Though Mexico has logged more than 180,000 Covid-19 deaths, it has some of the world's loosest entry requirements for foreigners. Visitors aren't required to submit negative test results, and there is no mandatory quarantine.
The pandemic's economic effect on the tourism industry has still been devastating.
The world's seventh most popular tourist destination, Mexico's economy has grown to depend on what amounted in 2019 to about $25 billion in income from 45 million international visitors, according to estimates from the National Tourism Business Council (CNET) and a center for tourism research at Universidad Anáhuac.
Across Mexico, tourist destinations are operating on limited capacity per Covid-19 regulations. The country is struggling to adapt to its slowest high season in memory, with limited government help for many workers and businesses struggling to make ends meet.
"I guess Mexico has been doing what it can do," said birdwatching guide Alex Martínez Rodríguez, but he said he doesn't feel that the populist government is acting in the best interest of the people.
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Risky business? Balancing Mexico's pandemic response with tourism
By Megan Frye, CNN. Top photo by Rodrigo Arangua/AFP via Getty Images






