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Also known as: Ciudad de México, Ciudad de México, D.F., México
Nahuatl:
México
Spanish:
Ciudad de México or
In full:
Ciudad de México, D.F.

The living conditions and welfare of Mexico City’s inhabitants vary dramatically according to socioeconomic class and the colonia (neighbourhood) they live in. In marked contrast to poor colonias, the more-prosperous neighbourhoods have all the benefits and services of a city in a developed country, including piped running water, electricity, telephone service, paved streets, and regular garbage collection. Supermarkets and stores provide all of the basic necessities. Luxurious malls, dance clubs, and theatres provide nightly entertainment, especially on weekends. The wealthy can also obtain government services more readily, although populist and leftist politicians have built a significant base of support among the lower classes and university students.

Government

Mexico City is the seat of the federal government, and local and national politics intertwine there like nowhere else in Mexico. The city’s residents have long had a powerful voice in politics, owing to their large and dense population (and their correspondingly large number of registered voters) and their ability to launch massive protests in the city streets. In addition, chilangos elect a proportion of deputies (representatives) and senators to the national Congress.

Scattered throughout the city are headquarters and offices for all of the federal executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. The president’s official seat of power is the National Palace, originally the residence of the viceroys during the colonial period. It is located on the east side of the Zócalo, where enormous crowds gather every September 15 at 11 pm (on the eve of Mexican Independence Day) to join the president in the 200-year-old battle cry known as the Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores). Much of the president’s day-to-day business is conducted at the official presidential residence, Los Pinos, which is located in Chapultepec Park.

Mexico City and the Federal District are constitutionally defined as one and the same. Their shared area has gradually increased since the mid-20th century and is now subdivided into 16 delegaciones, or administrative areas, similar to boroughs: Álvaro Obregón (Villa Obregón), Atzcapotzalco, Benito Juárez, Coyoacán, Cuajimalpa de Morelos, Cuauhtémoc, Gustavo A. Madero, Iztacalco, Iztapalapa, La Magdalena Contreras, Miguel Hidalgo, Milpa Alta, Tláhuac, Tlalpan, Venustiano Carranza, and Xochimilco. Many administrative functions are centralized, but other powers are divided among the delegaciones. In addition, the capital’s vast metropolitan area includes more than two dozen self-governing municipios (administrative units similar to counties or townships) in México state.

For much of Mexico City’s history, its residents did not elect local leaders. The president appointed a trusted party member to serve as its chief of government (jefe del gobierno), or mayor, who then became one of the most powerful politicians in the country. However, since 1997 the mayor has been elected by popular vote to a six-year term, and since that time left-wing politicians have tended to dominate the powerful city government, often in direct opposition to right-wing national presidents.

Mexico
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The city’s government, which is headquartered along the south side of the Zócalo, is structured much like the national government. The executive branch includes key secretariats, or ministries, such as a state secretariat and another that oversees public works and services. Other ministries deal with public safety, finance, environment, transportation and circulation, human welfare, and justice. The mayor once appointed trusted followers to head each of the delegaciones, but since 2000 they have been directly elected. In addition, the Federal District has a legislative assembly, similar to those of the Mexican states. Its members are elected to three-year terms.

Municipal services

Mexico City provides a full range of utilities and other municipal services to its wealthier and middle-class residents. However, many poorer neighbourhoods lack safe drinking water, proper housing, electricity, and sewer systems. Conditions are most deplorable in the ciudades perdidas, where overcrowded shanties may consist of nothing more than wooden frames with walls made of cardboard and newspaper and a sheet-metal roof. As a family’s income gradually improves over the years, these less-durable materials are replaced by cinder blocks, concrete, metal frames, and windows. Running water, electricity, and paved, lit streets may also be delayed for years in some areas.

Freshwater supplies and flood-control measures have been key to the city since the days of Aztec rule. Colonial administrators initiated major drainage projects, including an expansion of the Huehuetoca Canal in the 19th century. In 1900 the Tequixquiac tunnel diverted a large volume of water to the east. The drainage system was partly renovated in the 1970s and ’80s. Drinking water has been another challenge. In 1951 a system of tunnels and tubes was completed to supply México state and the Federal District with drinking water from distant reservoirs; hydroelectricity was supplied from the dams impounding the reservoirs. Fresh water now reaches virtually all households, but it is not always safe to drink. The great bulk is tapped from some 1,200 wells beneath the city, some of which are more than 980 feet (300 metres) deep. But the extraction of so much groundwater has contributed to the subsidence of parts of the metropolitan area. Moreover, as underground reserves have dwindled, drinking water has had to be brought in through expensive systems of pipes and pumping stations.

Some electricity is produced within the city, but most is purchased from outside. The telephone system, always inadequate, suffered a severe blow when a major earthquake in 1985 destroyed the city’s main exchange; in the late 1980s a decentralized system was installed. Cellular phones have become increasingly widespread since the 1990s. Propane gas, commonly used for cooking and for heating water, is distributed in portable tanks or by tanker trucks that fill home containers; home heating is virtually nonexistent.

Health

Public health is a major concern for the city because utilities and basic health care are inadequate in many areas. Although sanitary standards are higher than in the rest of Mexico, gastrointestinal diseases remain common, particularly among lower-class children. Also prevalent are respiratory illnesses, a consequence of pollution, and psychological disorders stemming from overcrowding. Among the worst sufferers from disease and unhealthful conditions are Mexico City’s pepenadores (garbage-dump scavengers), who daily risk becoming infected by the materials they handle or by inhaling toxic fumes. Among the majority of people, the gradual improvement of sanitary conditions (and subsequent relative decline in diseases caused by poor sanitation) has produced a rise in illnesses more characteristic of developed countries, such as cardiovascular diseases and cancer. This is particularly the case among middle- and upper-class residents, whose rates of diabetes and heart disease have increased with changes in diet and lifestyle.

Health care in Mexico City is a major service industry, and patients from throughout the country often travel to the capital for treatment. Huge hospital complexes and world-renowned research institutes and clinics are found in the more prosperous neighbourhoods. Many of these facilities are equipped with the latest technological developments, as well as world-class surgeons, technical personnel, and nurses. Among the best-known are the Institutes of Cancer, Cardiology, and Nutrition, located near Tlalpan in the southwestern section of the city. The government operates numerous health facilities, including the gigantic General Hospital and the Medical Centre, a conglomerate of specialized units. There are also many private hospitals.

Education

The vast majority of Mexico City residents are literate, and, despite limited resources in some areas and high dropout rates, the educational facilities are unsurpassed in Mexico. The public school system is complemented by a large number of private schools.

The capital contains Mexico’s largest concentration of higher-education facilities. The National Autonomous University of Mexico, better known by its Spanish acronym UNAM, was founded in 1551; it is the oldest such institution on the Latin American mainland and is now one of the largest universities in the world, with hundreds of thousands of full-time students. The National Polytechnic Institute and the Metropolitan Autonomous University are among the other important public institutions of higher education. Private universities include the Jesuit Ibero-Americana University and Anáhuac University. There are a number of specialized postgraduate and research institutions, including the prestigious College of México.