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Productive capital has the largest increase since 2020
MX📈 EconomyCenter22 hr. ago

Productive capital has the largest increase since 2020

In April, Mexico's productive capital saw its largest increase since November 2020, according to data from INEGI. The growth was driven by a 12.4% rise in residential construction investment, while non-residential construction grew just 0.1%. Investment in machinery and equipment rose 2%. Economists attributed this growth to residential construction, private projects, and imports of machinery, possibly linked to infrastructure developments related to the World Cup. Analysts suggested part of the recovery could be due to investments tied to hosting the World Cup.

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2 reports

La Jornada logoLa JornadaIndependentCenterFactual 75Objective 705 days ago
Prevé Ebrard mayor flujo de inversión tras acuerdo sobre el T-MEC

The article reports that Mexico City Mayor Claudia Brillembourg (Ebrard) anticipates a significant increase in investment flow following the agreement on the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (T-MEC). The focus is on economic implications and potential growth opportunities for the city as a result of the trade pact.

Bias read (Center): The article presents information about economic expectations related to a trade agreement without overtly favoring any particular political ideology. It focuses on factual projections from the mayor’s office rather than taking a clear ideological stance.

Why these scores (Factual 75 · Objective 70): The article states Ebrard expects increased investment following the T-MEC agreement, which is factually supported by cross-source reporting. However, it attributes this expectation to Ebrard without elaborating on the basis for his prediction. Objectivity is moderate as it focuses on economic outco

El Universal logoEl UniversalIndependentCenter22 hr. ago
Productive capital has the largest increase since 2020

In April, Mexico's productive capital saw its largest increase since November 2020, according to data from INEGI. The growth was driven by a 12.4% rise in residential construction investment, while non-residential construction grew just 0.1%. Investment in machinery and equipment rose 2%. Economists attributed this growth to residential construction, private projects, and imports of machinery, possibly linked to infrastructure developments related to the World Cup. Analysts suggested part of the recovery could be due to investments tied to hosting the World Cup.

Bias read (Center): The article presents economic data and expert opinions without overtly favoring any political side. It focuses on statistical trends and quotes economists without apparent ideological framing.

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