miércoles, 18 de febrero de 2015

Top 10 Food Cities -- National Geographic Travel

Top 10 Food Cities -- National Geographic Travel

  1. Ensenada, Mexico

    When the Ensenada market opened in 1958 and began selling fresh, local seafood, the fish tacos became the stuff of legend. Today, foodies flock to Ensenada’s many street stands serving the classic combo of fried fish and shrimp topped with mayo, salsa, and cabbage
RE/MAX Baja Realty
bajainvestment.com

jueves, 16 de enero de 2014

Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com and Property Priorities

Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com and Property Priorities

Property priorities will direct your search as you partner with a real estate agent to find the best vacation or retirement home in Baja. Just as you have a mental or written list of these priorities, you may want to develop a similar priority list related to your travels in Mexico. Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com is important for covering your liabilities in the event of a car accident. However, you also need to think about your risk of loss when you select Mexican auto insurance with MexicanInsuranceStore.com. Different travel styles may also play a role in how your Mexico insurance by MexicanInsuranceStore.com needs to be written. Remember as of 10-1-13, Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com or it's equivalent is now required for driving on any highway in Mexico.

Preliminary Property Evaluation

During your initial search for the right spot in Baja, you may want to make a few short trips into the communities you have in mind. Tijuana and Rosarito are great because they are just across the border, making it easy to spend a couple of hours before heading home. You can get a feel for everyday traffic issues, and you can explore at different times of day to get used to your prospective community. Long-term Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com enables you to come and go often. You can drive across the border at your leisure and stay for days or for just an afternoon. This approach to your Mexican auto insurance with MexicanInsuranceStore.com also enables you to travel with peace of mind. One thing to consider with a long-term Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com is that each policy covers only one vehicle. If you will travel in different vehicles at different times during your property search, you will need to select a long-term Mexico insurance by MexicanInsuranceStore.com for each vehicle that will make the drive.

Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com - More Remote Properties

While Rosarito real estate agents focus primarily on communities like Playas de Tijuana and Ensenada, you may want to look further south for unique locations. You may even want to consider buying a property and building your own home. Traveling by RV is an excellent way to become familiar with conditions you might experience during the building process. Remember to obtain Mexican auto insurance with MexicanInsuranceStore.com for your RV, adding any towed trailers or vehicles to your policy to ensure that you are properly protected against towing accidents. If you are thinking of towing a car behind your RV, that vehicle needs its own Mexico insurance by MexicanInsuranceStore.com in order to be legally operated in the country.

Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com comes with FREE Roadside Assistance

