MEXICO CITY (Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp.'s plan to source cars from Mazda Motor Corp.'s Mexican plant starting in 2015 highlights global automakers' growing reliance on the Latin American nation for quality production as well as lower costs.
Mexico's vehicle output is on pace to reach a record 2.86 million units in 2012, according to researcher LMC Automotive.
More is on the way, as Honda Motor Co. is building its first large Mexico assembly plant, Nissan Motor Co. adds a third factory, Ford Motor Co. produces mid-sized sedans and Volkswagen AG's Audi brand opens the country's first luxury vehicle plant in 2016.
"Across a range of industries, every single company in America that I've talked to will tell you that either their best plant or one of their top plants is in Mexico," said Jeff Liker, an engineering professor at the University of Michigan. "They can build quality and they can deliver on time."
From Japanese carmakers seeking relief from the strong yen to German and U.S. rivals eager to expand exports to the rest of Latin America, Mexico is evolving from its traditional role as a source of low-cost labor.
Automakers are focusing investment within about 300 miles (483 kilometers) of Mexico City to take advantage of the nation's newfound reputation for quality. Mexico's trade agreements covering 44 countries also make it an attractive export platform to ship cars to South America, Asia and Africa as well as the United States and Canada.
Free trade
"Mexico has more free trade agreements than the U.S.," said Sean McAlinden, a labor economist with the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich. "They have a free trade agreement with the EU that saves them a 10 percent tariff that's applied to U.S.-built vehicles. If you're going to build a world car like Q5 or an Infiniti, Mexico is where you're going to do it."
Central Mexico "will definitely be the hottest growth area with respect to North American vehicle production this decade," said Michael Robinet, managing director of consultant IHS Automotive in Northville, Mich. "The shift to Mexico is not only trying to feed the U.S. and Canadian markets, it's more of a global production play."
Automakers have announced $7.8 billion in Mexican investments in the past 24 months, McAlinden said.
Mazda agreed to build a Toyota-branded subcompact car based on the Mazda2 hatchback at a $500 million plant the company is building in the central state of Guanajuato. The factory will supply Toyota with 50,000 units of the vehicle annually when production begins in mid-2015.