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Mexican economy shrinks 0.4 pct in Q3: preliminary report

2019-10-31 10:20

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Mexico's economy contracted 0.4 percent in the third quarter of 2019 compared to the same period in 2018, according to a preliminary report.

The contraction is smaller than the 0.8 percent decrease registered in the second quarter, making a contrast with the 1.2 percent growth in the first quarter, said the report released by the National Statistics and Geography Institute (INEGI) Wednesday.

The decrease was blamed on weaker industrial activity dependance on U.S. demand and stagnation in the first nine months of the year, said the report.

Despite a 5.4 percent expansion in the agricultural sector, the third quarter also witnessed a 1.7 percent decline in industrial activities, and 0.1 percent decrease in the service sector, which contributes the most to the Mexican Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Mexico's economy saw zero growth in the first nine months of 2019 compared to the same period last year, the INEGI said.

"It should be noted that the timely estimates presented in this report could change when traditional quarterly GDP figures are released on Nov. 25," the institute said.

Scotiabank financial group, a member of Canada's Scotiabank, described figures of the third quarter as "negative," as there was only 0.1 percent GDP increase compared to the second quarter.

"Viewed as a whole, we can say that the Mexican economy is stagnating, as its nonexistent growth so far this year confirms, in a climate where a negative bias prevails given economic, political, national and global uncertainty," Scotiabank said.

Mexico, Latin America's second largest after Brazil, seems to have experienced an economic slowdown with the global trend.

According to Mexico's central bank Banxico, the country's GDP is expected to accelerate between 0.3 percent and 0.7 percent in 2019, much slower than the 2 percent growth pace last year.
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