People of Mexico City
- Nahuatl:
- México
- Spanish:
- Ciudad de México or
- In full:
- Ciudad de México, D.F.
News •
Mexico City’s population includes immigrants from every corner of the country and from numerous overseas locations. Those who are born in the city, particularly those whose families have resided there for several generations, are collectively known as chilangos. Among chilangos, however, there exist deep socioeconomic and ethnic divisions. Mexican society remains conscious of raza (“race”), and discriminatory attitudes prevail, so that, by and large, people with indigenous ancestry—American Indians (Amerindians) and mestizos (mixed Indian and European)—inhabit the middle- and lower-class neighbourhoods while those who claim largely European ancestry (“whites” or criollos) inhabit the wealthier zones. The “whiteness” of an individual remains a key element for social mobility and acceptance. While few will publicly acknowledge the existence of racial discrimination, criollos generally have the better-paying jobs and enjoy a higher standard of living than do the vast majority of the city’s inhabitants.
As in the rest of Mexico, residents of the capital generally view religion as an important part of their cultural background. One of the most powerful institutions since colonial times, the Roman Catholic Church, has left a deep imprint on Mexico City’s urban landscape and the daily life of its inhabitants. Practically every neighbourhood has a church, the older of which attest to the wealth and grandeur of the church in the Baroque and Neo-Classical periods.
Aside from its overwhelming Roman Catholic majority, the city has a small Jewish community that is prominent in the city’s trades and professions. Protestant churches account for a small but growing proportion of Mexico City’s Christians; as in the rest of Latin America, Protestants have been rapidly gaining converts since the 1980s, particularly through evangelization in the poorer neighbourhoods.
Economy
The Mexico City region accounts for nearly one-fourth of the gross domestic product of Mexico. More than three-fourths of the district’s income derives from the service sector, and about one-fourth derives from manufacturing. The vast majority of the metropolitan area’s income and employment also derives from services, followed by manufacturing. México state is the economic backbone of the surrounding area, and its economy ranks second only to the Federal District on a national scale.
The informal sector of the economy, which helps compensate for high official unemployment rates, is difficult to quantify but is undeniably widespread in the capital. It is evidenced in the squadrons of shoeshine boys, mobile candy-and-gum sellers, garbage scavengers, day labourers, street performers, and others whose income is generally underreported to taxing authorities. As is also true in Europe and the United States, many residents of the city are employed in informal jobs hidden beyond ordinary sight, including those working as live-in maids and unlicensed child-care providers, as well as those engaged in more nefarious pursuits, such as drug dealing, prostitution, and black marketeering.
Agriculture and mining together account for only a tiny percentage of the metropolitan workforce. However, dairy products, corn, maguey (agave, the source of pulque), and other farm products are sold in urban markets. The demands for food, water, and fuel for an urban settlement the size of Mexico City are staggering. All of these supplies are brought in from increasingly distant places. A single orange or beefsteak may have to travel more than 100 miles (160 km) to reach a household in the city. Tens of thousands of tons of food alone must arrive daily in order to meet demands.
Manufacturing
Owing to its superior transportation infrastructure and its large supply of skilled and semiskilled workers, Mexico City has remained the country’s principal manufacturing centre in spite of competition from regional centres such as Monterrey and the rapid growth of strategically positioned maquiladoras (export-oriented assembly plants) in the northern border states. However, the capital’s share of manufacturing employment has declined relative to service-oriented jobs.
Most of Mexico City’s heavier industries are dispersed along its metropolitan ring rather than being centralized within the Federal District itself, and in the 1990s the government forced some remaining industries to move or close because of concerns over air pollution. Among the city’s light manufacturing enterprises are maquiladoras specializing in clothing, paper products, and consumer electronics. Chemicals, plastics, cement, and processed foods and beverages are also important. Among the chief manufactures of the metropolitan area, centred on México state, are refined metals, metal products, chemicals, and processed foods.
Finance and other services
There has been a marked shift of the labour force to the service sector, which includes banks and financial services, restaurants, hotels and entertainment, communications media, advertising and other business services, and government employment. Tourism has become an increasingly important component of the sector.
As one of the developing world’s financial capitals, Mexico City has numerous major national and international banks. Its financial institutions manage the vast majority of Mexico’s savings accounts and foreign investment. Its stock exchange has grown rapidly and can be considered the pulse of the country’s economy, as well as a regional financial hub as important as the market of São Paulo or Buenos Aires.
Although many government agencies and offices have been moved outside of the capital since the 1990s, Mexico City retains the largest concentration of government jobs in the country. Local (city) government is also a major employer.
Transportation
Owing to its location within a large and resource-rich basin, Mexico City has long been a transportation hub. Ancient trade routes intersected there, linking the highlands with the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific coasts, the lake districts to the west, and the Puebla Basin to the east. Today the relatively efficient and well-maintained transportation network relies heavily on roads, although railways also converge there from throughout the country.
The construction of two beltways, the outer Anillo Periférico and the inner Circuíto Interior, has allowed drivers to circumvent the city’s bustling and congested central district. Expressways link the capital to the rest of the country via a ring of major cities including Cuernavaca, Toluca, Morelia, Querétaro, Tlaxcala, Puebla, and Pachuca. Toll superhighways built since the 1990s have greatly improved travel between Mexico City and Oaxaca, Acapulco, Toluca, and Morelia.
Mexico City has the country’s greatest concentration of cars, trucks, and other vehicles, and for a city of its vast size the internal transportation system works well. But despite the expansion and designation of several major streets as one-way thoroughfares (ejes) with synchronized street lights, traffic is often chaotic, particularly in the downtown area. Major boulevards such as Insurgentes and Paseo de la Reforma are often blocked by protesters marching toward the Zócalo to voice their concerns before the National Palace or the offices of the mayor. Enterprising street vendors set up their stalls along the sidewalks of many streets, adding to the general congestion and noise. Moreover, the streets can be deadly, especially for pedestrians forced off blocked sidewalks.
The number of vehicles circulating in the city nearly doubled to some three million between the late 1970s and early ’90s, and the total has continued to grow to about four million in the early 21st century. Traffic may creep at an average speed of 12 miles (20 km) per hour, particularly during the three high-traffic rush hours, which in some areas seem to last all day. The morning rush hour is exacerbated by countless parents who deliver their children to school before continuing on to their offices. In addition to lower-income commuters on public transportation, the long afternoon rush includes parents picking up their children from school, office workers heading home for lunch and those returning to their offices, and bureaucrats whose workday is over. In addition, there is a late afternoon and early evening rush hour. Increasing numbers of commuters drive 50 miles (80 km) or more to work in Mexico City while making their homes in cities such as Cuernavaca, Toluca, and Tlaxcala.
The capital’s millions of automobiles give the city some of the country’s most polluted air. The government has sought to reduce air pollution by limiting the number of cars on the road on any given day, according to the last numbers on their license plates; however, many wealthier commuters have circumvented these controls by buying an additional car to use on days when their regular car is banned.
Public transportation within the city and throughout the metropolitan area consists primarily of buses and the Metro subway, which the government heavily subsidizes. With some 125 miles (200 km) of railway on its 11 routes, the Metro alone transports about four million passengers each day, but its ticket sales cover only a fraction of its total operating costs. Other popular forms of transport include taxis, trolleys, and minibuses known as peseros. A light rail connects the central city with Xochimilco.
Mexico City’s huge international airport, now virtually surrounded by development in the northeastern part of the city, handles both national and international flights. Although the facility in the capital has been expanded, the airport at Toluca has been used since the 1980s to facilitate air traffic control. International flights also depart from the city of Puebla.