Regulation, AI Futures, Job Creation: The Week in Talent
Regulatory reform reshaped Mexico’s talent agenda in 2025, as authorities weighed extending social security to app-based workers and compliance moved to the center of workforce strategy. AI and emerging technologies are redefining the future of work toward 2030, with the WEF outlining multiple talent scenarios amid uncertainty over jobs and wages. Formal employment growth in Mexico remains sluggish, missing job creation targets and exposing persistent gender and regional gaps, even as overall formality reached 44.6%. Meanwhile, renewable energy jobs continue to expand globally, but automation is shifting demand away from low-skill roles toward specialized and digital talent.
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The Year in Talent: From Compliance to AI
In 2025, Mexico’s talent landscape saw transformative shifts driven by regulatory reform, evolving employee expectations, intense competition for talent, and accelerated upskilling. Meanwhile, technology and data governance became central to human capital strategy.
Mexico Weighs Social Security Coverage for App-Based Workers
Mexico’s labor authorities are moving toward a nationwide decision on whether workers for digital platforms such as DiDi, Uber, and Rappi will be incorporated into the country’s mandatory social security system, following the conclusion of a six-month pilot program at the end of 2025.
AI, Talent Trends Define Four Futures of Work by 2030: WEF
The rapid commercialization of emerging technologies is reshaping how companies operate, compete, and plan for talent, as AI moves from experimentation to integration across industries. While AI adoption is accelerating, uncertainty remains over its implications for jobs, wages, and the global economy, reports the World Economic Forum (WEF).
Formal Employment in Mexico Faces Slow Recovery
Mexico closed 2025 with limited growth in formal employment, according to a report published Jan. 9 by the think tank México, ¿cómo vamos? (MCV). Only 278,697 new formal jobs were added throughout the year, far below the MCV target of 1.2 million, placing the national Semáforo Económico (Economic Traffic Light) for job creation in red. The report highlights persistent stagnation across industries, regional disparities, and the ongoing gap between male and female workforce participation.
Renewable Jobs Grow Amid Automation, Friction
The renewable energy sector, which employs millions of people across the world, is growing steadily. However, job growth in the sector is slowing due to automation, higher productivity, and economies of scale. This is expected to lead to fewer low-skill jobs but stronger demand for specialized, technical, and digital skills, potentially reshaping the job market across the sector.
Mexico Achieves 44.6% Formal Employment but Job Growth Slows
Mexico ended 2025 with 44.6% of its employed population holding a formal job, equivalent to 26.5 million workers, according to the Labor and Social Welfare Ministry (STPS), even as hiring slowed sharply and formal job creation remained far below the level required to meet the country’s labor demand.