The Tijuana Business Coordinating Council (CCE) will seek to recover urban competitiveness rates, which has been descending compared to other cities with more than one million inhabitants, said its president, Roberto Lyle Fritch.
He recalled that as an agency, the interests of 17 business domes representatives of different sectors are represented, which are governed under a comprehensive work system for the improvement and efficiency of the local economy.
Among the points that are prioritized, he clarified, is that of the level of competitiveness that Tijuana has at national and urban levels, in which he pronounced there has been a stagnation and even a setback.
At that point, he said that issues such as infrastructure, government procedures, legality and law, society and environment, labor market, are points that influence the gain or loss of steps nationwide.
"As an example, the procedures are very cumbersome, we have to be more innovative and that it is a faster process, than if you are going to constitute a company takes a lot, because that speaks a lot about the competitiveness of a city," he said.
See more news..