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Labour in a Single Shot

Ciudad Juarez|Mexico

Statistical Data

City Founding 1659

City area 1.182 km2

POPULATION
Population (2019, estimated) 1.501.5521
Population density 4.467/km²
Area 4.853 km22
Population (metropolitan area Juarez-El Paso) 2.7 million3
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciudad_Juárez
1 http://population.city/mexico/ciudad-juarez/
2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juárez_Municipality,_Chihuahua
3 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Paso–Juárez

CLIMATE DATA

Max. temperature Ø (°c) 25,9  
Min. temperature Ø (°c) 10,7  
Rainfall /year (mm) 267,5
Days of rain 45,6
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciudad_Juárez#Klimatabelle

POPULATION HISTORY

1900 8.218
1950 122.566
1980 544.496
2000 1.187.275
2015 1.391.180
2017 1.428.508 (estimated)1
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciudad_Juárez
1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciudad_Juárez   

ECONOMIC OUTPUT

GDP (2014) 4,448 billion EUR
GDP per Capita (2014) 3.396 EUR
https://www.eleconomista.com.mx/estados/Ciudad-Juarez-muestra-solidez-financiera-20180918-0162.html

Inflation rate (Mexico, Mai 2019) 4,28%
https://tradingeconomics.com/mexico/inflation-cpi

Number of undertakings (2018)
Commerce 17.022
Production 2.657
Services 20.153
other 1.143
total 40.975
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

Employees with social insurance (2018) 461.268
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

minimum wage (2019) 8,29 EUR/ day
Income (EUR/day)
4,15 – 08,29 24,9%
8,30 – 12,45 33,6%
12,46 – 16,60 14,5%
16,61 – 20,76 6,8%
20,77 – 24,82 4,2%
more than 16%
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/  

IMMEX-programme
The IMMEX program, formally known as the IMMEX maquiladora program, allows foreign manufacturers to import raw materials and components into Mexico, tax and duty free, under the condition that 100% of all finished goods will be exported out of Mexico within a government mandated timeframe.
https://napsintl.com/manufacturing-in-mexico/the-immex-program-manufacturing-in-mexico/

Number of employees in IMMEX companies
Employees with social security (total) 459.482
in IMMEX companies 276.904
workers and technicians 250.717 (90,54%)
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/   

Employment development in IMMEX companies
Number of employees
2007 325 210.362
2009 339 168.016
2012 327 194.899
2015 319 247.675
2018 331 276.904
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

Average income in IMMEX companies in Juarez
472 EUR
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

Average daily income according to gender (2018, in EUR)
Men 20,28
Women 16,17
Difference 25,39%
https://www.competitividadlaboral.org/labor-data/

Average daily income in Juarez per sectors (2018, in EUR)
Manufacturing sector 17,29
Commerce 14,30
Public services 12,43
Social services 22,99
Building industry 12,23
Transport and communication 18,01
https://www.competitividadlaboral.org/labor-data/

employment structure
wage-dependent employees 76%
freelancer, sole proprietors 15%
employer 5%
unpaid 1%
https://www.competitividadlaboral.org/labor-data/

Unemployment (2019) 2,5%
https://www.competitividadlaboral.org/labor-data/

Employment by sectors in % (2018)
Manufacturing 65,3
Commerce 10,7
Services 10,6
Social and communal services 5,0
Construction industry 3,4
Transport and Communication 4,3
Water- and Energy supply 0,5
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

Employees with social security
Women 40,5%
Men 59,5%
https://planjuarez.org/documentos/informe-de-economia-2019/

Employment by sectors (2018)
Men (%) women (%) total
Extractive industry 93,3  6,7  75
Agriculture and forestry industry 88,4  11,6  992
Construction industry 87,7  12,3  15.536
Transport and Communication 83,6  16,4  19.913
Water and energy supply 82,8  17,2  2.244
Commerce 62  38  49.289
Services 60,4  39,6  48.696
Manufacturing industry 57,1  42,9  301.372
Social and communal 39,9  60,1  23.151

