| Mexico Business & Trade |
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Format: Paperback, 64pp. This book offers a smooth and problem-free transition between the American and Mexican business cultures. A concise, at-at-glance comparison of business styles and practices and social customs. |
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Format: Hardcover, 276pp. |
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Format: Paperback, 144pp. The Global Business Series is designed to reduce anxiety and ease the process of doing business abroad.Though each book concerns a different country, they all follow the same general format by describing how climates and geography shape unique cultures, which are perpetuated through insidious, subconscious imprinting of children by the family and school. |
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Format: Paperback, 2nd ed., 243pp. |
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Format: Paperback, 161pp. Everyone's heard that Mexico is becoming a lucrative market for the United States Businesses in the post-NAFTA era, but do you know how to do business in this neighboring yet foreign country? To help you avoid the common pitfalls, business consultants Glenn Reed and Roger Gray have drawn on over twenty years of Mexican business experience to offer this clear, concise guide to doing business in Mexico. |
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Format: Paperback, 1st ed., 105pp. For visitors to Mexico, people doing business with Mexicans or for students wanting an informative introduction to contemporary Mexican society, this guide includes information on religion, gender relations, dress and appearance, manners, meals and concepts of time. Contains information on how attitudes and behaviors are changing in response to rapid modernization and increased interdependence with the United States. Includes appendices providing basic facts about Mexico. |
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Format: Paperback, 254pp. Tired of the high cost of living? Same old work opportunities? Inclement weather? More and more people are giving up their dead end jobs and taking a step across the border to Mexico in search of a quality lifestyle and small business opportunities. This book describes everything from buying real estate and opening a bank account to starting a business on $3,000. Illustrations & maps. |
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Format: Paperback, 126pp. |
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Format: Hardcover, 272pp. Banking and investment in Mexico have changed radically over the past decade, and the economic events that prompted these changes will have a significant impact on Mexico's role in regional and world financial markets. Adams traces the evolution of Mexico's banking and investment activities, reviews current conditions and their implications for future investment opportunities in Mexico, and makes clear that what happens to Mexico's economy and political stability will have major implications for what happens elsewhere in the world. |
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Paperback, 326pp. Mexico 1994 is as much about one country's experience as about our changing world. The book offers in-depth analysis of long-term political and economic processes that set the stage for the crisis, and of specific actions in Mexico and abroad that prompted the crash and shaped its outcome. It also casts much-needed light on important new interrelationships between domestic and global phenomena. The authors are uniquely positioned to provide valuable insights on both the Mexican crisis and the metamorphosis in the nature of financial debacles. |
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Format: Hardcover, 257pp. By joining in a free trade agreement with Canada and the United States, Mexico has become the first independent developing country to be integrated with developed countries. While Mexico is expected to derive net benefits from this arrangement, it is clear that there will be losers as well as gainers. In addition, the evercloser integration between Mexico and the rest of North America carries implications for Mexico's relationship with the rest of the world. This book explores the economic as well as socio-political dimensions of the changes expected in Mexico and the question whether economic liberalisation will necessarily lead to political liberalisation. |
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Format: Library Binding, 229pp.. Comprises 12 contributions which examine the goals of economic reform and evaluate the results and the effects of economic modernization on important sectors of the Mexican economy. Topics include lessons to be learned by Mexico's banks and private sector from the 1994 peso devaluation, structural change in the private sector, business- government relations after 1990, the effects of NAFTA on Mexico's private sector, educating and training the Mexican labor force for a global economy, and theory and representative cases of strategies of Mexican firms toward global markets. |
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Format: Paperback, 96pp. Comprehensive guide to the culture, etiquette and communication of Mexico. |
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Format: Paperback, 2nd ed., 320pp. 'Orme understands that NAFTA is really about fundamentally changing Mexico's long-run economic future. . . But as (he) correctly points out, very modest direct effects do not make NAFTA an unimportant agreement for the United States.' - Lester Thurow, author, The Zero Sum Society |