A presidential advice and a figure that draws attention
The Secretary of the Treasury, Édgar Abraham Amador Zamora, today presented the creation of a Strategic Investment Planning Council. The most striking thing: it will be headed directly by president Claudia Sheinbaum.
This organization will be the central axis of the so-called Infrastructure Investment Plan for Development with Wellbeing. And it comes with a number that they seek to burn into public memory.
“For the period 2026–2030, a historic public and mixed investment of 5.6 billion pesos is contemplated,” Amador Zamora announced in the morning.
And what does that money go towards?
The strategy, according to the official, is based on the 100 presidential commitments. Its stated goal is to go beyond simple economic growth.
“There is an important difference between economic growth and development. We need to complement growth with justice, with income distribution,” he stated.
The spending breakdown is revealing. Of the total, 54% will be allocated to energy. Trains take 16%, roads 14%, and ports another 6%. Health, water and education complete the list with lower percentages.
The curious thing: Education represents only 3.4%, described as an investment “additional to existing programs”. A detail that invites us to ask about the real weight of the new compared to what has already been budgeted.
Promises of transparency and a nod to the past
To finance this plan, they promise new specialized investment vehicles. The secretary was careful to distance himself from previous schemes.
“They are going to be dedicated funds… very transparent and very cost-efficient vehicles,” he said, explicitly distancing himself from the old Public-Private Partnerships.
President Sheinbaum added that they will send a bill to the Chamber of Deputies this week to create the legal framework for the Council and the funds. “We are going to send all of this in a very simple law,” he assured.
Jorge Mendoza Sánchez, director of Banobras, gave another key piece of information: they seek for the federal government to have a majority in the companies that are created with the private sector to “have some control over investments”.
The question that remains floating: Does one more council, chaired from Los Pinos, guarantee that these billions do not get stuck in bureaucracy or in phantom projects? Recent memory is full of grandiose announcements whose physical progress was slower than the financial one.




