Please login first
The Mexican Agricultural Policy Observatory (MAPO): A Digital Governance Tool for Evidence-Based Public Policy
* 1 , 2 , * 3 , * 2
1  Minister of Sciences, Humanity, Technology and Innovation (Postdoctoral Position, Department of Agronomy, Division of Life Sciences), University of Guanajuato, Irapuato-Salamanca Campus, Irapuato, C.P. 36500, Mexico
2  Division of Natural and Exact Sciences, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Guanajuato, Guanajuato, C.P. 36050, Mexico
3  Department of Agronomy, Division of Life Sciences, University of Guanajuato, Irapuato-Salamanca Campus, Irapuato, C.P. 36500, Mexico
Academic Editor: Natalia Aversano

Abstract:

Introduction: Agricultural public policy analysis in Mexico is severely limited by fragmented data and a lack of transparency. Information about state-level support programs is dispersed across 32 decentralized agencies with no unified repository, hindering national comparisons and evidence-based decision-making. This fragmentation restricts policymakers’ ability to identify regional disparities, overlapping initiatives, and investment priorities. The Mexican Agricultural Policy Observatory (MAPO) was developed to address this gap by providing an interactive digital governance platform that centralizes, classifies, and visualizes agricultural policies nationwide.

Methods: A systematic audit of official websites from all 32 state agricultural secretariats was conducted. Data was manually curated to compile information on program objectives, beneficiaries, and support mechanisms. A functional classification scheme adapted from World Bank frameworks was applied, encompassing Financing, Supplies and Equipment Acquisition, Technification and Digital Transformation, Water Management, and Training. These categories are policy-relevant because they reflect key dimensions of public intervention in productivity, sustainability, and digital inclusion.

Results: Preliminary analysis reveals that financing initiatives dominate, accounting for 42% of all programs, while Technification and Commercialization remain underrepresented. The platform’s dashboard enables robust comparative policy analysis by cross-referencing policy data with national production statistics and visualizing program classifications by state through interactive tools such as treemaps of investment patterns, choropleth maps of regional priorities, and statistical charts comparing production value, land-use efficiency, and harvest loss rates across states.

Conclusion: MAPO enhances transparency and fosters digital transformation in public management. It empowers policymakers to identify inefficiencies, gaps, and redundancies, thereby improving strategic planning and resource allocation. Beyond serving as a repository, MAPO functions as a governance instrument that strengthens accountability and supports evidence-based, transparent, and regionally balanced agricultural policymaking, laying the groundwork for a more coordinated and inclusive rural development strategy in Mexico.

Keywords: Digital Transformation; public policies; agriculture; support programs; sustentability
Top