Sheinbaum Turns To Multilateral Banks To Fund Mexico's Growth Push
Key Facts
- The move: President Claudia Sheinbaum is drawing on multilateral development banks to help finance infrastructure and accelerate her flagship Plan Mexico.
- The lenders: The strategy involves a more active role for the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Investment Bank and the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean.
- The plan: Mexico's 2026–2030 infrastructure plan envisages 5.6 trillion pesos ($293bn) in public and mixed investment across eight strategic sectors.
- This year: The 2026 phase adds 722 billion pesos ($37.8bn), about 2% of GDP, on top of what was already budgeted.
- The goal: The government targets sustained growth of 2.5% to 3% a year, after a quarter-century in which Mexico rarely topped 2%.
President Claudia Sheinbaum is leaning on multilateral development banks to help bankroll Mexico's growth strategy, bringing institutions such as the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Investment Bank and the CAF into her Plan Mexico. The approach aims to fund an ambitious infrastructure programme while limiting new sovereign debt, as the government chases growth it has struggled to reach for years.
Why Sheinbaum is turning to multilateral banksThe government has set out a strategy of collaboration with international financial institutions to strengthen growth, fund strategic infrastructure and speed up Plan Mexico, the central economic project of the current administration. The approach gives a more active role to multilateral development banks.
According to coverage of the announcement, the lenders involved include the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Investment Bank and the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean, which have signalled financing lines and technical support for priority projects. The recently modernized Mexico-European Union trade agreement is cited as opening further room for international capital.
How multilateral banks fit the wider planThe financing push sits within the Plan for Investment in Infrastructure for Development with Wellbeing 2026–2030, which Sheinbaum presented earlier in the year. It envisages 5.6 trillion pesos ($293bn) in public and mixed investment across eight strategic sectors: energy, trains, roads, ports, health, water, education and airports.
For 2026 alone, the plan adds 722 billion pesos ($37.8bn) to what was already budgeted, equivalent to around 2% of gross domestic product. The bulk of the long-term investment is directed at energy, which takes the largest single share, followed by trains and roads.
The logic of mixed financingSheinbaum has framed the strategy as a way to avoid large new debt that could strain public finances, while bringing private capital into selected areas. She has argued it would also guard against excessive electricity-tariff rises or abuses by private firms, with the state acting as a partner rather than ceding control.
The plan rests on four pillars: a strategic investment-planning council, new specialized financing vehicles, an updated legal framework, and a national project database for transparency. Mexico's development banks, alongside the multilateral lenders, are expected to help channel and de-risk the investment.
The growth challengeThe explicit objective is to lift sustained growth to between 2.5% and 3% a year for the rest of the term. The diagnosis is widely shared: Mexico has gone through a prolonged period of moderate growth and faces a clear infrastructure gap.
Analysts at BBVA estimate the infrastructure plan could add 0.9 percentage points to sustained growth, but only if executed in full and if it genuinely produces a multiplier effect. The bank noted Mexico has not broken 2% growth in 25 years, citing infrastructure gaps, informality and insecurity as the main constraints.
The fiscal backdropMultilateral organizations have warned Mexico of the need for a tax reform to broaden the state's revenue base. With limited fiscal space, Sheinbaum has so far sought resources elsewhere, betting heavily on private and multilateral investment rather than higher taxation or sovereign borrowing.
For the government, the engagement of multilateral banks is presented as evidence that Mexico retains international credibility and the capacity to attract long-term financing for productive projects, even amid a turbulent global economic backdrop.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Sheinbaum's strategy?To draw on multilateral development banks, alongside private and public investment, to finance infrastructure and accelerate her Plan Mexico growth programme.
Which banks are involved?According to coverage of the announcement, the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Investment Bank and the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean.
How big is the infrastructure plan?5.6 trillion pesos ($293bn) in public and mixed investment from 2026 to 2030, with 722 billion pesos ($37.8bn) added in 2026, about 2% of GDP.
What is the growth target?Sustained annual growth of 2.5% to 3%. BBVA estimates the plan could add 0.9 points if fully executed; Mexico has not topped 2% in 25 years.
Connected Coverage
For more, see our coverage of Mexico's record first-quarter foreign investment.
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