As part of the Innovation Symposium held at Tec Guadalajara, William Maloney from the World Bank explained some of the challenges facing the region
By Carlos González | Guadalajara Campus - 03/22/2024 Photo Bryan Santos

It is not so much what is produced as how it is produced,” said William Maloney, the World Bank’s chief economist for Latin America and the Caribbean when addressing the economic challenges facing the region during an event held at Tec Guadalajara.

Organized by the Tec’s School of Business, the “Innovation Symposium: Industry, Higher Education, and Government” was also attended by Mark Thomas, the World Bank’s country director for Mexico, Colombia, and Venezuela, as well as Cristobal García, fellow of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

At the forum, the specialists held conversations with representatives of Jalisco’s different productive sectors: businessmen, academics, investors, and government officials.

For Xiomara Vázquez, Western Region Dean of the Tec’s School of Business, this dialogue “was of great importance, because they also explained to us how Mexico is positioned in the world and how we can have an approach aligned with Jalisco’s economic ecosystem”.

 

William Maloney, World Bank Chief Economist for Latin America and the Caribbean. Photo: Bryan Santos.
Retos económicos de latinoamérica, según especialista del banco mundial.

 

Challenges for the Latin American Region

William Maloney listed the challenges he considers key to the development of the Latin American economy:
 

1. Changing growth trends

The most important challenge for the whole region is insufficient growth. We are forecasting 2.4% growth for 2025, which is not enough to enable social mobility, reduce poverty, and create dynamic societies,” he said.

We have to find out what is missing in our regional model to enable us to attain regional growth levels of 5 or 6%.

And that is why we are here at the Tec, because a key ingredient in all successful countries is precisely a deep innovation process for the whole economy,” he remarked.
 

William Maloney spoke with businessmen, government officials, investors, and academics. Photo: Bryan Santos.
Retos económicos de latinoamérica, según especialista del banco mundial.

 

2. Transforming opportunities into sources of development

However, Maloney believes that Latin America also has specific opportunities. “This region is very well positioned in terms of renewable energy and minerals like lithium and copper,” he said.

The challenge is to convert those opportunities into sources of broader holistic development. This requires well-functioning business model and innovation systems,” he pointed out.

He voiced his opinion that this is why there are a number of issues to be resolved: there are lags in basic education, there is a deficit of technicians in the region, and several ports need infrastructure improvement.

If we are to expand and become a base for nearshoring (relocation of transnational companies), we have to improve this... We have to set up innovation systems that work better to increase the growth rate,” he continued.

 

 

Xiomara Vázquez (left) stressed the importance of this session for the Tec’s School of Business. Photo: Bryan Santos.
Retos económicos de latinoamérica, según especialista del banco mundial.

 

3. Maximizing business-university ties

Maloney stressed that universities “are incredibly important in two ways: first, to generate the human capital that industry needs and for citizens to have a good quality of life”.

And second, he said, “when it comes to innovation, they are important partners for the private sector; they are full of ideas on how to set up a company to see how to drive a new industry forward and create more added value in the economy.”

However, he commented that this means the region having to establish a way to identify these ideas and define how they can be translated to the local context.

We have to find ways of doing research projects together, and of setting up small businesses (technological or not) and creating economic dynamism,” he clarified.

 

Identifying good ideas and bringing them to market was one of Maloney’s recommendations. Photo: Bryan Santos.
Retos económicos de latinoamérica, según especialista del banco mundial.

 

4.Generating high quality research

Furthermore, he believed that the region needs high-quality research departments that are relevant to the economic base and work in close collaboration with universities.

We must have entrepreneurs who are able to identify good ideas and bring them to the market. But at the same time, we must have universities that can work with them to identify and develop new ideas. We have to think more in this vein,” he said.

 

“We must have entrepreneurs who are able to identify good ideas and bring them to the market.” - William Maloney

 

5. Taking advantage of foreign investment

He went on to say that another key factor in terms of growth is to increase foreign direct investment (FDI) in as many countries in the region as possible.

And he pointed out that in order to boost growth, FDI should be perceived less as a source of jobs or taxes and more as a lever for learning.

 

Mark Thomas explained his specific economic outlook for Mexico. Photo: Bryan Santos.
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Retos económicos de latinoamérica, según especialista del banco mundial.

 

Closing the Gap between Theory and Practice

For his part, Mark Thomas told the meeting that, “Mexico is going through a key moment in its history. There are economic challenges in terms of growth and the reduction of inequality.

“But the opportunity offered by nearshoring is also a factor. And the most important challenge is that this process should have benefits for all Mexicans.”

Finally, Xiomara Vázquez reflected that these ties are key to the Tec’s School of Business because “one of the main triggers of business is this connection between innovation and entrepreneurship”.

The session has been a hub for connecting the role of the university, for bridging the gap between theoretical knowledge and its business applications,” she concluded.

 

 

ALSO READ:

https://conecta.tec.mx/en/news/guadalajara/entrepreneurs/social-impact-tec-guadalajara-redesignated-changemaker-campus

 

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