Trade policy openness — tariffs, non-tariff barriers, FTAs, industrial protection.
Product-market regulation, entry barriers, licensing burdens, network-industry regulation, price controls.
Security of private property rights — formal recognition, expropriation risk, titling systems.
De jure and de facto independence of the central bank from fiscal authority. Per D.1.5 scope, one of the framework's defensible monetary positions.
The 1992 amendment to Article 27 of Mexico's Constitution and the accompanying Agrarian Law ended the obligation to redistribute land and recognised individual ejido titling, leasing, sale, and collateralisation rights. The reform unwound seven decades of post-revolutionary communal-tenure doctrine, was complementary to NAFTA's agricultural opening, and ran alongside the broader Salinas programme of trade liberalisation, privatisation, and central-bank reform.
Per invariant 3, reforms are scored by what they did on each channel-separated axis, not by the party that enacted them. This fingerprint is how the policy-match engine finds historical analogues.
Explicit links are curated by the author. Inferred links are hypotheses in the library that test the same axes this policy moved — the framework's answer to "what does the data say about a policy like this?".
Ranked by axis-fingerprint overlap with this policy. Direction match bolded — those are the closest historical analogues. Shape of the match is what drives policy-outcome comparison, not the country or party label.