SAN BARTOLOMÉ QUIALANA, Mexico — Pedro Sánchez MartÃnez has spent decades as a contractor building houses for his neighbors in this farm town. Seven years ago, he set out to build one for his own family.
The pace of construction in rural Mexico, where mortgages are hard to come by, frequently depends on how quickly relatives working in the United States send dollars. Sánchez has relied on money transfers from two sons toiling as gardeners in California.
“I had hoped to be done in a year or so from now,†he said.
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But that was before the dawn of the “super-peso,†as the Mexican currency has been dubbed since steadily gaining 18% on the dollar during the last 12 months.
Here in the southern state of Oaxaca — among Mexico’s poorest — a weaker dollar means fewer pesos to buy livestock, food and other necessities, or pay for quinceañeras, marriages and funerals.
As crime engulfs many Mexican states, immigrants who’ve saved to retire there are reevaluating ties to home — and whether returning is worth the risk.
With more dollars now going toward basic expenses, home-building here has all but collapsed, leaving Sánchez, 57, with little work.
He expects it could take three more years to complete his house. He and his wife and their son, 20, moved in three months ago once it had a roof, a front door and a glossy living-room floor.
Concrete pillars with ornamental curlicues grace the interior. But it still lacks a kitchen, a bathroom, adequate plumbing and windows.
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Sánchez estimates that he could finish the kitchen and the bathroom for 500,000 pesos — which was about $26,000 back in January but is now closer to $30,000.
“I don’t have that kind of money,†he said. “The dollar has lost its value.â€
Remittances paid for most of the houses in town and helped finance public works, including a basketball court and renovations for a resplendent, 17th century church constructed with stones from a pre-Columbian temple. Each August, former residents now in Southern California hold fundraisers for their hometown’s annual fiesta.
“There’s a muchacho from here who just left — he made it to Los Angeles the next day,†said Clemente Sánchez, 57, the municipal president.
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As a teenager, he saw little future here, beyond subsistence farming and helping his father gather wood for charcoal along the slopes of the nearly 10,000-foot Cerro Picacho.
“I was only able to attend school until the fourth grade,†he said.
And so he too headed north, spending almost two decades in California. He only returned once he had sent back enough money to build several family houses. Now he works at the town hall, where one wall features a framed image of Benito Juárez, the iconic ex-Mexican president and a fellow Zapotec from Oaxaca.
Remittances to Mexico — almost all from the United States — have more than doubled during the last decade, totaling a record $58.5 billion in 2022, or 4.32% of the country’s gross national product, according to the World Bank.
From her stall featuring regional delicacies — chile-infused dried grasshoppers, juicy white worms from the maguey plant and handmade chocolates, among other edible fare — 63-year-old Eufenia Hernandez issued a challenge to U.S.
That was a bigger share of the economy than oil or tourism. Only India, a country with more than 10 times the population, received more remittances than Mexico.
“Everything here is done by women,†said Aurora Sánches Gómez, 42, the town sÃndica, or legal representative. “We clean the ditches, mind the fields, take care of the children.â€
On a recent morning, she was leading an animated, largely female brigade planting trees along the main road as they chatted among themselves in their Indigenous language, Zapotec. The women donned traditional woven blouses and skirts.
With her four brothers having left for the United States, Sánches and her sister care for their elderly parents.
The gruesome killing of Ariadna López shocked Mexico, spurred protests in the capital and highlighted the nation’s epidemic of violence against women.
“Now, with the value of the dollar going down, it’s hardly enough to feed my family, buy them clothes and supplies for school,†she said. “It seems like every week the dollar is worth less and less.â€
By the end of that year, the dollar fell to about 20 pesos, where it hovered until last fall before starting to slide. This July, it dipped below 17 for the first time in more than seven years.
On Monday, a dollar bought 17.17 pesos.
One major factor behind the peso’s rise, experts say, is escalating foreign investment as multinationals serving the U.S. market are increasingly drawn to Mexico — a strategy known as near-shoring — amid rising U.S.-China tensions and worries about interruptions in industrial supply chains.
Foreign investment in Mexico surged 48% in the first three months of 2023 compared with the same period last year, according to the economy ministry. Early this year Mexico became the top U.S. trading partner, surpassing Canada and China.
Following the expiration of Title 42, U.S.-bound migrants are still arriving at Mexico’s southern border to travel north, in a chaotic scene.
Another factor is Mexico’s aggressive fight against inflation. The Bank of Mexico’s benchmark interest rate of 11.25% is more than double the U.S. Federal Reserve target — a disparity that has drawn international investors hunting yields in pesos and peso-denominated bonds.
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The surging tide of remittances from the United States has also played a role in driving up the peso.
“Wages have gone up a lot in the United States, especially in the low-end sectors like food service and hotels, real basic entry-level jobs, where a lot of immigrants work,†said Connel Fullenkamp, an economist at Duke University. “If your family back home tells you they aren’t doing well, you’ll do whatever you can to send more money.â€
“The peso has strengthened as never before,†López Obrador recently told reporters. “What does this mean? … That Mexico is a country with economic and financial stability.â€
Economists tend to agree that the peso’s current potency is a sign of a healthy economy.
“Right now, Mexico is in kind of a sweet spot,†Fullenkamp said. “Most countries say they want a strong exchange rate, but they don’t want it too strong.â€
The danger is that the peso overheats and deters foreign tourists from visiting or dampens Mexico’s booming export market, as goods as varied as oil, tequila and cars become more expensive.
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And, of course, the more the peso rises the bigger the reduction in buying power of the dollars that Mexicans in the United States send back to their families.
Remittances to Mexico are projected to increase 8.1% this year, according to Gabriela Siller Pagaza, chief economic analyst for Banco Base, a Mexican financial services firm. But, because of inflation and the super-peso, she recently tweeted, the purchasing power of those dollars is expected to fall 11% compared with last year.
His spacious home here — featuring balconies with panoramic vistas and a winding staircase leading to an upper floor — is almost complete. His niece and her daughter live in the house now and run a ground-floor grocery.
Morales anticipates that his dollars banked in the United States will someday buy pesos at a better rate, enabling him to finish the job.
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“Right now, the dollar gives so little,†he lamented.
Her sister had made the trek last year, following a familiar script: Cross into U.S. territory from Mexico with a minor child, surrender to the Border Patrol, and apply for political asylum — then get released and launch a new life in the United States.
His own house still has no furniture. Blankets are piled up in the bedrooms. Running water is erratic and the bathroom is outside.
“We have a lot to do,†said Sánchez.
Short on cash, Sánchez is contemplating a new plan: Returning to the United States, finding work and saving enough to complete his house.
Foreign correspondent Patrick J. McDonnell is the Los Angeles Times Mexico City bureau chief and previously headed Times bureaus in Beirut, Buenos Aires and Baghdad. A native of the Bronx, McDonnell is a graduate of Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism and was a Nieman fellow at Harvard.