Americas view | Mexico’s middle class

Too bourgeois to bus tables

A new report on Mexico's growing middle

By H.T. | MEXICO CITY

OUR report this week from the Mexican-American border points out that Mexicans are becoming too bourgeois to cross illegally into the United States. These days they’d rather stay in high school than risk deserts, rattlesnakes, murderous bandidos and La Migra (as the gringo migration authorities are known) just to bus tables north of the border. In fact, according to an exhaustive report in May by North American experts, known as the Regional Migration Study Group, Mexicans are much more likely to have a degree before going north than they were seven years ago, and the number of years of schooling of 15-19-year-olds is now pretty similar to that in United States. If more educated workers emigrate, it raises their earning capacity, which gives them and their families even more chance of rising up the ranks of the middle class when they and the money flow back to Mexico. In which case, even fewer will need to go to el Norte. That is real progress.

More from Americas view

Business backlash

A weakened Enrique Peña Nieto faces calls to roll back his tax reform

Back to the table

The FARC's kidnapping of a Colombian general last month did not kill the peace process


The new brooms

Dilma Rousseff's new economic team talk about their plans