  Mexican insurance from MexicanInsuranceStore.com  

martes, 8 de octubre de 2013

Americas Now 09/16/2013 Made in Mexico



In the eyes of many world travelers, Tijuana Mexico has long been seen as little more than a tourist trap across the US border for cheap souvenirs and tequila and for its prostitutes peddling their services on the back streets of Avenida Revolucion. Its negative image cemented further by memories of violent turf battles in the streets between drug gangs and police in the not so distant past particularly this shootout back in 2008 that saw kindergarten children caught in the crossfire, having to be rescued from harms way by authorities. And today visitors here often see daily arrests of criminal suspects outside Tijuana’s souvenir shops. One shop owner hoping tourists might focus on more positive attributes like Tijuana’s favorite son legendary rock musician Carlos Santana. Santana aside what has gone virtually unnoticed here by the outside world is Tijuana’s extraordinary transformation in the last decade as a world class manufacturing center with armies of highly skilled Mexican workers. 165 thousand of them showing up for work each dayfor 600 hundred top foreign national companies here that are producing billions of dollars in exports each year. A “business boom” said to be directly responsible for turning this once impoverished town of 3 million citizens into a modern middle class metropolis -- with elegant gated communities rivaling those across the border in San Diego, California. Housing developments built not from the “drug money” of Mexico’s narcotics gangs but from the hard earned pesos of an exploding working middle class moving into them. A point man for Tijuana’s rise as a global manufacturing giant is Tijuana native Flavio Olivieri that is CEO of the Tijuana Economic Development Corporation.His nonprofit agency facilitating is the arrival of foreign multinational companies keen on doing business in Tijuana. He says they are a link between the companies and the government agencies and all of the services required to do business in Tijuana. Currently they have about 52 industrial parks that house close to 600 companies and manufacturing facilities. And they also have Samsung from Korea. They manufacture here their large format TV sets and their smart TV sets. And not just a handful of them, but 17 million Samsung flat screen TVs with their “Made in Mexico” stamp are exported each year from Tijuana to retailers just across the border in San Diego and across the United States - and to the European continent. As well Japanese electronics giant Sony has made Tijuana a major manufacturing base for its flat screen TVs.Toyota has a huge plant on the outskirts of Tijuana producing the popular “Tacoma” pickup truck for export in the United States. US aerospace giant Honeywell employs nearly 15 thousand local workers manufacturing aerial defense systems for the US military.And San Diego based 3DRobotics has made Tijuana its manufacturing hub for its highly popular amateur unmanned aerial vehicles known as ‘quad copters” selling in most countries around the world. So impressive are Tijuana’s manufacturing capabilities and output that the city of San Diego has become the first US city to open a binational affairs office in Tijuana to encourage more US-Mexico business partnerships says office director Mario Lopez. ATijuana has born Mexican American who commutes to and from Tijuana almost daily by San Diego’s trolley line to the US-Mexico border. Mario Lopez says: “We think of this as a mega region the only way to really thrive instead of competing instead of looking at each other on different terms is actually creating synergy that’s the only way in the long term that we’re going to be able to compete with other places in the world.” Though, “being able to compete,” say human rights groups, should not come at the expense of the Mexicans doing the work here, who they claim have historically been among the most exploited in the world. While industrial parks like these across Tijuana have created thousands of jobs, there remains a contentious issue with many workers: Low wages. The minimum wage in Mexico, for example, is almost five times lower than the 7 dollars and 25 cents an hour workers earn in the United States.Admittedly a controversial issue, says Tijuana’s business facilitator Flavio Olivieri. He tells us the hour wage is about one dollar that is fifty cents. Well it is not a lot of money compared to the US. It is more than other parts of the world and Mexico.And people with that wage are able to get their benefits and be able to get insurance and loans for buying a house and they get all the medical services they require. Olivieri says an example of how working conditions and benefits have improved here in recent years is the US Company DJO Global and its manufacturing plant in Tijuana voted one of the top 3 “Best Places to Work” in Mexico for two years running. Its 2,000 employees assembling orthopedic products here are offered everything from free college education - providing they stay with and move up in the company to home loans to free health careto a weekly discount Farmers Market - set up out front of the plant to save employees the time and expense of food shopping elsewhere each week. To a “Hollywood Star” style “Walk of Fame” for “Employees of the month” meant to boost morale.To this music system in the plant’s cafeteria “Karaoke Optional” We requested an opportunity to interview some of the floor workers here -- but the company told us none were willing to take part.We were, instead, offered an interview with an employee from the Human Resources department. Mildred Herrera Martinez claims the company changed her life for the better 13 years ago when she started work here on the production line at the legal working age in Mexico of 14. Her hourly wage has risen from 1 dollar fifty cents to 5 dollars an hour - earning her 40 dollars a day - 200 dollars a week. She worked her way up from the production line and after, they helped her finish university. And now she has risen to a position with Human Resources. Tijuana’s business leaders say the city’s manufacturing boom is slowly sending a message to its American neighbors to the north that Mexicans - when given the opportunity -- are capable of and happy to find jobs in their own country rather than crossing the border illegally for employment in the United States. Flavio Olivieri says: “You know the perception of Mexico has been very negative...and played very strongly by the media and downplaying the capabilities...and the opportunities with Mexico. And I think Americans can really notice the partnership...that could be developed with Mexico...because we complement each other...and we can be more competitive if we work together.” As for the issue of crime and security in Tijuana - Olivieri says drug war violence today is almost non-existent around the city. And while every day crime still exists, he says, it’s no more than in other major cities around the world. Flavio Olivieri thinks what really shows that crime is not a factor is the growth of companies. They continue to see existing companies to invest more and more and expand and expand. Tijuana’s future, he says, is brighter than it’s ever been and thanks to a more highly trained work force capable of higher standard production methods. That is meeting the demands of more and more US companies opening manufacturing plants here. That has Mexicans, these days, feeling quite proud.Tijuana is making its mark as a global manufacturing leader.

