Mexicans turn to street economy in recession
By Jason Lange
MEXICO CITY, June 11 (Reuters) - A deep recession in Mexico is pushing hundreds of thousands of workers to take irregular jobs like fixing drains, repairing TVs or selling everything from underwear to furniture on the streets.
At dawn on a recent morning, groups of people desperate to open a stall at the sprawling San Felipe open air market on Mexico City's north side waited to be allocated space on sidewalks and streets.
Bonfilio Sarabia, 30, lost his job running a computer network at a Mexico City architecture firm six months ago and now hopes to sell computer hardware at the market.
"I've looked and I can't find any other work," Sarabia said, standing in front of some plastic boxes holding his merchandise. To make ends meet, he also repairs computers in people's homes.
Hit by a drop in U.S. demand for its exports, Mexico is in its sharpest recession since at least the mid-1990s and the economy is expected to shrink nearly 6 percent this year.
That has pushed many into the informal economy where they are generally poorer than employees at tax-paying businesses.
Growing poverty is expected to hurt President Felipe Calderon's conservative National Action Party in mid-term congressional elections next month.
About 27 percent of Mexico's workers were active in the informal economy during the first quarter of this year, and that number has been edging up since the economy began slowing in 2007. Continued...
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