IP and Mexican municipalities begin work for economic recovery


The president of the Council of Chambers and Business Associations of the State of Mexico (Concaem), Gilberto Sauza Martínez, announced that coordination work has already begun with the new municipal administrations so that criteria can be generated that allow the recovery process and the economic development.

In tune, the business leader The local assured that they are also working with the state authorities so that from the two levels of government they can promote employment and improve the living conditions of the population.

He deepened that within these works they are proposing that it is necessary to promote a more efficient administrative regulation and thus speed up the process of opening companies

“Generate better conditions for the arrival of investments and promoting a criterion of trust for the establishment of new economic units in an accelerated manner, will allow strengthening the creation of jobs and better remunerations”, he deepened.

Sauza Martínez referred that it is essential that measures be taken around the Turning Opinion, the digitization of processes and procedures, as well as concluding the installation process of the Municipal Anticorruption Committees.

“What we are asking for is not a blank check, but a vote of confidence, that low-impact companies can open practically immediately and that random reviews are then carried out to verify their operation. In case of not complying, the sanction must be exemplary, but the process must stop being complicated, because it limits new investments”, he added.

Sauza Martínez stressed that according to the 2020 National Survey on Regulatory Quality and Government Impact on Companies, carried out by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi), 28.2% of companies in the country indicate that the regulatory framework has constituted a obstacle to doing business, because the paperwork and loss of time affect the start of their operations.

The Inegi study indicates that small business initiatives are the most affected, representing 74.8% of the cases, they also consider that they cannot finalize the installation due to issues related to carrying out administrative paperwork and procedures.

“The data from the aforementioned survey indicates that more than 200,000 economic units were victims of corruption, which represented an estimated cost of 887 million pesos, equivalent to 1% of the country’s GDP,” said Sauza.



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