Editor:James Source: CCTV.com

www.bajainvestment.com

miércoles, 26 de junio de 2013

Seasons and Celebrations in Baja

A full year of travel in Baja may not be feasible for your family, but several trips over the course of a year might be attainable. A full-year policy of Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com is ideal for such plans, allowing you to pick up and go at your leisure without worrying about that stop at the border for coverage. Using the quote tool for Mexican auto insurance at Mexican Insurance Store, you'll find that pricing for a full year is comparable to a few short trips in cost. Additionally, it's worth the peace of mind to know that your policy is updated and that your Mexican car insurance from Mexican Insurance Store documents are safely tucked in your glove box. Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com is important because US or Canadian coverage is invalid in Mexico and if you are looking for a Baja vacation home or a retirement mecca, you will need quality Mexican auto insurance at Mexican Insurance Store to safely explore this enchanting region. Check Out Different Seasons and Celebrations Summer is a popular travel time for families. Some participate in service projects in Baja communities. Others find a long-term vacation rental and spend a month or more enjoying culture, food and recreation. You might find Baja real estate deals during your visits, and you will definitely enjoy the laid back nature of the peninsula. Fall Celebrations It can be exciting to watch a Mexican Independence Day parade in a small town. The 16th of September is a lot of fun, and the kids will enjoy piñatas and flour-filled eggshells in local parks throughout Baja. Your Mexican car insurance from Mexican Insurance Store can provide for help if you run into car trouble on the Transpeninsular Highway. Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com includes free emergency help. You will want to make sure that you carry a cellphone with an international calling plan so that you can contact your Mexican auto insurance at Mexican Insurance Store representative for help. Winter Months Baja is a wonderful destination in winter months. Whale watching opportunities begin in late December. You'll also enjoy the Mexican celebration of Noche Buena, Christmas Eve. You can participate in the Día de los Reyes as well, January 6. Be ready for beautiful days and chilly nights as you travel. Keep extra blankets in your vehicle in case of a breakdown. Your Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com continues to avail you of support for roadside emergencies throughout the year. You also may want to include travel insurance supplements for your Mexican auto insurance at Mexican Insurance Store. Mark your renewal date on your calendar so that your policy doesn't lapse.

Consider Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com for peace of mind while scouting for Real Estate deals in Baja!



[caption id="attachment_9932" align="alignleft" width="224"]Mexican Insurance from Mexican Insurance Store.com Re/MAX Baja Realty - The Experienced Professionals [/caption]

martes, 7 de mayo de 2013

Viewpoint: Five myths about Mexico



1 May 2013 
People walk on a crowded street in Mexico city
Mexico is a country with a growing middle class and strong democracy
As US President Barack Obama visits Mexico this week, he may want to consider the new realities of the country, says Shannon O'Neil, from the Council on Foreign Relations.
President Obama's visit to Mexico is part of a long tradition of diplomatic relations between the US and its neighbour to the south.
But while many Americans feel that they understand the basic economic and social forces that drive Mexico, the realities are much more interesting.
Here five myths about Mexico, that have a direct impact on American foreign policy, are debunked.

Mexico is no longer a poor country

Billboard advertisement signs for Motorola, King Kong and Telcel hanging over an Oriental Rug shop in Mexico City. Mexico City is a modern hub of commerce and culture
Though many Americans think of Mexico as a country of either wealth or poverty, by most accounts it is now a middle-class country.
A majority of Mexican households - incorporating roughly 60m people - now have disposable income. Half of the people in Mexico own their own car, and one-third own a computer. Nearly everyone has a television and mobile phone.
These new urban middle-class Mexicans are also investing in their children's education. There are now 45,000 private schools, comprising nearly a third of all Mexico's schools.
Student enrollment in universities and beyond has tripled in the past 30 years, from under a million in 1980 to almost three million today.
The rise of the middle class has affected Mexico's politics, too, with this segment pivotal in voting out the long-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 2000, and then voting them back in to Los Pinos, Mexico's White House, last year.
This crucial voting bloc is increasingly up for grabs, rapidly joining the ranks of Mexico's proclaimed political independents.
They mirror the US middle class in their concerns, paying close attention to economic opportunities and security, two important issues in US-Mexico relations.

