MEXICO CITY, (Reuters) – Mexico’s government cut its 2015 budget by nearly 3 percent yesterday after a drop in global prices hurt public finances, and it is shelving a tainted $3.75 billion high-speed train tender as part of its austerity measures.
Finance Minister Luis Videgaray said the cuts were intended to reassure global investors that Mexico will keep its finance in order and he promised they would not derail an economic recovery this year.
Latin America’s No. 2 economy, a major crude exporter, has posted weak growth in recent years and the drop in oil prices has dampened confidence in the impact of a landmark opening of the state-run energy sector this year to private companies.
The slump has also battered Mexico’s peso currency, which blew past the 15-per dollar level on Friday for the first time since 2009 before it recovered slightly.
Mexico’s central bank warned on Thursday the peso could see steeper losses and its governor, Agustin Carstens, advised the government to act to prevent a further run on the currency. “We have to take decisions because our budgetary reality has changed,” Videgaray told a news conference.
He said the government was shelving, for now, a project to build the rail link between Mexico City and the central city of Queretaro.
The tender sparked accusations of shady dealings favoring a contractor close to President Enrique Pena Nieto.
China Railway Construction Corp (CRCC) had looked poised to clinch the contract even after its original winning bid was revoked when it became engulfed in the scandal.
Pena Nieto’s family and Videgaray bought homes from a government contractor that was part of the consortium that won the original train tender, raising concerns about corruption and conflicts of interest.
Videgaray declined to comment yesterday when asked what interest rate he had paid on a loan from the government contractor who sold him his house.
The scandal has compounded the president’s woes. He was already grappling with the fallout of the abduction and massacre of 43 trainee teachers in restive southwest Mexico last year as drug gang violence goes unchecked.
Analysts worry that Mexico’s political crisis could further undermine implementation of a raft of major economic reforms seen as key to helping stem a slide in domestic oil output and bolster growth.
The finance ministry still expects the economy to grow between 3.2 percent and 4.2 percent this year, Videgaray said, although economists forecast growth at just above 2 percent last year.
Videgaray said Mexico would cut spending by 124.3 billion pesos ($8.29 billion) this year, equal to 2.6 percent of the 2015 spending plan. The government uses oil revenues to fund about a third of its budget.
Earlier this month, Videgaray said that budget cuts this year would not be needed after the government bought derivatives to hedge its oil revenues.
Strategists said Mexico’s cuts were a bid to insulate its financial markets from the current bout of global volatility. Foreign investors now hold more than 2 trillion pesos ($133 billion) of debt, nearly 40 percent of the stock.