, Un Futuro Incierto (Pemex: An Uncertain Future).

Thursday, February 9, 4:00 pm
Institute of International Studies Conference Room, 223 Moses Hall
(map)

Photos of the event


Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas
"The Future of U.S.–Mexico Relations"

What lies ahead for the United States and Mexico? Cuauhtémoc Cardenas will discuss the challenges and opportunities the two countries face as they become ever more interdependent.

Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, one of the founders of the Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD), was the mayor of Mexico City from 1997–99 and a three-time presidential candidate.

A webcast of this event is now available here. (RealPlayer file)

Thursday, March 2, 7:00 pm
Andersen Auditorium, Haas School of Business

Analysis and photos of the event


Enrique Dussel Peters
"Mexico's Trade: Up Against the Great Wall"

NAFTA helped turn Mexico into an important trading country, but intense competition in the global economy has limited the treaty’s benefits. The greatest threat to Mexico’s position as an export manufacturing economy comes from China, which has already displaced it as the United States’ second largest trade partner. Professor Dussel Peters will discuss the challenges and opportunities facing Mexico in its economic relations with China and the U.S.

Enrique Dussel Peters is Professor of Economics at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. His research focuses on the theory of industrial organization and economic development as well as manufacturing, trade and regional specialization patterns in Latin America and Mexico.

Thursday, April 27, 4:00 pm
223 Moses Hall

CLAS Event Series on Mexico and the U.S. and Mexico

   
 
© 2005, The Regents of the University of California, Last Updated - August 18, 2006