Mexican manufacturing doesn't harm US workers

Men work on an assembly line at a Mexican shoe factoryBasing factories in Mexico allows American companies to be more competitive
For Mexico, the biggest issues in the US-Mexico relationship are economic, and President Enrique Pena Nieto is hoping to deepen commercial ties between the two nations.
In his State of the Union address, President Obama praised Ford Motor Company for bringing jobs back from Mexico as part of a strategy to make "America a magnet for new jobs and manufacturing".
Yet this statement, at least with regard to Mexico, is mistaken.
It isn't that globalisation doesn't lead some jobs to foreign lands. It does. But by expanding abroad, companies become more competitive, supporting and creating jobs at home.
Ford increased its US workforce (and plans on adding thousands more jobs by 2015), but it hasn't stopped hiring in Mexico. It is expanding a plant in Hermosillo and adding over 1,000 positions in the last few years in the state of Sonora.
A study by two Harvard business professors and a University of Michigan colleague shows that for every 10 people hired overseas by American corporations, two new jobs are created in the United States.

Mexican immigrants are not going to keep flooding the US

 Male undocumented immigrants rest at the U.S. Border Patrol detainee processing center The net migration from Mexico to the US is zero, due to many factors. The US has cracked down on undocumented immigrants like these Mexican men being held by Border Control
The images of hundreds of thousands of Mexican immigrants illegally entering the United States each year, chased down by border patrol agents on foot, horseback, or truck, resonates widely. But this reality has changed.
The estimated numbers coming north each year are down to levels last seen in the 1970s.
In fact, a 2012 Pew Hispanic Report noted that the net immigration for Mexicans in and out of the United States was "zero". In other words the same numbers of Mexicans entered and left.
This can in part be explained by the US recession, but it also reflects changes within Mexico.
Mexico has undergone a major demographic shift in the last generation. In the 1970s, women were having an average of seven children, but today that number is closer to two - the same as the US.
With fewer citizens coming of age each year relative to the overall population, the decades where Mexico's "extra youths" headed to the US are over.

Mexico's democracy is not weakening

Mexican president Enrique Pena NietoMexican president Enrique Pena Nieto wants to expand business dealings between the US and his country
Although many feared that the 2012 return of the PRI would push Mexico back into its authoritarian past, checks and balances now exist and constrain whomever wears the presidential sash.
In Mexico's Congress, the three major political parties must negotiate to get any bill passed, and the nation's Supreme Court has increasingly exercised its autonomy to restrain both political officials and vested interests.
The country's media and civil society groups more generally are beginning to play an important watchdog role, questioning policies and exposing bad behaviour.
And finally, Mexico has reached a relatively enviable space, ranking in the upper tiers of nearly all relative international measures of democracy.

Mexico is not at risk of becoming a failed state

Teachers and students protest in front of anti-riot policemen in AcapulcoMexico has its share of protests, corruption and violence, but the country continues to improve its institutions
Over the last six years, some 70,000 Mexicans have been killed in drug-related violence, and tens of thousands more have disappeared.
Mexico's police have often been unwilling or unable to stem the bloodshed, and the judicial system too has failed - with just 2% of all crimes ending in convictions.
But while Mexico faces a serious security threat from organised criminal groups, the country continues to collect taxes, build roads, run schools, expand social welfare programmes and hold free and fair elections.
Its economy has grown steadily, if somewhat slowly, and Mexico maintains an important presence in multilateral groups and summits.
It has also begun the long and arduous path of professionalising its police forces and transforming its courts to create a democratic rule of law.
One thing about Mexico that remains true is the deep and now permanent economic, political, security, and personal links between Mexico and the United States.
For Presidents Obama and Pena Nieto, there is much to gain from a better understanding of each other's country.
Shannon K. O'Neil is a senior fellow for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of Two Nations Indivisible: Mexico, the United States, and the Road Ahead
www.bajainvestment.com
www.remax-baja.com

lunes, 8 de abril de 2013

Buying land near Mexico's coasts


Buying land near Mexico's coasts


This blog is written by Tim Johnson, the Mexico bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers.


