The Díaz regime encourages manufacturing through export…
1888 CE to 1899 CE
The Díaz regime encourages manufacturing through export incentives, high protective tariffs on foreign manufactured products, low transportation costs, and abolition of the transactions tax on business.
The number of industrial enterprises—most of them heavily backed by United States, French, German, and British investors—grows rapidly, and the volume of manufactured goods will doubles between 1877 and 1910.