Economic activity is stable, but growth momentum remains limited
The Global Indicator of Economic Activity, known as IGAE, is one of Mexico’s main high-frequency measures of real economic activity. It tracks the monthly evolution of production across broad sectors of the economy and provides an early signal of the direction of output before full GDP figures are released. The seasonally adjusted version helps remove recurring calendar and seasonal effects, making it more useful for evaluating short-term economic momentum.
Recent dynamics
The series shows a relatively flat pattern throughout 2025. Economic activity started the year at 104.22 in January and moved to 105.13 in February, before easing slightly in March. From April to September, the index remained mostly between 104.6 and 105.1, indicating that activity was neither contracting sharply nor expanding with clear strength.
A stronger reading appeared in October 2025, when the index rose to 105.67, the highest level in the recent sample. However, this improvement was not followed by a sustained acceleration. Activity softened to 105.42 in November and remained close to that level in December, suggesting that the October gain was more of a temporary improvement than the beginning of a stronger expansion cycle.
In early 2026, the index weakened to 104.62 in January, before partially recovering to 104.78 in February and 105.23 in March. The March reading shows a rebound from the beginning of the year, but it remains close to the levels observed during much of 2025. This points to stabilization rather than a decisive acceleration in economic activity.
Interpretation and economic signal
The behavior of the IGAE suggests that Mexico’s economy is operating in a low-momentum environment. The index has avoided a persistent decline, which is a positive signal, but it has also failed to establish a clear upward trend. This combination points to an economy that remains resilient, but not strongly expansionary.
The narrow range of movement is important. When economic activity fluctuates around the same level for several months, it often indicates that the economy is absorbing previous shocks, tighter financial conditions, or sector-specific constraints. In this context, the rebound in March 2026 should be interpreted cautiously, since the level remains close to the recent average rather than marking a clear breakout.
From an Austrian perspective, this type of stagnation can also reflect the aftereffects of earlier credit and investment cycles. Periods of easy financial conditions may support activity temporarily, but if they encourage misallocation of capital, the later adjustment phase can appear as weak real growth, uneven sector performance, and a lack of broad productivity-driven expansion.
Overall, the current signal is one of stability with limited momentum. The economy is not showing a clear contractionary pattern, but the absence of sustained gains suggests that real activity remains constrained and dependent on whether future readings can move consistently above the recent range.
Conclusion
Mexico’s seasonally adjusted IGAE indicates a stable but subdued economic environment. Activity recovered in March 2026 after a weak start to the year, but the broader trajectory remains mostly flat compared with the levels observed during 2025.
The latest reading suggests that economic activity is holding up, but not yet accelerating decisively. A stronger signal would require several consecutive increases that lift the index above its recent range, confirming that the recovery is being driven by sustained real growth rather than temporary monthly fluctuations.