id okr-10986-20871
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-208712021-04-23T14:03:58Z 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights World Bank International Finance Corporation ACCESS TO FINANCE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS BUSINESSES COLLATERAL COMPETITOR CORRUPTION CUSTOMS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ELECTRICITY EMPLOYMENT ENTERPRISE SURVEY ENTERPRISE SURVEYS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FIRM PERFORMANCE FIRMS GROWTH RATES INCOME LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR REGULATIONS LEVELS OF ACCESS LICENSING LINE OF CREDIT LOAN LOAN AMOUNT PERFORMANCE MEASURES PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH SALES GROWTH SAVINGS SAVINGS ACCOUNT SMALL FIRMS TAX TAX RATES The World Bank interviewed a representative sample of the private sector in 8 of the most active economic regions in Mexico. The sample consisted of 1480 business establishments surveyed from August 2010 through June 2011. The enterprise survey covers several topics of the business environment as well as performance measures for each firm. This report presents following highlights from the survey: Mexican firms added jobs at over 5 percent but saw only modest gains in sales and productivity; however, productivity growth was due to gains from Mexico's small firms; Mexican firms cite informality, tax rates, access to finance, and crime as top obstacles; a greater proportion of Mexican firms face competition from the informal sector; Mexican firms exhibit lower levels of access to financial intermediation; and while losses due to crime in Mexico are high significantly fewer firms actually pay for security. 2014-12-22T16:46:22Z 2014-12-22T16:46:22Z 2013-10-22 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/10/20368328/enterprise-surveys-mexico-country-highlights-2010 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20871 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research Latin America & Caribbean Mexico
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCESS TO FINANCE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS
BUSINESSES
COLLATERAL
COMPETITOR
CORRUPTION
CUSTOMS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ELECTRICITY
EMPLOYMENT
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FIRM PERFORMANCE
FIRMS
GROWTH RATES
INCOME
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR REGULATIONS
LEVELS OF ACCESS
LICENSING
LINE OF CREDIT
LOAN
LOAN AMOUNT
PERFORMANCE MEASURES
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
SALES GROWTH
SAVINGS
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
SMALL FIRMS
TAX
TAX RATES
spellingShingle ACCESS TO FINANCE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS
BUSINESSES
COLLATERAL
COMPETITOR
CORRUPTION
CUSTOMS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ELECTRICITY
EMPLOYMENT
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FIRM PERFORMANCE
FIRMS
GROWTH RATES
INCOME
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR REGULATIONS
LEVELS OF ACCESS
LICENSING
LINE OF CREDIT
LOAN
LOAN AMOUNT
PERFORMANCE MEASURES
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
SALES GROWTH
SAVINGS
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
SMALL FIRMS
TAX
TAX RATES
World Bank
International Finance Corporation
2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Mexico
description The World Bank interviewed a representative sample of the private sector in 8 of the most active economic regions in Mexico. The sample consisted of 1480 business establishments surveyed from August 2010 through June 2011. The enterprise survey covers several topics of the business environment as well as performance measures for each firm. This report presents following highlights from the survey: Mexican firms added jobs at over 5 percent but saw only modest gains in sales and productivity; however, productivity growth was due to gains from Mexico's small firms; Mexican firms cite informality, tax rates, access to finance, and crime as top obstacles; a greater proportion of Mexican firms face competition from the informal sector; Mexican firms exhibit lower levels of access to financial intermediation; and while losses due to crime in Mexico are high significantly fewer firms actually pay for security.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
author World Bank
International Finance Corporation
author_facet World Bank
International Finance Corporation
author_sort World Bank
title 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
title_short 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
title_full 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
title_fullStr 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
title_full_unstemmed 2010 Mexico Enterprise Survey : Country Highlights
title_sort 2010 mexico enterprise survey : country highlights
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/10/20368328/enterprise-surveys-mexico-country-highlights-2010
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20871
_version_ 1764446472704622592