Soccer-The economic goal that never came: World Cup falls short of boosting Mexico


FILE PHOTO: A drone shows the Banorte Stadium, also known as Azteca Stadium, as renovation works continue ahead of World Cup beginning on June 11 in Mexico City, Mexico May 11, 2026.REUTERS/Henry Romero/File Photo

MEXICO CITY, July ⁠17 (Reuters) - The World Cup left stadiums packed and millions of fans euphoric in ⁠Mexico, but failed to lift a sluggish economy weighed down by weak investment ‌and uncertainty over the upcoming review of the North American trade agreement (USMCA).

The tournament, which ends Sunday after more than a month of matches across Canada, the United States, and Mexico, had Mexico host 13 of 104 games. ​However, it fell short of ambitious official tourism targets ⁠aimed at boosting gross domestic product (GDP), ⁠which contracted in the first quarter.

"The World Cup will not structurally change the trajectory of ⁠the ‌Mexican economy," said Humberto Calzada, chief economist at Rankia.

Calzada noted the tournament offers only a short-term stimulus for an economy the government expects to grow between 1.8% ⁠and 2.8% this year, compared to analysts' forecasts of 1.1%.

The ​economic impact was highly ‌localised. Banorte lowered its estimate of the World Cup's GDP contribution to 0.4%-0.5%, ⁠down from a ​previous forecast of up to 0.62%.

Banamex calculated the total economic impact at $2 billion — about 0.1% of GDP and less than half of the $5.6 billion Mexico received in remittances in May alone.

Deloitte projected the ⁠competition created 100,000 temporary jobs, 10% fewer than its ​previous estimate. Meanwhile, BBVA reported its household consumption indicator fell 0.2% month-on-month in June, with spending on hotels down 10.5% and restaurants down 4.9%, despite a 16.5% spike in entertainment.

The benefits were ⁠uneven across the host cities of Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey. The Mexican Restaurant Association reported that half of its establishments performed worse than in a typical week due to low hotel occupancy and local protests in the capital.

Air travel data was also mixed. Passenger ​traffic rose slightly in June in Guadalajara and Monterrey but ⁠fell at Mexico City's main airport.

Analysts say the main driver of the Mexican economy remains outside ​the stadiums: trade certainty under the USMCA.

With companies holding ‌back investment ahead of the trade pact's review, ​and the economy contracting 0.6% in the first quarter, the IMF recently trimmed Mexico's growth forecast to 1.2% from 1.6%.

(Reporting by Noe TorresEditing by Christian Radnedge)

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