SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

          Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                    Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.  )

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [_]
Check the appropriate box:
[_]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[_]  CONFIDENTIAL, FOR USE OF THE
     COMMISSION ONLY (AS PERMITTED BY
     RULE 14A-6(E)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[_]  Definitive Additional Materials
[_]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to (S) 240.14a-11(c) or (S) 240.14a-12

                              THE MEXICO FUND, INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                              THE MEXICO FUND, INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.
[_]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

     (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

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     (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

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     (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
         pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which
         the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

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     (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

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     (5) Total fee paid:

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[_]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[_]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
     Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee
     was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement
     number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

     (1) Amount Previously Paid:

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Notes:



                             THE MEXICO FUND, INC.
                             1775 Eye Street, N.W.
                           Washington, DC 20006-2401

                   Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders

                                 March 7, 2002

   NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the
"Meeting") of The Mexico Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") will be held at 30 Rockefeller
Plaza, 23rd Floor, New York, New York, 10112, on March 7, 2002 at 2:00 P.M. for
the following purposes:

   (1) To elect two Directors;

   (2) To approve adding a performance fee component to the Fund's investment
       advisory fee;

   (3) To approve adoption of a share repurchase policy requiring the Fund, on
       a periodic basis, to offer to repurchase in-kind Fund shares at no less
       than 98% of net asset value;

   (4) To consider a shareholder proposal that the shareholders of the Fund
       recommend that the Board of Directors expedite the process to convert
       the Fund to an open-end investment management company; and

   (5) To transact such other business as may properly come before the Meeting
       or any adjournment thereof.

   The Board of Directors has fixed December 22, 2001 as the record date for
the determination of shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
Meeting or any adjournment thereof, and only holders of record of shares at the
close of business on that date are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
Meeting and any adjournment thereof.

   You are cordially invited to attend the Meeting. All shareholders are
requested to complete, date and sign the enclosed form of white proxy and
return it promptly in the envelope provided for that purpose. The enclosed
white proxy is being solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of the Fund.

                                      By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                      Samuel Garcia Cuellar
                                      Secretary

New York, New York
Dated: January 23, 2002

  PLEASE RESPOND -- YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND
  THE MEETING, PLEASE COMPLETE, SIGN AND MAIL THE WHITE PROXY CARD IN THE
  MANNER PROVIDED. IT IS IMPORTANT THAT YOU RETURN YOUR PROXY AS SOON AS
  POSSIBLE TO ASSURE THAT YOUR PROXY WILL BE VOTED AND TO AVOID ANY ADDITIONAL
  EXPENSE TO THE FUND OF FURTHER SOLICITATION. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE
  CALL 1-800-654-2468.



                                PROXY STATEMENT

                             THE MEXICO FUND, INC.

                             1775 Eye Street, N.W.
                           Washington, DC 20006-2401

                               -----------------

                        Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                                 March 7, 2002

                               -----------------

                                 INTRODUCTION

   This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation of
proxies on behalf of the Board of Directors of The Mexico Fund, Inc. (the
"Fund"), a Maryland corporation, to be voted at the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders of the Fund (the "Meeting") to be held at 30 Rockefeller Plaza,
23rd Floor, New York, New York, 10112, on March 7, 2002 at 2:00 P.M. and at any
adjournment thereof. The approximate mailing date of this Proxy Statement is
January 24, 2002. The report for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2001,
including financial statements, was previously mailed to shareholders. To
request a copy of the annual report, please visit the Fund's web site at
www.themexicofund.com or contact the Fund's Information Agent at: Morrow & Co.,
Inc., 445 Park Avenue, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10022, (800) 654-2468.

   All properly executed proxies received prior to the Meeting will be voted at
the Meeting in accordance with the instructions marked on the proxies. Unless
instructions to the contrary are marked thereon with respect to each Proposal,
a properly executed proxy will be voted FOR Proposals 1, 2, and 3 and AGAINST
Proposal 4. The appointed proxy holders will vote in their discretion on any
other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment or
postponements thereof as set forth in "Other Business."

