Asked by hjbhbh
In Mexico what do citizens and businesses decide
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Do you mean politically (voting, public decisions) or economically (market choices)? I can answer either — here are short summaries of both so one will likely match your intent.
If you mean economically (market decisions)
- Citizens/households decide what goods and services to buy, how much to save, where to work, whether to start a business and where to live.
- Businesses decide what products or services to produce, what prices to charge, how much to invest, how many people to hire, and where to locate production.
- Prices, competition and government rules (taxes, labor and environmental regulations, customs) help coordinate those choices.
If you mean politically / civically
- Citizens decide who represents them by voting in elections for president, federal deputies and senators, state governors and local (municipal) governments; they can also participate in public consultations, petitions and civic organizations.
- Businesses decide how to engage politically and civically (lobbying, advocacy, campaign contributions within legal limits), and they make organizational decisions that affect public policy debates (e.g., investment plans, layoffs, corporate social responsibility).
If you had a specific context (taxes, elections, regulations, a particular decision), tell me which and I’ll give a focused answer.
If you mean economically (market decisions)
- Citizens/households decide what goods and services to buy, how much to save, where to work, whether to start a business and where to live.
- Businesses decide what products or services to produce, what prices to charge, how much to invest, how many people to hire, and where to locate production.
- Prices, competition and government rules (taxes, labor and environmental regulations, customs) help coordinate those choices.
If you mean politically / civically
- Citizens decide who represents them by voting in elections for president, federal deputies and senators, state governors and local (municipal) governments; they can also participate in public consultations, petitions and civic organizations.
- Businesses decide how to engage politically and civically (lobbying, advocacy, campaign contributions within legal limits), and they make organizational decisions that affect public policy debates (e.g., investment plans, layoffs, corporate social responsibility).
If you had a specific context (taxes, elections, regulations, a particular decision), tell me which and I’ll give a focused answer.
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