laht.com
MEXICO CITY
– Low petroleum prices will be around for “years, not months,” and Mexico will
have to adjust to lower revenues from the oil industry for a longer period of
time, Bank of Mexico Gov. Agustin Carstens.
“We had gotten used to
spending with revenues from an oil price of between $80 and $100 per barrel” in
Mexico, Carstens said during a meeting with legislators from the conservative
National Action Party, or PAN.
“We no longer have those revenues,
especially when it appears that the drop is pretty durable and we can say it is
going to be a question of years, not months,” the central bank chief
said.
The rate at which the country has been spending in recent years
cannot be sustained without taking on debt, but borrowing will lead to higher
taxes, Carstens said.
“The issue is that we have to adjust to a lower
level of income,” Carstens said.
The 124.3 billion pesos ($8.57 billion)
in spending cuts announced by the government last week will help cushion the
impact of falling oil prices in 2016, “especially because it is foreseeable that
this situation of weak oil prices will last for a prolonged period,” the central
bank chief said.
Commodity prices, especially the price of petroleum,
have fallen due to weak global demand, supply issues and the appreciation of the
dollar, Carstens said.
Mexico, the world’s 10th-largest oil producer,
relies on petroleum sales to fund a large portion of the federal government’s
budget.
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