Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T08:29:44.107Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Export Assembly Operations in Mexico and the Caribbean

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Extract

Faced with limited opportunities for their primary-product exports, many developing countries have sought new strategies to develop manufactured products for export. Often lacking the necessary infrastructure for industrialization but possessing abundant labor resources, some developing economies have attempted to attract investment through assembly operations that promote domestic employment, exports, and local development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Cherol, R. and Zalduendo, S. (1984) “Legal Framework for Foreign Investment in the Caribbean and Central America.” The International Lawyer 18, 4 (Fall) 957: 82.Google Scholar
Delatour, L. and Voltaire, K. (1980) International Subcontracting Activities in Haiti (mimeo). Case study as part of the project on North- South complementary intra-industry trade directed by Dr. Joseph Grunwald, Brookings Institution, Washington, DC. (UNCTAD-UNDP Project RLA-78-019; IDB Project TC-78-06-17-0). Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
DeWind, J. and Kinley, D. (1988) Aiding Migration. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Espenshade, T. (1987) Projected Imbalances between Labor Supply and Labor Demand in the Caribbean Basin: Implications for Future Migration to the United States (mimeo). Background paper for the Southwest Symposium on United States Population Policy, cosponsored by the Woodlands Center for Growth Studies and by the American Assembly of Columbia University; The Woodlands, TX; 22- 24 October..Google Scholar
Fernandez-Kelly, M. (1983) For We Are Sold, I and My People: Women and Industry on Mexico's Frontier. Albany, NY: State University of New York (SUNY) Press.Google Scholar
Garrity, M. (1981) “The Assembly Industries in Haiti: Causes and Effects.” Journal of Caribbean Studies 2,1 (Spring): 2537.Google Scholar
Grunwald, J. and Flamm, K. (1985) The Global Factory. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) (1988) Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: 1987 Report. Washington, DC: IDB.Google Scholar
International Monetary Fund (IMF) (1988) International Financial Statistics Yearbook 1987. Washington, DC: IMF.Google Scholar
Investment Promotion Council of the Dominican Republic (IPC-DR) (1988) Investment Opportunity: Free Zones in the Dominican Republic. Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic: IPC-DR.Google Scholar
Long, F. (1986) Employment Effects of Multinational Enterprises in Export Processing Zones in the Caribbean (Working Paper 42). Geneva, Switzerland: UN International Labor Office.Google Scholar
Mexico. Secretaria de Programacion y Presupuesto (Mexico SSP) (1988) Estadistica de la Industria Maquiladora de Exportacion, 1975-1986. Mexico DF, Mexico: Secretaria de Programacion y Presupuesto.Google Scholar
Morrison, T. (1975) “Case Study of ‘Least Developed Country’ Successfully Exporting Manufactures: Haiti.” Inter-American Economic Affairs 29,1 (Summer): 2131.Google Scholar
Moya Espinal, F. (1986) Las zonas francas industriales y las empresas multinacionales: Efectos economicos e impact sobre el empleo en la Republica Dominicana (Working Paper 46). Geneva, Switzerland: UN International Labor Office, Programa de Empresas Multinacionales.Google Scholar
National Council of Industrial Free Zones (1988) Unpublished data. Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic: Investment Promotion Council of the Dominican Republic.Google Scholar
Pavez Hermosilla, G. (1987) Industria de maquila, zonas procesadoras y empresas multinacionales en Costa Rica y El Salvador (Working Paper 48). Geneva, Switzerland: UN International Labor Office, Programa de Empresas Multinacionales.Google Scholar
Pedrero Nieto, M. and Saavedra, N. (1987) La industria maquiladora en Mexico (Working Paper 49). Geneva, Switzerland: UN International Labor Office, Programa de Empresas Multinacionales.Google Scholar
Rubin, S. (1988) Tax-Free Exporting Zones: A User's Manual. London, England: The Economist Publications Ltd.Google Scholar
Schoepfle, G. and Perez-Lopez, J. (1988) US Employment Impact of TSUS 806.30 and 807.00 Provisions and Mexican Maquiladoras: A Survey of Issues and Estimates (Economic Discussion Paper 29). Washington, DC: US Department of Labor, Bureau of International Labor Affairs.Google Scholar
Shiells, C. and Schoepfle, G. (1988) Trade and Employment Effects of the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (Economic Discussion Paper 30). Washington, DC: US Department of Labor, Bureau of International Economic Affairs.Google Scholar
Stoddard, E. (1987) Maquila: Assembly Plants in Northern Mexico. El Paso, TX: Texas Western Press.Google Scholar
Thoumi, F. (1988) Economic Policy, Free Zones and Export Assembly Manufacturing in the Dominican Republic (mimeo). Paper presented at the meeting of the Allied Social Sciences Associations, New York (NY), December.Google Scholar
Thoumi, F. (1983) “Social and Political Obstacles to Economic Development in Haiti,” pp. 205218 in Henry, P. and Stone, C. (eds.) The New Caribbean: Decolonization, Democracy and Development. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for the Study of Human Issues (ISHI).Google Scholar
United Nations. Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) (1985) Export Processing Free Zones in Developing Countries: Implications for Trade and Industrialization Policies. Geneva, Switzerland: UNCTAD.Google Scholar
United Nations. International Labor Office (UN-ILO) (1987) Year Book of Labour Statistics 1986. Geneva, Switzerland: UN-ILO.Google Scholar
United Nations. International Labor Office (UN-ILO) (1986) Economically Active Population, 1950-2025. Geneva, Switzerland: UN-ILO.Google Scholar
United Nations. International Labor Office and Centre on Transnational Corporations (UN-ILO/CTC) (1988) Economic and Social Effects of Multinational Enterprises in Export Processing Zones. Geneva, Switzerland:Google Scholar
UN-ILO and CTC. United States. Department of Commerce (US-DC) (1985) Investment Climate in Foreign Countries IV: Western Hemisphere. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics (US-BLS) (1988a) Hourly Compensation Costs for Production Workers in Manufacturing Industries: Mexico, 1975-1987 (Mimeo). Washington, DC: US Department of Labor, September.Google Scholar
United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics (US-BLS) (1988b) Supplement to Employment and Earnings. Washington, DC: US Department of Labor.Google Scholar
United States. International Trade Commission. (US-ITC) (1988a) The Use and Economic Impact of TSUS Items 806.30 and 807.00 (Publication 2053). Washington, DC: US-ITC.Google Scholar
United States. International Trade Commission. (US-ITC) (1988b) Imports Under Items 806.30 and 807.00 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States, 1984-87 (Publication 2095). Washington, DC: US-ITC.Google Scholar
United States. International Trade Commission. (US-ITC) (1988c) Operation of the Trade Agreements Program, 39 Report, 1987. (Publication 2095). Washington, DC: US-ITC.Google Scholar
United States. Office of the Trade Representative (US-TR) (1987) A Guide to the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP). “Washington, DC: US Office of the Trade Representative.Google Scholar
van Houten, J. (1973) “Assembly Industries in the Caribbean.” Finance and Development 10, 2 (June): 19-22 and 37.Google Scholar