   For purposes of determining the presence of a quorum for transacting
business at the Meeting, abstentions and broker non-votes (that is, proxies
from brokers or nominees indicating that such persons have not received
instructions from the beneficial owner or other persons entitled to vote shares
on a particular matter with respect to which the brokers or nominees do not
have discretionary power) will be treated as shares that are present.

   Approval of Proposals 1 and 4 requires the affirmative vote of a majority of
the shares cast at the Meeting. Approval of Proposals 2 and 3 requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the Fund's outstanding voting securities as
provided in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act").
This means the affirmative vote of the lesser of (a) more than 50% of the
outstanding shares of the Fund, or (b) 67% or more of the shares present at the
meeting, if more than 50% of the outstanding shares are present at the meeting
in person or by proxy. Under Maryland law, abstentions do not constitute a vote
"for" or "against" a matter and will be disregarded in determining the "votes
cast" on all proposals. For purposes of Proposals 2, 3 and 4, broker non-votes
do not constitute a vote "for" or "against" the Proposal and will be
disregarded in determining the "votes cast" on the Proposal.

   Any shareholder giving a proxy has the right to attend the Meeting to vote
his or her shares in person (thereby revoking any prior proxy) and also the
right to revoke the proxy at any time by written notice received by the Fund
prior to its exercise.

   In the event that the necessary quorum to transact business at the Meeting
is not obtained or a quorum is present at the Meeting but sufficient votes to
approve any of the proposals are not received, the proxy holders may propose
one or more adjournments of the Meeting to permit further solicitation of
proxies. Any adjournment will require the affirmative vote of a majority of
those shares present at the Meeting in person or by proxy. If the necessary
quorum is not obtained, the persons named as proxies will vote in favor of the
adjournment. If a quorum is present, the proxy holders will vote proxies which
vote for any proposal with respect to which insufficient votes for approval
have been received in favor of such an adjournment, and will vote those proxies
required to be voted against such a proposal, against adjournment. A
shareholder vote may be taken on one or more of the proposals in this Proxy
Statement prior to any adjournment if sufficient votes have been received for
approval. In the event any of the proposals are not approved by shareholders,
the Board of Directors of the Fund will consider appropriate action.



   The Board of Directors has fixed December 22, 2001 as the record date for
the determination of shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
Meeting and at any adjournment thereof. Shareholders on the record date will be
entitled to one vote for each share held. As of October 31, 2001, the Fund had
outstanding 45,456,232 shares of common stock, par value $1.00 per share. To
the Fund's knowledge based on filings made with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC"), as of October 31, 2001, the beneficial owners of
more than five percent (5%) of the voting securities of the Fund are the
following:




                                           Number of Shares Percentage (%) of
                                             Beneficially       the Fund's
              Name and Address                  Owned       Outstanding Shares
  ---------------------------------------- ---------------- ------------------
                                                      
  President and Fellows of Harvard College
   600 Atlantic Avenue
   Boston, MA 02210.......................    7,190,900            14.2%
  Laxey Partners Limited
   Stanley House, 7-9 Market Hill
   Douglas, Isle of Man 1M1 2BF...........    2,543,550             5.6%


                       PROPOSAL 1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

   The Board of Directors of the Fund is divided into three classes of
Directors, as nearly equal in number as possible, each of which serves for
three years with one class being elected each year. Each year the term of
office of one class will expire. The terms of office of Messrs. Juan Gallardo
T. and Agustin Santamarina V. expire this year. Mr. Santamarina has decided not
to stand for reelection and to retire from the Board effective upon the
election of his replacement as proposed at this Annual Meeting. Messrs. Juan
Gallardo T. and Emilio Carrillo Gamboa have been nominated as Class III
Directors for a three year term expiring in 2005. The nominees have indicated
an intention to serve if elected and have consented to be named in this Proxy
Statement.

   The Board of Directors of the Fund knows of no reason why any of these
nominees would be unable to serve, but in the event of any such unavailability,
the proxies received will be voted for such substituted nominees as the Board
of Directors may recommend. The Fund's Directors and executive officers
beneficially own less than 1% of the Fund's common stock. None of the
Directors, with the exception of Mr. Jose Luis Gomez Pimienta, is an
"interested person" of the Fund as defined in the 1940 Act.