Average wages / month
Teacher 1.370,23
Secretary 1.015,71
Lawyer 2.504,98
Computer technician 1.395,17
Dentist 4.237,95
Graphic designer 1.214,21
Waiter 1.124,10
all branches 1.926,05
http://www.salaryexplorer.com/salary-survey.php?loc=1593&loctype=3

COSTS OF LIVING

Prices (in EURO)
12 eggs 1,36,-  
1 kg tomatoes 0,87,-  
Bread for 2 persons (1 day) 0,72,-  
0,5 l beer in a supermarket 1,01,-  
1 l milk 0,81,-  
Hourly rate for cleaning help 2,72,-  
Monthly rent for a 85qm apartment in an average
area of the city 264,-  
1 l petrol 0,66,-  
Monthly ticket public transport 18,-
Cab drive (8 km) 16,-
https://www.expatistan.com/cost-of-living/comparison/berlin/ciudad-juarez

CRIME

Most dangerous cities in the world 2018
City Country Homicides in 2018 Inhabitants Homicides per 100.000 inh.
1.  Tijuana Mexico 2.640 1.909. 424 138,2
2. Acapulco Mexico 948 857.883 110,5
3. Caracas Venezuela 2.980 2.980.492 99,9
4. Ciudad Victoria Mexico 314 365.089 86,0
5.  Ciudad Juaréz Mexico 1.251 1.462.133 85,5
in Comparison:
Berlin Germany 94 3.723. 914 0,39

„A further 11 Mexican cities were included among the 50 most violent in the world as a result of their per-capita homicide rate in 2018. […] Mexico has the highest number of cities on the list, with 15, followed by Brazil with 14 and Venezuela with six. All but eight of the cities among the 50 most violent are in Latin America.“
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/of-the-5-most-violent-cities-in-the-world-4-are-in-mexico/
https://www.berlin.de/polizei/_assets/verschiedenes/pks/polizeiliche_kriminalstatistik_berlin_2018_-_kurzuberblick.pdf

Homicide rates 2018
Mexico 27 / 100.000
USA 5 / 100.000
El Salvador 82 / 100.000
Honduras 56 / 100.000
Jamaica 47 / 100.000
Germany 0,9 / 100.000
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/opinion/tracking-mexicos-cartels-in-2019/

The first three months of 2019 have seen a 9.6% increase in murders in Mexico, official figures suggest. The report says 8,493 people were murdered from 1 January to 31 March, a 9.6% rise from the same period in 2018.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-48012923

Economic damage caused by violent crime in Mexico (2018)
238 billion EUR; = 24% of Mexico’s GDP
per-head calculation
1.928 EUR; = fife times of the average monthly wage
http://visionofhumanity.org/app/uploads/2019/04/MPI-ENG-2019-web.pdf

Suicides in Mexico
37.150 (2012 - 2017) = 17 / day, thereof
21.757 in states with a high crime rate
https://www.eluniversal.com.mx/english/suicides-surge-mexico-amidst-drug-trafficking-and-violence

Connection between crime and suicide
serious crimes suicides
State of Mexico 19.715    3.704
Jalisco 10.935    3.275
Mexico City 10.020    2.333
Chihuahua 8.804    2.165

The normalization of violence, threats, death, and persecutions has had a strong influence on Mexican youth, causing addictions and
suicide,” stated the specialist (i.e. Dr. Alejandro Águila Tejeda, Director Instituto Hispanoamericano de Suicidología)
In the case of Chihuahua, which currently ranks fifth in violence and suicide rates, Águila Tejeda explained that, for instance, Ciudad Juárez, which is a border city and one of the main channels for drug trafficking across the U.S. border, not only has an extremely high criminal rate, but has also shown high suicide rates caused by the hostile environment generated by organized crime.
https://www.eluniversal.com.mx/english/suicides-surge-mexico-amidst-drug-trafficking-and-violence

