It’s easier and more efficient in Mexico
By
Jeffrey Tucker
Over
the weekend, we were treated to a preposterous display of hectoring of
allegations that Wal-Mart Mexico (prepare yourself for a shock) paid bribes to
public officials for the legal right to do business in that country.
You see, to do serious business in America requires
vast campaign contributions to several layers of elected politicians, an army
of lobbyists in Washington, retired government employees on your board and
public devotion to the American civic religion. It goes on every year and
restarts every election cycle.
Even then, it is hard to know if you are going to get
what you pay for.
It’s easier and more efficient in Mexico. You pay
bribes directly. The decision maker gets the money. He or she clears the path
for you to do the thing. The facilitator takes a slice. People mostly keep
their promises. The deal is done.
Apparently, bribe paying in the United States is a
sign of a healthy, functioning democracy; doing the same thing in Mexico in a
more streamlined way is a criminal violation of the standards of good corporate
governance.












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