                                      2



   The nominees for election as Class III Directors are as follows:

                      Class III (Term Expiring in 2005):



                                                                                           Shares of
                                                                                             Common
                                                                                             Stock
                                                                                          Beneficially
                            Principal Occupation for Past Five Years             Director   Owned on
   Name and Address                 and Other Directorships                 Age   Since   10/31/01(1)
   ----------------      -----------------------------------------------    ---  -------- ------------
                                                                              

Juan Gallardo T.++      Mr. Gallardo is Chairman of the Fund's Board        54     1985      15,000
Monte Caucaso 915       of Directors. Over the last decade, he has been
4th Floor               extensively involved in the negotiation of the
Lomas de Chapuleepec    North American Free Trade Agreement
11000 Mexico, D.F.,     (NAFTA) among the United States, Canada
Mexico                  and Mexico and free trade agreements between
                        Mexico and Israel and the European Union.
                        Mr. Gallardo has served as Coordinator of the
                        Mexican Business Council for Free Trade
                        Agreements and Chairman of the Foreign
                        Policy Committee of the Mexican Business
                        Roundtable.

                        Chairman of the Board, Grupo Embotelladoras Unidas, S.A. de
                        C.V. (bottling company); Vice Chairman, Home Mart de Mexico,
                        S.A. de C.V. (retail trade); Director, Clevite de Mexico, S.A. de
                        C.V. (auto parts); NADRO, S.A. de C.V. (pharmaceutical
                        distribution); Grupo Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (mining). Director,
                        Bombardier Concarrill (manufacturing); Member, International
                        Advisory Board, Lafarge Coppe (cement and biotechnology) and
                        Textron, Inc. (aircraft automotive); Director, Caterpillar Inc.
                        (construction equipment); Intercon, S.A. de C.V. (autoparts,
                        outboard engines). Formerly Chairman of the Board of
                        Supervisory Directors, The First Mexico Income Fund N.V.;
                        Chairman of the Board, Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Largo Plazo,
                        S.A. de C.V.; Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Corto Plazo, S.A. de
                        C.V. and Fondo Mexico de Capitales, S.A. de C.V. (Mexican
                        investment companies), Chairman of the Board, Grupo Azucarero
                        Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (filed under Mexican law for creditor
                        protection May 9, 2000) (sugar production).

Emilio Carrillo Gamboa  Mr. Carrillo Gamboa is a former director of the     64     --        --
Bufete Carrillo Gamboa, Fund (from inception of the Fund in 1981 to
S.C.                    1987). He resigned as director in 1987 to
Blvd. Manuel            become Mexico's ambassador to Canada. Mr.
Avila Camacho No. 1,    Carrillo Gamboa is a preeminent lawyer in
Ste. 609                Mexico with extensive business experience and
Mexico, D.F.            has served or currently serves on the boards of
Mexico 011009           many prestigious Mexican businesses and
                        charitable organizations. (2)


                                      3





                                                                                  Shares of
                                                                                    Common
                                                                                    Stock
                                                                                 Beneficially
                 Principal Occupation for Past Five Years               Director   Owned on
Name and Address         and Other Directorships                    Age  Since   10/31/01(1)
---------------- ----------------------------------------           --- -------- ------------
                                                                     

                 Deputy Secretary, Consejo Mexicano de Hombres de Negocios
                 A.C. (Business Roundtable of Mexico); Senior Partner of
                 Bufete Carrillo Gamboa, S.C. (law firm); Chairman of the
                 Board, Cementos Apasco, S.A. de C.V. (cement company);
                 Director, Grupo Modelo, S.A. de C.V. (beer brewing); Director,
                 Kimberly-Clark de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (consumer products);
                 Director, San Luis Corporacion, S.A. de C.V. (mining and
                 automotive parts); Director Gasoductos de Chihuahua, S. de
                 R.L. de C.V. (public utility-gas transportation); Director;
                 Sistemas Automotrices y de Potencia, S.A. de C.V. (power
                 equipment distribution); Secretary and Alternate Director,
                 Innova, S. de R.L. de C.V. (DTH television); Secretary and
                 Alternate Director, Servicios Novasa, S.A.(Innova subsidiary-
                 services and administration); Secretary and Alternate Director;
                 Corporacion de Radio y Television del Norte de Mexico, S.A.
                 de C.V. (Innova subsidiary-DTH concession holder);
                 Corporacion Novaimagen, S. de R.L. (Innova subsidiary-
                 marketing); Corporacion Novavision, S. de R.L. (Innova
                 subsidiary-personnel).

