Mexico’s
Ghost Towns
The other
side of the
immigration
debate
By John
Gibler
(ZACATECAS,
Mexico )
31/07/08 "ICH"
-- - Cerrito
del Agua,
population
3,000, has
no paved
roads —
either
leading to
it or within
it. No
restaurants,
no movie
theaters, no
shopping
malls. In
fact, the
small town
located in
the central
Mexican
state of
Zacatecas
has no
middle
schools,
high schools
or colleges;
no cell
phone
service, no
hospital.
Its
surrounding
fields are
dry and
untended.
The streets
are empty.
The
explosion of
emigration
to the
United
States over
the past 15
years has
emptied much
of central
Mexico, even
reaching
into
southernmost
states like
Chiapas and
Yucatan. But
it has
simply
devastated
Zacatecas, a
dry, rolling
agricultural
region
located
about 400
miles
northwest of
Mexico City.
A little
more than
half of
Zacatecas’
population —
about 1.8
million
people — now
live in the
United
States,
especially
in areas
surrounding
Atlanta,
Chicago and
Los Angeles.
Between 2000
and 2005,
three out of
its four
municipalities
registered a
negative
population
growth. A
2004 state
law created
two new
state
legislative
posts for
migrants
living in
the United
States. In
2006,
depopulation
cost the
state one of
its five
congressional
districts.
“Well,
you’ve seen
what this
place is
like,” says
Dr. Manuel
Valadez
Lopez,
gesturing
out the door
of his small
private
clinic when
I ask him
how
emigration
has affected
the town.
“There has
not been
even minimal
development
here. There
is not a
single yard
of pavement.
The few
people who
have
sidewalks in
front of
their houses
built them
themselves.
Most people
defecate
outdoors.”
Lopez, 40, a
native of
Cerrito del
Agua, is one
of the few
to leave the
town and
return. All
six of his
brothers now
live and
work in the
United
States. All
four of his
sisters
married men
who left to
work in the
United
States.
In his
teens, Lopez
himself had
moved to
Guadalajara
(about a
five-hour
drive
southwest of
Zacatecas)
to attend
high school
and
university,
then stayed
on to study
medicine and
receive a
specialist’s
training in
gynecology.
He later
returned to
Cerrito del
Agua for a
visit and
realized
“there was
so much work
to do here
that I
stayed,” he
says.
That was
eight years
ago.
“The whole
culture now
is that
people grow
up and go to
the U.S. —
their
parents,
their
uncles,
their
brothers and
sisters,
everyone
goes,” Lopez
says. “The
kids who are
strong and
smart, they
all go to
the U.S.
There are no
basic
services
here; the
government
has not
carried out
a single
project.”
The
situation
has been so
dire, he
says, that
the staff at
the clinic
had to
install its
own sewage
system.
“There is
running
water, but
it’s not
clean,” he
continues.
“People get
all sorts of
infections,
a typical
Third-World
situation.”
Worst of
all, says
Lopez, is
that “people
who could
possibly
stay here
and do
something,
they all
go.”
The new U.S.
colony
A January report by Richard Nadler, president of the conservative Americas Majority Foundation, found that the strongest state economies in the United States are those with high numbers of migrant workers. Nadler writes: “An analysis of data from 50 states and the District of Columbia demonstrates that a high resident population and/or inflow of immigrants is associated with elevated levels and growth in gross state product, personal income, per capita personal income, disposable income, per capita disposable income, median household income and median per capita income.”
Those who are leaving Mexico — those whose land goes unplanted, whose roads remain unpaved — are laboring in the United States, building shopping malls and factories, washing dishes in restaurants and cafés, picking grapes and pulling lettuce.
They are creating within the U.S. economy precisely the goods and services that their hometowns lack. At the same time, their anemic home economies falter on the brink of collapse.
“I think that the U.S.’s plan is to make Mexico into a kind of colony,” says Lopez, with a half smile. “People go to the U.S. to work and earn dollars. They come back to Mexico and spend their dollars on American products. It’s a nice, round business.” He continues: “Everyone here depends on the U.S. If this isn’t a colony, then how do you define colony?”
Condemned to disappear
In the heated debates over U.S. immigration policy, the pressing questions seem to be “How many immigrants should be allowed in, if any?” and “How should they be processed into the system?” But rarely considered is what this massive influx is doing to Mexico.
With nearly half a million Mexicans crossing the U.S.-Mexico border every year to look for work, Mexico has become the world’s largest exporter of its people. More people flee destitution in Mexico than in China or India — each with populations 10 times larger than Mexico’s.
Their remittances — the money Mexican immigrants in the United States save and send back to their families — equaled $24 billion last year, and made up the third-largest source of revenue for the Mexican economy (after illegal drugs and oil).
“Theories of migration always show the interests of the North,” says Raul Delgado Wise, director of the Graduate School of Development Studies at the Autonomous University of Zacatecas and an expert on migration. He says migrants born in Mexico contribute 8 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) — about $900 billion — which is more than Mexico’s entire GDP.
Wise is one of several researchers studying Mexican migration at the University of Zacatecas. Together they publish an international journal called Migration and Development and are laying the groundwork for an alternative think tank to the World Bank, which will be called the Consortium for Critical Development Studies.
“With all of this, we need to see really how much it is costing Mexico, how much Mexico is losing,” Wise says.
He says that the mass migration from Mexico to the United States cannot be fully understood without considering the U.S.-Mexico economic integration. Begun in the ’80s, this integration reached its maximum expression with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which took effect Jan. 1, 1994.
