Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador

said on Tuesday that billionaire Carlos Slim , the country’s richest man, has told him he aims to retire during his administration, and has committed to helping the economy in the process.

Slim, who for a time was listed by Forbes as the world’s richest man, has long been a dominant figure in the Mexican economy. However, the president’s announcement was at odds with the businessman’s typically low-key approach to public life.

“He wants to end his business life helping economic growth and public welfare during this government,” López Obrador told a regular morning news conference. “That’s what he offered me. He wants to retire and he wants to do it in this government.”

Arturo Elías

, a spokesman and son-in-law of the 79-year-old Slim , later issued a brief statement on Twitter .

“Slim remarked to the president that the two have almost six years of intense work (ahead) for the country, the president due to his electoral mandate, and (Slim) due to his age,” Elias said.

Day-to-day management of Slim’s business empire , which ranges from telecommunications and construction to retail and banking, is in the hands of his sons and sons-in-law, though he is widely held to maintain a powerful influence over decisions.

The leftist López Obrador took office in December and has canceled a partly-built $13 billion new Mexico City airport in which Slim and his family had major interests. He did not specify when Slim told him he wanted to retire.

Vowing to tackle chronic poverty and inequality in Mexico, López Obrador has put government welfare spending at the heart of his plans to redistribute wealth.

While some economists have questioned how effective handouts will be, business leaders have publicly backed the promotion of “bienestar” or “welfare” as an instrument of policy, and pledged to support the president economically.

Obrador, who worked with Slim to redevelop parts of Mexico City when he was mayor of the capital between 2000 and 2005, argued that the airport was tainted by corruption and being built in an area that was geologically unsuitable.

The cancellation angered business leaders and the government spent its first few weeks paying off investors in the project.

The president said he planned to meet Slim soon to discuss plans for investment in Mexico. He did not go into detail.

Slim’s companies include telecoms giant America Movil and bank Grupo Financiero Inbursa .

The Slim family’s wealth is currently estimated by Forbes at $64 billion . The billionaire has previously suggested he would never retire, saying he would work until he is “put in a coffin” or until “my body gives in.”

Shares in America Movil were up 0.22 percent in afternoon trading, slightly ahead of the main S&P/BMV IPC stock index , which was up 0.15 percent. Inbursa shares were up 0.43 percent.

López Obrador has used his presidency to rail constantly at the neo-liberal economic policies of the last six governments which he blames for fomenting corruption and violence in Mexico.

Those 3 1/2 decades cover most of the period during which Slim vaulted from a position of relative obscurity to becoming Mexico’s pre-eminent business magnate with the acquisition of former state telephone monopoly Telmex in 1990-91 .

By law, Mexican presidents can serve only a single six-year term. López Obrador’s term is due to end in 2024 .

dm

Google News

TEMAS RELACIONADOS

Noticias según tus intereses