                 Mr. Carrillo Gamboa also serves on the Board of Directors of
                 many charitable organizations. Vice-Chairman, Centro
                 Mexicano de Filantropia (charitable organization); Vice-
                 Chairman, Asosiacion de Amigos del Museo de Arte Popular,
                 A.C. (charitable organization); Director, Patronato del Antiguo
                 Colegio de San Ildefonso, A.C. (charitable organization);
                 Director, Fondo Mexicano para la Naturaleza, A.C. (charitable
                 organization); Director, Adopte una Obra de Arte A.C.
                 (charitable organization); Director, Fundacion Comunitaria de
                 Oaxaca, A.C. (charitable organization); Director, Fundacion
                 Xochitla A.C. (charitable organization); Director, Asociacion
                 Pro-Mujer de Mexico, A.C. (charitable organization); Director,
                 Casa de la Amistad para Ninos con Cancer, A.C. (charitable
                 organization).

--------
(1) The information as to beneficial ownership is based on statements furnished
    to the Fund by the Directors. All shares listed in this table are owned
    with sole voting and investment power and in the aggregate represent less
    than 1% of the total shares outstanding of common stock as of October 31,
    2001.

                                      4



(2) Mr. Carrillo Gamboa would be a new member of the Board of Directors to
    replace Mr. Agustin Santamarina V.

++  Audit Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee member.

Continuing Directors

   The balance of the current Directors consists of two Class I and three Class
II Directors, none of whom is a nominee for election at the Meeting and all of
whom will continue in office after the Meeting for the terms shown below. The
Directors are as follows:

                       Class I (Term Expiring in 2003):



                                                                                           Shares of
                                                                                             Common
                                                                                             Stock
                                                                                          Beneficially
                         Principal Occupation for Past Five Years                Director   Owned on
 Name and Address                and Other Directorships                    Age   Since   10/31/01(1)
 ----------------    -----------------------------------------------       ---   -------- ------------
                                                                              

Philip Caldwell++   Mr. Philip Caldwell was Chairman and Chief             82      1991      5,415
Ford Motor Company  Executive Officer of Ford Motor Company from
225 High Ridge Road 1979 to 1985 succeeding Henry Ford II. He was
West Building       the first non-Ford family member to lead the
Stamford, CT 06905  company. From 1953 to 1990, he served in a
                    wide variety of domestic and international
                    executive positions at Ford and was Director
                    from 1973 to 1990. From 1985-1998, he was
                    Director and Senior Managing Director of
                    Lehman Bros. Inc. and its predecessor, Shearson
                    Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.

                    Director, Mettler-Toledo International, Inc. (scales and weighing
                    instruments), Waters Corporation (scientific instruments), and
                    Russell Reynolds Associates, Inc. (executive recruitment). Formerly,
                    Chariman of the Board of Mettler-Toledo International, Inc., Director
                    of the Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., the Chase Manhattan Corp.
                    (global banking); CasTech Aluminum Group Inc. (aluminum
                    products); Digital Equipment Corporation (computer technology);
                    Federated Department Stores, Inc., (department stores); The Kellogg
                    Company (food products); Specialty Coatings International Inc.,
                    (plastics); Zurich Holding Company of America, Inc., (insurance);
                    and Zurich Reinsurance Centre Holdings, Inc. (reinsurance).
                    Formerly, Member, Business Council, Policy Committee of Business
                    Roundtable, Committee for Economic Development, Conference
                    Board, Trilateral Commission, U.S. Trade Representative Advisory
                    Committee for Trade Negotiations, President's Export Council,
                    Mexican-US Business Committee, Advisory Council Japan-US
                    Economic Relations, and Director of the Japan Society. Automotive
                    Hall of Fame; Laureate, Business Hall of Fame.



                                      5





                                                                                                   Shares of
                                                                                                     Common
                                                                                                     Stock
                         Principal Occupation for Past Five Years Owned on               Director Beneficially
    Name and Address                  and Other Directorships                       Age   Since   10/31/01(1)
    ----------------     -------------------------------------------------         ---   -------- ------------
                                                                                      

Jaime Serra Puche++        Dr. Serra Puche has a Ph.D. in economics from           51      1997      1,625
Edificio Plaza             Yale University and is a former Secretary of
Prolongacion Paseo de la   Finance for Mexico. Dr. Serra Puche was the
Reforma 600-103            minister in charge of negotiations for NAFTA
Santa Fe                   and trade agreements between Mexico and
01210 Mexico, D.F.,        Chile, Bolivia, Venezuela, Colombia and Costa
Mexico                     Rica on behalf of the Mexican government. He
                           is currently Senior Partner of the law and
                           economics consulting firm Serra and
                           Associates International.

                         Director, Tubos de Acero de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (steel manufacturing);
                         Director, Alcatel-Indetel, S.A. de C.V. (telecommunications equipment);
                         Director, Vitro, S.A. de C.V. (glass manufacturer); Director, Grupo
                         Ferroviario Mexicano, S.A. de C.V. (railways); Director, Southern Peru
                         Copper Corporation (copper manufacturer); Director, Princeton Video
                         Image, Inc. (virtual publicity); Director, Regional Market Makers, Inc.
                         (procurement company); Director, Bardahl, S.A. de C.V. (oil products);
                         Co-Chairman, President's Council on International Activities of Yale
                         University. Formerly, Weinberg Visiting Professor, Princeton University;
                         Secretary of Trade and Industry (Mexico); Distinguished Visiting
                         Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Trustee, Yale
                         University; Partner, Centros de Arbitrajes (arbitration).

--------
(1) The information as to beneficial ownership is based on statements furnished
    to the Fund by the Directors. All shares listed in this table are owned
    with sole voting and investment power, and in the aggregate represent less
    than 1% of the total shares outstanding of common stock as of October 31,
    2001.

++  Audit Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee member.

                       Class II (Term Expiring in 2004):



                                                                                 Shares of
                                                                                   Common
                                                                                   Stock
                                                                                Beneficially
                        Principal Occupation for Past Five Years       Director   Owned on
  Name and Address              and Other Directorships            Age  Since   10/31/01(1)
  ----------------    -------------------------------------------- --- -------- ------------
                                                                    

Claudio X. Gonzalez++ Mr. Gonzalez is President of the Business    67    1981      20,000
Lagrange 103          Coordinating Council of Mexico. Mr. Gonzalez
11560 Mexico, D.F.,   is also Chairman of the Board and Chief
Mexico                Executive Officer of Kimberly-Clark de
                      Mexico, S.A. de C.V. He also serves on the
                      Board of Directors of several prominent U.S.
                      and Mexican companies including General
                      Electric Co., where he was a member of the
                      search committee to recommend Mr. Jack
                      Welch's successor.


                                      6





                                                                                            Shares of
                                                                                              Common
                                                                                              Stock
                                                                                           Beneficially
                              Principal Occupation for Past Five Years            Director   Owned on
    Name and Address                  and Other Directorships                Age   Since   10/31/01(1)
    ----------------       ----------------------------------------------    ---  -------- ------------
                                                                               

                          Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Kimberly-
                          Clark de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (consumer products); Director,
                          General Electric Co. (industrial and financial products), Home
                          Depot (home improvement); Kimberly-Clark Corp. (USA)
                          (consumer products); Kellogg Company (food products); Grupo
                          Televisa, S.A. de C.V. (broadcasting); and America Movil
                          (telecommunications); Director, Investment Company of America
                          (investment fund); Advisory Director, Unilever, PLC and Unilever
                          N.V. (consumer products); Member, International Advisory
                          Council, J. P. Morgan Chase (financial services). Formerly,
                          Supervisory Director, The First Mexico Income Fund, N.V.;
                          Director, Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Largo Plazo, S.A. de C.V.;
                          Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Corto Plazo, S.A. de C.V. and Fondo
                          Mexico de Capitales, S.A. de C.V. (Mexican investment
                          companies); Director, Banco Nacional de Mexico, S.A. (bank);
                          Director, Planet Hollywood Int. (theme entertainment); Director,
                          Telefonos de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (telecommunications).

Jose Luis Gomez           Mr. Gomez Pimienta has over two decades of         62     1989      8,360
Pimienta*                 experience investing in the Mexican securities
Aristoteles 77, 3rd Floor market. He has been the President of the Fund
Col. Polanco              and Director General of the Fund's investment
11560 Mexico, D.F.,       adviser since 1981. He has been Chairman of
Mexico                    the Board of the Fund's investment adviser
                          since 1985. He is a Director and member of the
                          Executive Committee of the Mexican Stock
                          Exchange.

                          Formerly President and Supervisory Director, The First Mexico
                          Income Fund N.V.; Chairman of the Board and Director General,
                          Impulsora del Fondo Mexico Controladora, S.A. de C.V. (holding
                          company); Chairman of the Board and Director General,
                          Impulsora Capital Markets, S.A. de C.V. (investment adviser);
                          Chairman of the Board and Director General, Impulsora de Fondos
                          Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. (mutual fund sponsor); Vice Chairman of
                          the Board of Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Largo Plazo, S.A. de
                          C.V., Fondo Mexico de Deuda de Corto Plazo, S.A. de C.V. and
                          Fondo Mexico de Capitales, S.A. de C.V. (Mexican investment
                          companies).



                                      7





                                                                                        Shares of
                                                                                          Common
                                                                                          Stock
                                                                                       Beneficially
                    Principal Occupation for Past Five Years                  Director   Owned on
 Name and Address           and Other Directorships                     Age    Since   10/31/01(1)
 ----------------  ----------------------------------------           ---     -------- ------------
                                                                           

Robert L. Knauss++  Mr. Knauss is the former Dean and                 70        1985      2,624
5151 San Felipe     Distinguished University Professor of
Suite 1661          University of Houston Law School.
Houston, TX 77056
                   Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Baltic
                   International USA, Inc. (investments); Director of Philips Service
                   Corp. (industrial services) and Equus Ltd. II (investments).
                   Formerly; Director, Allwaste Inc. (environmental services);
                   Chairman of the Board, Philips Service Corp. (industrial services).

--------
(1) The information as to beneficial ownership is based on statements furnished
    to the Fund by the Directors. All shares listed in this table are owned
    with sole voting and investment power, and in the aggregate represent less
    than 1% of the total shares outstanding of common stock as of October 31,
    2001.

++  Audit Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee member.

* Director is an "interested person" (as defined in the 1940 Act ("interested
  director")). Mr. Gomez Pimienta is deemed to be an interested director by
  reason of his affiliation with the Fund's investment adviser, Impulsora del
  Fondo Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (the "Adviser").

   The Fund has a standing Audit Committee and a Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee. The Audit Committee is composed entirely of Directors who
are not "interested persons" of the Fund or the Fund's investment adviser
within the meaning of the 1940 Act, and who are "independent" as defined in the
New York Stock Exchange listing standards.

   The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee recommends nominations for
membership on the Board of Directors. It evaluates candidates' qualifications
for Board membership and, with respect to nominees for positions as independent
directors, their independence from the Fund's investment adviser and other
principal service providers. It periodically reviews director compensation and
will recommend any appropriate changes to the Board as a group. This Committee
also reviews and may make recommendations to the Board relating to those issues
that pertain to the effectiveness of the Board in carrying out its
responsibilities in governing the Fund and overseeing the management of the
Fund. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee does not consider
candidates for the Board of Directors suggested by stockholders.

   During the Fund's fiscal year ended October 31, 2001, the Board held four
regular meetings, three telephonic special meetings, two Audit Committee
meetings and three Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee meetings. Each
Director then in office attended 75% or more of the aggregate number of regular
and special meetings of the Board and those Committees of which each Director
is a member.

   During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2001, the Fund paid each Director,
with the exception of Mr. Gomez Pimienta (who is not compensated for his
services as Director), an annual retainer of $12,000 and $2,000 per meeting
attended. The Fund also paid a $1,500 per diem fee to each Director for travel
required to attend a Board meeting and reimbursed all Directors and officers of
the Fund for out-of-pocket expenses relating to attendance at meetings. The
aggregate amount of fees paid and expenses reimbursed to the Directors and
officers for the twelve month period ended October 31, 2001 was $333,790.

   The following table sets forth the aggregate compensation (not including per
diem fees and expense reimbursement) paid by the Fund to each Director (other
than Mr. Gomez Pimienta, who receives no director fees or other compensation
for services as a director of the Fund) during the fiscal year ended October
31, 2001, as well as the total compensation paid by the Fund to each Director.

                                      8





                                      Pension or Retirement Total Compensation
                          Aggregate     Benefits Accrued        from Fund
                         Compensation      as Part of          Complex Paid
     Name of Director     from Fund       Fund Expenses       to Directors*
  ---------------------- ------------ --------------------- ------------------
                                                   
  Juan Gallardo T.......   $40,000            None               $40,000
  Philip Caldwell.......    40,000            None                40,000
  Claudio X. Gonzalez...    38,000            None                38,000
  Robert L. Knauss......    40,000            None                40,000
  Agustin Santamarina V.    40,000            None                40,000
  Jaime Serra-Puche.....    40,000            None                40,000

--------
* There are no other funds in the Fund Complex.

   The Fund has a policy that half of the annual retainer paid by the Fund to
its Directors is to be used by each Director to purchase Fund shares on the
secondary market. All Board members are in compliance with this policy.

   The officers of the Fund and their principal occupations for the past five
years are: Jose Luis Gomez Pimienta (age 62), President (since 1981), who also
serves as Chairman of the Board and Director General of the Adviser, and a
Director of Bolsa Mexicana de Valores, S.A. de C.V. (Mexican Stock Exchange);
Samuel Garcia-Cuellar (age 59), Secretary (since 1981), who is a partner of
Creel, Garcia-Cuellar y Muggenburg, S.C., Mexican counsel to the Fund,
Secretary of the Adviser and a Director of MexDer, Mercado Mexicano de
Derivados, S.A. de C.V. (derivative exchange); and Carlos Woodworth Ortiz (age
58), who is Treasurer (since 1992) and Compliance Officer of the Fund (since
1999) and was Assistant Treasurer of the Fund (1981-1992), and a Deputy
Director of the Adviser, and an Alternate Director of the Bolsa Mexicana de
Valores, S.A. de C.V. (Mexican Stock Exchange). Additional officers of the Fund
are: Hector Trigos (age 41), Vice President, Research (since 1999), who also
serves as Director of Research of the Adviser; Alberto Osorio (age 34), Vice
President, Finance (since 1999), who also serves as Director of Finance of the
Adviser; and Eduardo Solano, (age 33), Vice President, Investor Relations
(since 1999), who also serves as Director of Economic Research of the Adviser.
These officers have all served as Officers of the Adviser for the past five
years. Allan S. Mostoff (age 69) and Sander M. Bieber (age 51), partners of
Dechert, U.S. counsel to the Fund, are Assistant Secretaries of the Fund (since
1981 and 1989, respectively). The officers of the Fund serve at the discretion
of the Board of Directors.

Report of the Audit Committee; Information About the Fund's Independent Auditor

   The Audit Committee reviews both the audit and non-audit work of the Fund's
independent public accountants, submits recommendations to the Board of
Directors as to the selection of independent public accountants, and reviews
compliance of the Fund with regulations of the SEC and the Internal Revenue
Service, and other related matters. The Fund adopted an Audit Committee Charter
on December 6, 1999 and the Charter has not been amended since attached as part
of the Fund's proxy statement for its 2001 Annual Shareholders Meeting.

   The members of the Audit Committee are not professionally engaged in the
practice of auditing or accounting and are not experts in the fields of
accounting or auditing, including in respect of auditor independence. Members
of the Committee rely without independent verification on the information
provided to them and on the representations made by management and the
independent accountants. Accordingly, the Audit Committee's oversight does not
provide an independent basis to determine that management has maintained
appropriate accounting and financial reporting principles or appropriate
internal controls and procedures designed to assure compliance with accounting
standards and applicable laws and regulations. Furthermore, the Audit
Committee's considerations and discussions referred to above do not assure that
the audit of the Fund's financial statements has been carried out in accordance
with generally accepted auditing standards, that the financial statements are
presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles or that
the Fund's auditors are in fact "independent."