What Mexico really exports, Wise argues, is labor.
The supposed growth in Mexico’s manufacturing sector is a “smokescreen,” he wrote in a 2005 article in Latin American Perspectives, a scholarly journal. Almost half of all manufacturing exports come from the maquiladora assembly plants (foreign-owned factories in Mexico) that import production materials and export their final products — and their profits. Mexico adds only the labor.
Neoliberal policies — first implemented in the ’80s, and later through NAFTA — cut government investment in public works and agriculture, privatized key state enterprises and created low interest rates that attracted foreign capital. These policies opened the way for a 25-fold increase in maquiladora sales between 1982 and 2003 (though that growth peaked in 2000 and has since fallen as maquiladora owners seek ever lower wages and looser environmental regulations to compete with China’s abundant labor supply).
From 1994 to 2002, Mexico lost more than 1 million agricultural jobs. And from 1980 to 2002 — the same period maquiladora sales soared — migration from Mexico to the United States grew by 452 percent, with more than 400,000 people crossing each year, on average.
“In Mexico, we have exported the factory of migrants,” says Rodolfo Garcia Zamora, an economics professor who also teaches at the Graduate School of Development Studies. Zamora, author of Migration, Remittances and Local Development, says Mexico “is mortgaging its future” with migration and remittances. In the 10 Mexican states with the longest migration histories, he says, 65 percent of municipalities have a negative population growth. “This means that in the future,” says Zamora, “these communities will not be able to reproduce, neither economically nor socially, because the demographics of migration have condemned them to disappear.”
No escape?
“The United States economy demands cheap labor. Mexico has an excess of laborers. We complement each other,” says Fernando Robledo, director of the Zacatecas State Migration Institute, a government office that administers development projects in conjunction with several U.S. migrant organizations.
He dismisses talk of depopulation and an abandoned countryside as “fatalism.” “Zacatecas has a 120-year history of migration,” he says. “Migration is historical.”
Robledo describes the state government’s development priorities as variations on the “three for one” program — where local, state and federal governments match each dollar provided by U.S. migrant organizations for use in local development projects, such as building interstate highways heading north and constructing greenhouses for growing export crops.
“If you had $50 million in the budget,” Robledo says, “would you use that to increase production in the countryside or to build an interstate highway? It is a political and economic decision.”
Robledo puts priority on the highway.
But doesn’t building super-highways toward the Mexico-U.S. border and changing agriculture to a cash-crop export reproduce the very neoliberal policies that dispossess migrants in the first place?
“We do not live in a socialist country,” he responds, “where the government controls every aspect of the economy. We are in a neoliberal country. We cannot escape from neoliberal economics.”
Garcia Zamora, who helped write the Zacatecas state development plan, is unconvinced. The main problem, he says, is the lack of real political alternatives to neoliberalism. According to Zamora, “there is only one political party in Mexico — the PRI,” referring to Mexico’s notoriously corrupt Institutional Revolutionary Party, which ruled the country from 1929 to 2000. “The PRD government in Zacatecas now acts just like a PRI government,” Zamora says, this time referencing the Party of the Democratic Revolution, the opposition party to the PRI. “The same lack of planning and nepotism. It spends its time mainly implementing federal programs. They drafted a good development plan, but they … have never carried out a serious regional economic development policy that seeks to diminish the massive exodus of 40,000 Zacatecas residents who abandon Mexico every year.”
Abandoned by migration
A few years ago, Mario Garc’a left Zacatecas to work in construction in Southern California, but after about five months he decided to return to El Cargadero, a tiny town about 50 miles west of the city of Zacatecas, the state capital.
“I thought, ‘In Mexico, if you work a couple of shifts, you can live OK’, ” he says. “Without so many luxuries and freeways, but you can live a more peaceful life.”
Garc’a, in his early 40s, is a small farmer and municipal delegate. His wife and three daughters live in El Cargadero. All nine of his brothers and sisters, and more than 50 cousins, live in the United States.
El Cargadero, with a population of about 350, and a population in the United States of more than 1,000, is supposed to be a success story. Most of its roads are freshly paved, and residents have electricity and potable water, thanks to remittances and the “three for one” program.
“There are many points of view, but as you can see here, this is a community abandoned by migration,” Garc’a says. “The government should work to keep people in the country, to find jobs, better living conditions. Here we have pretty streets, but where are the people?”
Driving from the city of Zacatecas to El Cargadero, mile after mile of empty fields, closed restaurants and boarded-up houses span the countryside. José Manuel, a taxi driver, who worked in California for four years, washing dishes and making salads, accompanies me on the drive. He says he remembers when these roads weren’t paved yet, but the fields were full of corn and beans. It is now vast emptiness.
“Nobody works most of this land anymore,” he says. “The owners went to the U.S. and left the land behind.”
This is precisely what brought Mario Garc’a back. “The countryside is broken,” he says. “The rural economy needs to be reactivated. But we export one of the most valuable things: our workers. And now we don’t produce anything.”
The legalization debate is misguided, he says, because it focuses, always, on the U.S. economy: how many immigrants to allow in and how to stamp their passports. That focus needs to shift to include Mexico.
“Mexico does not need an open border with the U.S. that invites Mexicans to go work there. People always talk about legalization, but no, what needs to be legalized is the Mexican’s ability to stay [home] so that Mexico can grow and produce.”
John Gibler is a Global Exchange Media fellow who writes from Mexico. He is the author of Mexico Unconquered: Chronicles of Power and Revolt, forthcoming from City Lights.
This article was first published at "In These Times" May 29th 2008
