Edgardo Saucedo was fed up with his job at a brewery. The pay was good, but the company wouldn't train him or give him a permanent job. So earlier this year the 20-year-old machinist walked out and went to work for Nemak, a fast-growing auto-parts company in a suburb of Monterrey. "I prefer a job where I can start at the bottom but have some security and a chance to move up," says Saucedo, whose gel-spiked hair is a counterpoint to Nemak's regulation blue overalls.
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