Informal economy drives 25.4% of Mexico's GDP in 2024

Mexico's informal economy reached its highest contribution to GDP in 2024, accounting for 25.4% of the total, according to preliminary INEGI data. This marks a 3.2 percentage point increase since 2020, underscoring the persistence of labor informality affecting 54.4% of the employed population.

The INEGI's Informal Economy Measurement for 2024 shows that informality generated one in every four pesos of national GDP, a record since data has been available since 2003. The informal sector contributed 14.5%, and other modalities, such as subsistence agriculture and domestic service, added 10.9%.

This 0.7 percentage point increase from 2023 highlights more dynamic growth in informality: while total GDP rose 1.4%, the formal economy advanced only 0.5% and the informal surged 4.3%. INEGI notes that "for every 100 pesos of the country's GDP, formal workers generated 75 pesos and those in informality, 25 pesos".

In the third quarter of 2025, out of 59.5 million employed, 33 million worked informally (55.4%), compared to 26.5 million in the formal sector. This results in a gap of 1.2 informals per formal, with no notable improvements in job quality despite wage increases.

Informality persists as the main avenue for income generation, though it is less productive. In this context, Víctor Piz argues that "it is essential to accelerate the growth of the economy and formal employment in 2026", to prevent informality from continuing as the primary driver of economic growth.

Related Articles

Illustration of Mexico's economy showing GDP contraction with charts and Mexico City skyline
Image generated by AI

Mexico economy contracts 0.6 percent in first quarter of 2026

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Mexico's gross domestic product fell 0.6 percent in the first quarter compared with the prior period, according to final Inegi data released Friday. The contraction was smaller than expected and revives debate over possible further rate cuts by Banxico.

The National Survey of Occupation and Employment (ENOE) reported that in March 2026, the employed population reached 60.2 million people, up 422,000 from a year earlier. The unemployment rate fell to 2.4 percent and underemployment to 6.7 percent, though labor informality held steady at 54.8 percent.

Reported by AI

IMSS data show the average contribution salary hit a record of 663.50 pesos daily in March, up 7.1% nominally. Yet, formal job creation in the first quarter was the weakest in two decades, excluding past crises. This boosts informality and underemployment, analysts say.

A study led by Universidad de Antioquia found discrepancies between DANE formality figures and UGPP records. The analysis revived debate on methodologies to measure employment in Colombia.

Reported by AI

An analysis by ITESO's Business School shows Mexico's food basket cost rose 67% from August 2018 to March 2026, outpacing general inflation of 45%. In urban areas, it increased from 1,500 to 2,571 pesos per person monthly. This hike particularly impacts low-income households.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline