January 16, 2008
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01/15/08 - A Texas Lawyer Says
Increased Sunspot Activity Can't Be Blamed On Illegal
Immigration…But A Lot Of Things Can Be
A California Professor Warns Mexico Is Squandering Its Biggest Asset
From: Nancy Harkey, Ph.D. and Professor Emeritus [e-mail
her]
Mexico’s
greatest single source of wealth is its access to rich
fields of oil. But its greatest boondoggle is its
mismanagement of this asset.
The Los Angeles Times
business section has just published a lengthy report
on Pemex, the state-owned petroleum Company that has
been watching its shallowest, most easily accessed
fields
decline fairly rapidly, while doing nothing to
locate the new, rich fields known to exist in the Gulf
of Mexico.
At a high point in 2004,
production was about 2 million barrels per day, but more
recently has declined to about 1.46 million barrels: "a
very serious loss.” [Woes
Mount For Mexico’s State Oil Titan, By Maria
Dickerson, Los Angeles Times, January 2, 2008]
Why? The proximate reason is that these fields are
deep and will require high levels of technology and
expertise, as well as
large amounts of capital that
Pemex does not have.
More distant reasons
involve the fact that the government takes an inordinate
amount of revenue in taxes from Pemex. The Times
reports that from sales just under $100 billion dollars
for 2006, the government took $54 billion in taxes
thereby profoundly weakening the goose that lays its
golden egg.
Other explanations include
Mexico’s decision to
nationalize Pemex and thus removed from the
influences of such
American companies as
Standard Oil.
One consultant firm
comments that Pemex is thus much more than an oil
company; it is a powerful symbol of Mexican national
sovereignty. As a result, privatization is considered
to be politically impossible.
According to the Times,
Pemex is $52.3 billion in debt and is therefore the
most-indebted oil company on the planet. This makes
bailout from outside capital loans out of the question.
The core financial
resource of Mexico is in deep trouble. Its assets are
necessary for the continued development of roads,
schools etc. but its income is dropping drastically.
What is politically
possible, of course, depends on the countervailing
pressure on
Mexican politicians. Ideally that would come from
the U.S. by forcing Mexico to
face up to its domestic problems
Instead, the U.S. continues to supply jobs,
education, housing and medical care to millions and
millions of Mexican immigrants. So the need for
Mexico to
act responsibly on behalf of its citizens is
correspondingly reduced.
And so it goes…the more we
do for Mexico, the less it does for itself.
Harkey’s mother emigrated
from Scotland and her father from
Norway. Her specialty
at California State University at Pomona was biological
psychology. Harkey describes herself as
"a political conservative on most
issues with first hand experience in how
painful that can be in
the academic setting."
Since her retirement, Harkey
has published, with her daughter, a two- book set on
effective parenting titled Raising CuddleBugs and
BraveHearts, Volume
I and
Volume II (website
here.)
Previous letters from Harkey
about bedbug infestation in southland Los Angeles and
using environmental impact laws as a tool to fight
illegal immigration are
here and
here.