When Mexico will stop exporting the bales of the cheap toilet paper we need

Mexico’s exports of cheap toilet papers are a boon to the economy.
And Mexico’s export boom has been fueled by a surge in demand for the paper.
That demand has led to a glut of the material, which is now being shipped around the world for a fraction of its cost in the U.S. and Canada.
The bales are being sold as toilet paper for $3 a pound, but some consumers are willing to pay more.
The demand has been driven by Mexico’s expanding use of Mexico’s subsidized toilet paper programs.
That has prompted some of the country’s biggest manufacturers to slash their production to make up for the shortfall.
For instance, U.K.-based British American Tobacco is cutting production by 80 percent in Mexico.
The company said its Mexican factories will continue to produce toilet paper in the event the bale is not produced.
MEXICO CITY, Mexico — Mexico’s government says it is in a position to import $200 billion worth of toilet paper from China in the coming months.
The country exported more than $1 billion worth in toilet paper last year, according to Mexico’s National Statistics Office.
That number includes $3.2 billion in bales that were exported last year.
That’s about 3 percent of the global total, which means Mexico has nearly three times the amount of toilet papers it needs, according the Mexico Institute of Technology.
But that’s not the end of the story.
Mexican exports of toilet sheets and paper are expected to climb again this year, to $200.4 billion.
The government says Mexico can now import more toilet paper than it exported last.
The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime said the increase in imports is due to the demand for cheap toilet sheets.
The agency said Mexico exported 1.5 billion toilet sheets in 2018, up from 1.2 in 2017.
The increase is partly because of a surge of demand in Mexico’s poor rural areas, where most of the toilet paper is manufactured.
Mexico’s government has started buying toilet paper overseas, and the government is looking at ways to expand its supply.
Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto has ordered the construction of a massive factory to produce new toilet paper.
He says he wants to increase Mexico’s output by 50 percent in the next 10 years.
Mexico already has the world’s largest supply of toilet tissue, about 1.7 billion bales.
Mexico is expected to produce about 3.8 billion of those bales this year.
The president also wants to invest $50 million in an expansion of the Mexico State University to produce high-quality toilet paper, said Carlos Fuentes, a spokesman for Pena.
Mexico also is planning to add another 50 million toilet paper bales next year, Fuenters said.
U.S.-based U.W.C.E. said Mexico’s use of toilet-paper as a primary source of income is expected grow to 10.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2025.
The global demand for toilet paper and toilet tissue is expected increase to about 1 billion bals a year, or 2.7 percent of GDP.
Mexico was a leading toilet paper exporter in the 1990s, but has been slowly reducing its use in recent years.
In a report earlier this month, the World Bank said Mexico needs to double its use of paper products by 2025 to avoid an economic collapse.
Mexico currently consumes more than 1.8 million metric tons of toilet material a year.