For nearly a century, foreigners have been holding deeds to land near Mexico’s borders or shoreline. The prohibition came as a result of fear of invasion by land or sea.
Over the past four decades, foreigners have indeed been able to obtain beachfront property but through a bureaucratic process in which they set up a Mexican bank trust. The bank actually holds the deed. Through the trust, the foreigners enjoy basically the same rights as Mexicans.
Now, change is in the air, and it could save money for thousands of American retirees and other foreigners who want to buy their piece of paradise in Mexico.
Two days ago, none other than Manlio Fabio Beltrones, put forth a proposal to amend article 27 of the Mexican constitution.
Beltrones is no ordinary politician. He’s a former governor of Sonora state, a former two-term congressman, a current senator, a perennial big shot of the Institutional Revolutionary Party and even a onetime presidential candidate.
Beltrones, presented the proposal along with another PRI deputy, Gloria Nunez Sanchez, and early signs are that members of the center-right National Action party may get behind it.
But first, a little more history: Mexico had legitimate fears of invasion back during the 1917 Revolution. So the constitution minted then included a blanket ban on foreigners owning land within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of any border or 50 kilometers (31 miles) of any shoreline. This websitesays the ban includes the entire Baja Peninsula.
Following a 1973 law that regulated creation of trusts, foreigners found a work-around. By paying around $2,000 for a permit and registration in the foreign investment registry, plus up to another $1,000 annually for bank trust administration fees, foreigners could buy land near the coasts and borders.
This has made quite a bit of money for banks.
In his proposal, Beltrones notes that fears of invasion are anachronistic.
“Hand to hand combat is no longer the way to settle disputes, thus the danger has disappeared of allowing foreigners to obtain property,” it says.
The trusts, the proposal notes, have confronted foreigners with “high costs of setting up trusts and fee payments for various registration procedures, assessments, taxes and permits prior to the government authority.”
Some Mexican realtors are already touting the proposed change, apparently eager to increase sales.
But any constitutional amendment is lengthy. Beltrones’s proposal has to be passed by both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, then approved by 17 state legislatures before it becomes law.
Moreover, the proposal would only affect those building housing with "no commercial objectives," and that a ban would remain on foreigners owning "direct dominion over the water." I'm not sure what that means. 
www.bajainvestment.com

Read more here: http://blogs.mcclatchydc.com/mexico/2013/04/buying-land-near-mexicos-coasts.html#storylink=cpy


Read more here: http://blogs.mcclatchydc.com/mexico/2013/04/buying-land-near-mexicos-coasts.html#storylink=cpy

martes, 12 de marzo de 2013

For sale foreclosed oceanfront property in Rosarito Baja California

Amazing opportunity in Rosarito Baja California real estate: Foreclosed oceanfront property in Rosarito Baja California, Mex.! 

Presenting the best opportunity in Baja real estate: Paradise del Baja, a Foreclosed oceanfront property in Rosarito Baja California Mex. 

It is Owner’s intention to effect the sale of the Property Paradise del Baja by sale of 100% of the shares of the company, which owns the property. Purchaser will obtain ownership of the Co. by purchase of its outstanding stock, and thereby its current ownership rights to Paradise del Baja in excess of $2 million Dlls of grading work. 

Paradise del Baja consist of 6 parcels, combined into a single larger tract, with one very large sized parcel, two intermediate sized parcels, and 3 fragment sized parcels. Paradise del Baja a 5.97-acre parcel of land is situated in a magnificent location on Rosarito Baja California, Mex. with sweeping Pacific Ocean and beach views. 
Developers with a taste for the peaceful views of El Descanso Bay in Baja, will be drawn to this beachfront property, a natural whale resting area. 

Beachfront real estate in Baja doesn’t get any better than this, with views of turquoise waters and less than a mile from the renowned Puerto Nuevo dinning. Rising on an partially land graded parcel of land between the main highway and the Pacific Ocean, Paradise del Baja, a Rosarito real estate opportunity is unparalleled in the possibilities it presents for real estate development. Zoned residential and commercial, this land is available for many types of development, like hotels, condos, homes, shopping mall, etc. The Seller has conducted a Master Plan audit to identify potential uses for this Oceanside land. 

This exceptional Rosarito Beach property can support a premier community that is zoned over 200 homes. Potential Features and Amenities: Seaside Multi-Family Residences, Seaside Single-Family Residences, Beach Club, Retail/Entertainment District, Reconstituted Beach, Community Sports Fields, Staff Housing and more. 

Paradise del Baja an undeveloped but largely improved oceanfront property in Rosarito Baja, represents a stellar opportunity for development of a project that boasts world-class recreational activities within a short drive from the US border. The 5.97 acres of land on Rosarito Baja California is situated in the Cantiles Dorados area, 28 miles south of the border. 

Contact us: 
Toll Free.- 1866 588 2252 
US (619) 270 5446 
Mex (661) 100 2076 
rosaritobeach@topproducer.com
bajainvestment.com