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Steady in the Storm: How Mexico Maintains Business Confidence Amid Tariff Tensions

Los Angeles Times

|

September 11, 2025

With a pragmatic approach as a strategic commercial partner and resilient manufacturing hub, Mexico's business community has remained resolute in its commitment to the United States, navigating tariff threats and political turbulence.

Steady in the Storm: How Mexico Maintains Business Confidence Amid Tariff Tensions

When President Trump secured a return to the White House in 2025, the business community on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border braced for another round of tariffs, tightened trade policies, and nationalist rhetoric.

Yet in Mexico, the reaction among industry leaders was neither panicked nor defensive. Instead, many companies doubled down on a message of reliability and long-term partnership with the United States.

"We have always maintained that Mexico is a strategic partner for the U.S., not just a neighbor," said Gustavo Almaraz, CEO of Grupo Estrategia Política, a leading public affairs consultancy. "Even when the rhetoric gets heated, business between our nations continues to thrive because the fundamentals are too strong to ignore."

A Trade Partnership Built on Integration

Mexico is the United States' largest trading partner, with over $860 billion in goods exchanged annually, according to U.S. Census data. Decades of integration through NAFTA and now the USMCA have created deeply intertwined supply chains, particularly in the automotive, electronics, and agricultural sectors.

Felipe Villarreal, CEO of Alian Plastics, a Monterrey-based plastics injection molding company specializing in the automotive sector, emphasized that the connection between Mexican manufacturers and U.S. clients is robust and highly sophisticated. "We know the American market well, its standards, its expectations," said Villarreal. "That's why we've been able to diversify beyond automotive into sectors like HVAC and home appliances."

This diversification has become essential, especially as tariff threats resurface. Villarreal noted that although new invest ment decisions are momentarily slower due to political noise, long-term confi dence remains because Mexico offers what U.S. manufacturers need: proximity, talent, and competitive costs.

Investment Keeps Flowing

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