A brewing controversy over wage records in Mexico has drawn sharp scrutiny from British economists, who are calling for an independent audit of the nation's official statistics. The dispute centres on claims by the Mexican government of a historic surge in real wages, a narrative that local labour purists have branded misleading.
At the heart of the row is President Claudia Sheinbaum's assertion that average salaries have risen by 20% in real terms since 2018, a figure touted as a regional benchmark. However, grassroots economists in Mexico, citing alternative data from independent surveys, argue that wage growth has been far more modest, with many low-income workers still struggling below the poverty line.
UK experts, including analysts from the Resolution Foundation and the London School of Economics, have weighed in. Dr. Michael Reeves, a labour economist at the University of Manchester, said: "The Mexican government's numbers appear to rely on a narrow sample of formal-sector jobs. This ignores the millions in informal employment, where wages have stagnated or fallen. We need official verification of the methodology."
The debate has significant implications for future trade and investment deals with Mexico, as well as for international comparisons of labour rights. A spokesperson for the ONS declined to comment specifically on Mexico, but noted that UK protocols require full transparency of any data used in official claims.
On the ground in Mexico City, a street cleaner told this reporter: "They say wages are up, but I'm still working two jobs to feed my family. The statistics don't put food on my table." This sentiment echoes a broader frustration in developing economies where headline growth masks regional inequality.
As the row escalates, the Bank of Mexico has promised to review its methodology, but has not committed to an independent audit. British observers warn that without robust data, the risk of policy missteps grows. For the average worker, the bottom line remains: is a pay packet actually stretching further? The answer, for now, is far from clear.