Suicides in Juarez
33 suicide attempts per day of inhabitants over 18
12.000 suicide attempts (2017)
Suicide rate (2017) 8,9/100.000
43 persons with daily suicide thoughts
https://theconversation.com/rising-suicides-in-mexico-expose-the-mental-health-toll-of-living-with-extreme-chronic-violence-99131


Feminizide in Juarez
2010  191
2016  57
2017  92
2018  more than 90
1993 – 2017 over 1.600
https://www.efe.com/efe/english/life/mexican-women-take-action-against-growing-number-of-femicides/50000263-3731344

In Mexico, an average of nine women are believed to be murdered every day, according to UN Women’s latest figures released in November 2018.
The country’s criminal code does specifically reference femicides, defining the crime as one “that deprives a woman of her life for gendered reasons”, evidence of which include signs of sexual violence; “degrading” injuries; a history of violence at home, work or school.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/5050/how-one-woman-is-mapping-femicides-in-mexico/

Murders of women also rose nationwide, with 861 cases in 2018, compared to 735 the year prior. Mexico experienced a record number of murders for the second year in a row in 2018, with official statistics logging 33% more killings than in 2017, Reuters reports. Mexican authorities opened 33,341 murder investigations in 2018, the highest number ever, the country’s Interior Ministry reported Sunday. The figure outpaced even last year’s toll of over 25,000, which was then the highest number since the record began in 1997.
http://time.com/5509216/mexico-murder-rate-sets-record-2018/

Migration
Arrests at the south-west border because of illegal border crossing per month under the
Bush-Administration (2001 - 2009)  81.588
Obama-Administration (2009 - 2017)  34.647
Trump-Administration (2017 - 2019)  32.012
(Highest rate: 2000) Clinton-Administration 136.000
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/05/us/border-crossing-increase.html

Arrested persons
January 2017 January 2019
travelling families ca. 2.000 36.174
unaccompanied children ca. 3.000 6.825
others ca. 20.000 23.451
total ca. 25.000 66.450
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/05/us/border-crossing-increase.html

MPP - Migrant Protection Protocols
The Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) are a U.S. Government action whereby certain foreign individuals entering or seeking admission to the U.S. from Mexico – illegally or without proper documentation – may be returned to Mexico and wait outside of the U.S. for the duration of their immigration proceedings, where Mexico will provide them with all appropriate humanitarian protections for the duration of their stay.
https://www.dhs.gov/news/2019/01/24/migrant-protection-protocols

Under MPP repatriated migrants (24. June 2019)
15.079 thereof 4.780 children with their parents
https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/report_pdf/us_mexico0719_web.pdf

The significant change in the composition of the migrants, from single Mexican men to Central American families and unaccompanied children has created unique challenges. Unlike Mexicans, they cannot, by law, be swiftly deported to their home country, and families also cannot be indefinitely detained because of rules limiting the incarceration of children to 20 days. Border infrastructure, largely designed for single males, has not adjusted to the demographic shift. The Border Patrol bolstered medical screenings after two children died in December. It has also received $30 million to upgrade the South Texas processing center and funding to construct the facility in El Paso.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/30/us/border-migrants-el-paso-bridge-spring-surge.html?rref=collection/byline/miriam-jordan

Congestion of immigration proceedings at US-courts
2008 ca. 200.000
2014 ca. 400.000
2017 ca. 600.000
2019 ca. 800.000
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/01/24/us/migrants-border-immigration-court.html

Indictments in connection with illegal entries (April 2018 - March 2019)
Indictments because of illegal entries 85.727
Indictments because of illegal re-entries 34.617
Indictments because of organized immigration crime 4.733
Indictments because of employment of illegally entered persons 11
https://trac.syr.edu/immigration/reports/559/