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OECD - OECD Territorial Reviews: Hidalgo, Mexico

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OECD OECD Territorial Reviews: Hidalgo, Mexico
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OECD Territorial Reviews Hidalgo Mexico Please cite this publication as - photo 1
OECD Territorial Reviews: Hidalgo, Mexico
Please cite this publication as:
OECD (2019), OECD Territorial Reviews: Hidalgo, Mexico , OECD Territorial Reviews, OECD Publishing, Paris.
https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264310391-en
Metadata Legal and Rights ISBN 978-92-64-31038-4 print - - photo 2
Metadata, Legal and Rights
ISBN: 978-92-64-31038-4 (print) - 978-92-64-31039-1 (pdf) - 978-92-64-31040-7 (HTML) - 978-92-64-31041-4 (epub)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264310391-en
Series: OECD Territorial Reviews
ISSN: 1990-0767 (print) - 1990-0759 (online)
This document, as well as any data and any map included herein, are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory, to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area.
The statistical data for Israel are supplied by and under the responsibility of the relevant Israeli authorities. The use of such data by the OECD is without prejudice to the status of the Golan Heights, East Jerusalem and Israeli settlements in the West Bank under the terms of international law.
Photo credits: Cover Csar Monzalvo.
Corrigenda to OECD publications may be found on line at: www.oecd.org/publishing/corrigenda .
OECD 2019
You can copy, download or print OECD content for your own use, and you can include excerpts from OECD publications, databases and multimedia products in your own documents, presentations, blogs, websites and teaching materials, provided that suitable acknowledgement of OECD as source and copyright owner is given. All requests for public or commercial use and translation rights should be submitted to .
Foreword

OECD countries and regions are recovering from the effects of the global financial crisis. The recovery period provides an opportunity to rethink the foundations for inclusive and sustainable growth. For example, boosting economic productivity needs to go hand in hand with rising well-being for workers and citizens. This is also true for the Mexican state of Hidalgo. Since the global financial crisis and after a long period of economic stagnation, Hidalgos economy started to close the gap with national standards in output and productivity. The state has undertaken a number of policy reforms to improve the business environment, attract foreign investment and modernise its public sector.

These gains should be further leveraged over the medium and long term to ensure Hidalgo mobilises its growth potential and can harness the benefits of globalisation. The state has a number of competitive advantages benefiting from a strategic location just north of Mexico City and a relatively safe environment (the third lowest homicide rate in the country). It also benefits from a comparatively good environmental quality within Mexico, low costs of production and a demographic premium in OECD comparison.

Yet the state must mitigate a number of bottlenecks it faces for development. They include a high labour informality rate, a high share of low-skilled labour force and underperforming cities. Moreover, low levels of tax collection and high socio-economic disparities between the south of the state, where the three metropolitan areas are located, and the municipalities in the northern and mountainous area remain pressing challenges.

The Territorial Review of Hidalgo examines the economic, social and environmental challenges the state faces. The review assesses the states potential for further development and how its policies can be improved. The review highlights that Hidalgo has growth potential and untapped opportunities to transition towards high-value-added economic sectors that can generate quality employment by better linking its local businesses with global value chains and international firms. In order to attain sustained growth over the medium term, it must raise its productivity by developing a co-ordinated strategy to support small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and a holistic innovation policy framework that can better integrate the activities of the academic, private and public sectors.

This review also identifies a number of recommendations to promote inclusive growth and reduce the north-south divide. These include development of a long-term strategy for business development in rural areas through the modernisation of agriculture and the promotion of off-farm activities. To raise well-being in rural areas, strategic spending from both the state and municipal governments linked to investment projects and in coherence with the development plan will be required. Improving accessibility to public services and expanding information technologies and the infrastructure connectivity, especially for the northern municipalities, is a cornerstone to ensure that the entire population participates in the states economic development. The implementation of these recommendations will help Hidalgo to maximise its contribution to the national economy and well-being.

This review is part of a series of OECD Territorial Reviews created in 2001 to support regional development at the multi-country, country, regional and metropolitan scale. It was approved by the Working Party on Rural Policy of the Regional Development Policy Committee [CFE/RDPC/RUR(2018)6] at its 21st session on 6 November 2018.

Acknowledgements

This publication was produced in the OECD Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs, Regions and Cities (CFE), led by Lamia Kamal-Chaoui, Director, as part of the programme of work of the Regional Development Policy Committee (RDPC).

The review has been conducted in close collaboration with the Government of the State of Hidalgo. Special thanks are due to the Governor of the State of Hidalgo, Omar Fayad Meneses, for his support throughout the process. The Secretariat is also grateful to the local review team supervised by Jose Luis Romo (Secretary of Economy, State of Hidalgo) in close collaboration with Daniel Hernandez Galindo, Sergio Vargas Tllez and Karla Ensstiga.

The OECD team elaborating the report include Andres Sanabria, report co-ordinator, with the support of Guillaume Lecaros de Cossio, under the supervision of Jose Enrique Garcilazo, Head of the Regional and Rural Policy Unit in the Regional Development and Tourism Division led by Alain Dupeyras. Ana Moreno Monroy, Diana Oropeza, Andres Sanabria, Andrs Blancas, Adriana Garca, Gloriana Madrigal and Lorena Mello e Figueiredo all drafted parts of the report. Yancy Vallant (Autonomous University of Barcelona) provided important inputs. The review benefited from comments by other OECD colleagues, including Joaquim Oliveira Martins (Deputy Director, CFE), Jane Stacey (CFE), Jonathan Potter (CFE), Elodie de Oliveira (OECD), Santiago Guerrero (OECD) and Manuel Gerardo Flores (OECD). Cicely Dupont-Nivore (CFE) led the publication process and Eleonore Morena prepared the manuscript for publication.

Special thanks are due to Riccardo Crescenzi (London School of Economics), Carina Ohm (Ernst and Young, Denmark) and David Clementoni (Italian Artisan) who provided valuable inputs and comments and accompanied the team in the development of the review. The OECD is also grateful for the involvement and hospitality of representatives from the state and municipal governments of Hidalgo as well as business and civil society representatives met in the context of this review. They include, but are not limited to: Simn Vargas Aguilar (Secretary of Government), Israel Flix Soto (Secretary of Public Policy), Delia Jessica Blancas (Secretary of Finances), Benjamin Rico Moreno (Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources), Atilano Rodrguez Prez (Secretary of Education), Jos Ventura Meneses Arrieta (Secretary of Public Works and Territorial Planning), Daniel Rolando Jimnez Rojo (Secretary of Social Development), Laman Carranza Ramirez (Head of Planning and Prospective Unit), Carlos Munoz Rodriguez (Secretary of Agriculture), Maria Eguiluz Tapia (Secretary of Labour), Gabriela Lugo Mendez (former Deputy Secretary of Economic Development), Mauricio Gonzlez Reyna (Deputy Secretary of Investment and Sectorial Productivity), and other secretaries, as well as municipal presidents and officials of the Federal Government.

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