Market Demand for Microchip I.D. in Mexico First of all I would like to note that most usual microchip ID is an implantable, 12mm by 2.1mm radio frequency device about the size of the point of a typical ballpoint pen. Each microchip will contain a unique identification number and other critical data. Utilizing an external scanner, radio frequency energy passes through the skin energizing the dormant microchip, which then emits a radio frequency signal transmitting the identification number and other data contained in the microchip. The scanner will display the identification number, but the microchip data can also be transmitted, via telephone or the Internet, to an FDA compliant, secure data-storage site. It will then be accessible by authorized personnel.
Inserting the microchip device is a simple procedure performed in an outpatient, office setting. It requires only local anesthesia, a tiny incision and perhaps a small adhesive bandage. There are different types of microchip IDs and one should remember that not all of them are implantable. Some of the microchip IDs are already used in smart cards, currencies, and passports to minimize the chance of their forgery. – Is there an indicator that there is a market for Microchip identification? Yes, there are several signs that there exists a microchip Id market in Mexico. There are also several areas where it is possible to implement the microchip id in Mexico. Please refer to some of them. Economic: In 1995, Mexico was an impoverished country guided by its president Mr.
The Essay on Microchip Identification Company In Mexico
Microchip identification Company in Mexico First of all one needs to understand that Mexico has a free market economy with a mixture of modern and outmoded industry and agriculture, increasingly dominated by the private sector, which makes this country a wonderful place for the location of our Microchip Identification company. Recent administrations have expanded competition in seaports, ...
Ernesto Zeidillo. Yet the membership in the NAFTA, proximity to the worlds largest market for virtually anything that the USA represented, contributed to the increased standards of living among Mexicans already in 2000 (Luboff, 78).
The companies of Mexico grow and develop new technology and knowledge and certainly are in need in any microchip technology. Microchips are currently used in smart cards, phone cards, smart cards for gas station, card-operated hotel locks etc, are the areas that show growing demand for the microchip id technology in Mexico. And the increased financial status of Mexicans not only creates the need for such chips but also shows that there is enough money to accommodate that need. Problem areas: Currently Mexico faces numerous problems with illegal migration to the USA. Yet the saddest problem is the drug industry.
Illicit cultivation of opium poppy and cannabis continues in spite of government eradication program continues to be a problem. Mexico is a major supplier of heroin and marijuana to the US market and it continues to be the primary transshipment country for US-bound cocaine and marijuana from South America (Wise, 183).
Also one needs to remember that Mexico is increasingly involved in the production and distribution of methamphetamine, which once again is shipped to the USA. The microchip Id technology could then be used to either mark those who were caught in the past for drug dealing and then, in case of a need, it would be easy to check where these people go. Also, upon entering the USA, the Mexicans could get the microchip id with the date of arrival and the expected date of departure programmed in it. Thus, if a person, violates the immigration laws, yet tries to find a job in the USA, the potential employer would be informed that the person is an illegal immigrant.
Also, one should not forget that Mexico is the country with the second (after Colombia) largest number of kidnappings with over 400 people kidnapped annually. Microchip IDs, if implanted in a child (another sensitive area that requires parental advice) could apprehend the kidnappers at each police post (assuming that policemen possess the ID scanners) and could certainly benefit the families. Some microchips at some point of time could as well be detected with other special equipment (radars, satellites) making it possible to locate child anywhere on earth. -How to apply Microchip identification in demanded market? Microchip ID should certainly pursue the new market and do the following: Open several educational campaigns of how microchips could benefit families, children and people. Directly contact the companies and offer your services for personalized cars (if stolen can easily be identified), smart cards, etc. speak with the Mexican authorities and decide whether one should implement ID chips into criminals, traffickers, and drug-dealers.
The Term Paper on Economics Of Mexico
A federal constitutional republic located in North America, Mexico is surrounded by Belize, Guatemala and the United States. This Latin nation has about 11 million people in population. In nominal terms, Mexico’s economy stands as the 13th largest in the whole word according to the World Bank. It stands as the 11th largest economy in terms of purchasing power parity. Mexico is considered to be an ...
Speak with the US embassies in Mexico offering them another protection for the US visa-microchip ID. With that chip, it would be almost impossible to forge Visa, because it would not only be needed to falsify the data on the US visa, but also to reprogram the microchip. Some chips can be created as non-reprogrammable, thus making visa perfectly protected that would once again in crease the border control especially with the country that annually contributes for the largest number of the US illegal immigrants.
Bibliography:
Luboff, Ken, Live Well in Mexico: How to Relocate, Retire, and Increase Your Standard of Living, McGraw Hill, 2002. Wise, Carol, The Post-Nafta Political Economy: Mexico and the Western Hemisphere, Prentice Hall, 2001. Butler, Edgar, Mexico and Mexico City in the World Economy, Penguin books, 2001. Stokes, Erica, The Economy of Mexico, NY Random House, 2002..