In: Economics
The Mexican Revolution's initial aim was merely to abolish the Díaz regime, but the comparatively basic revolutionary activity grew into a massive economic and social upheaval the maintained the fundamental character of the experience of Mexico in the 20th century. The Mexican people developed a sense of culture and meaning during the long war, perhaps unmatched by any other Latin American republic. By 1940, when the revolution's aims were institutionalised as guidance for future Mexican policy, several changes had been made. The brutality of 1910 brought the Mexican Revolution a strong beginning, but historians differ on a final point: many use the year 1920 as a congress, but others end it with the constitution of 1917 or events in the 1920s, and even others claim that the revolution eventually unravelled until 1940.
The 1917 constitution set the priorities that presidents had to strive for. Carranza was, as predicted, elected president and recognised de jure by the United States. The last unified resistance to the Carranza-Obregón reorganisation was destroyed when Zapata was betrayed and killed in 1919. After his raids across the frontier, particularly one in Columbus, N.M., Villa retired from aggressive campaigning. (March 9, 1916), in confrontation with Carranza, had struggled to embroil the United States. Villa was eventually ambushed and assassinated in 1923 by political rivals.
At the conclusion of World War II, the population of Mexico erupted. A significant factor of the economy was the industrialism spawned by the war. As arbiters of public strategy, the military gradually faded into the past, and Mexico had an unbroken string of civilian presidents, starting with Miguel Alemán's 1946 victory. With him, the focus moved from the Cárdenas approach to the production of new capital, breaking the limited agricultural land of Mexico among several individuals. Huge hydraulic schemes have been undertaken to provide electricity, open up new land, manage flooding and become the centre of regional agricultural and industrial complexes. In an attempt to satisfy burgeoning domestic demands, the nationalised oil industry became a major producer of natural gas and petrochemicals. By expanding road, highway and airline networks to almost all countries , economic convergence has been achieved.