                                      9



   The Audit Committee has received written disclosures and the letter required
by Independence Standards Board No. 1 from Arthur Andersen LLP, the Fund's
independent auditors, and has discussed with Arthur Andersen LLP its
independence. The Audit Committee has also reviewed and discussed the audited
financial statements with Fund management and Arthur Andersen LLP, and
discussed certain matters with Arthur Andersen LLP addressed by Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61. Based on the foregoing, the Audit Committee
recommended to the Board of Directors that the Fund's audited financial
statements be included in the Fund's Annual Report for the fiscal year ended
October 31, 2001.

   During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2001, the Fund incurred the
following fees for services provided by Arthur Andersen LLP:



                       Financial Information Systems
            Audit Fees Design and Implementation Fees All Other Fees
            ---------- ------------------------------ --------------
                                                
             $94,947                None                 $37,931


   During the Adviser's last fiscal year (calendar year 2001), Arthur Andersen
LLP provided tax services to the Adviser and was paid an aggregate amount of
$45,400 and audit services for which it was paid a total of $33,900.

   The Audit Committee has considered whether the provision of the services
covered under the column "All Other Fees" is compatible with maintaining Arthur
Andersen LLP's independence.

   The Board of Directors, upon recommendation of the Audit Committee, has
selected Arthur Andersen LLP as independent public accountants to examine the
financial statements of the Fund for the fiscal year ending October 31, 2002.
Audit services performed by Arthur Andersen LLP during the most recent fiscal
year included examination of the financial statements of the Fund, review of
filings with the SEC and preparation of tax returns.

   The Fund knows of no direct or indirect interest of such firm in the Fund. A
representative of Arthur Andersen LLP will be present at the Meeting and will
have the opportunity to respond to questions from shareholders.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF EACH OF THE
                  NOMINEES TO THE FUND'S BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

 PROPOSAL 2: AMENDMENT OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT TO ADD
                           PERFORMANCE FEE COMPONENT

About the Investment Advisory and Management Agreement and the Fund's Adviser

   Impulsora del Fondo Mexico, S.A. de C.V. has served as the Fund's investment
adviser since the Fund's organization in 1981. The Adviser is a registered
investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended and is
located at 77 Aristoteles Street, 3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico D.F.,
Mexico. The Adviser provides investment advisory and management services
pursuant to an Amended and Restated Investment Advisory and Management
Agreement dated December 1, 1990, as amended and restated June 16, 1998 (the
"Contract"). The Contract was last submitted to shareholders for approval in
1990. In June 2001, the Board unanimously approved the renewal of the Contract
for a one-year term.

   As compensation for its management services, the Adviser is paid a fee,
computed at the end of each calendar month based on the average daily value of
the net assets of the Fund translated into dollars at an annual rate of 0.85%
of average daily net assets up to $200 million, 0.70% of such assets between
$200 million and $400 million and 0.60% of such assets in excess of $400
million (the "Base Fee"). The Base Fee is among the lowest fee rates for world
equity closed-end funds listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

                                      10



About Adopting a Performance Fee Component to the Adviser's Compensation

   The Fund seeks your approval to amend the Contract to add a performance
adjustment component to the advisory fee of the Fund that would reward the
Adviser by increasing advisory fees when the Fund outperforms the IFCG Mexico
Index, which is calculated by Standard & Poor's, and penalize the Adviser by
decreasing advisory fees when the Fund underperforms the IFCG Mexico Index.

   The purpose of a Performance Adjustment to the Adviser's compensation is to
better align the interests of the investment adviser with those of shareholders
by rewarding the Fund's investment adviser for good investment performance and
penalizing the Fund's investment adviser for poor investment performance. The
use of a performance fee component such as the Performance Adjustment is not
uncommon, and the SEC has adopted rules that generally ensure that a
performance fee adjustment results from the adviser's management skills and not
from other factors. These rules require use of a benchmark index such as the
IFCG Mexico Index to calculate any performance-based fees.

   The Performance Adjustment would work as follows: For every one percent
difference in the Fund's performance against the IFCG Mexico Index, the Fund's
advisory fee would be adjusted by two and one-half basis points (0.025%), up to
a maximum adjustment of twenty-five basis points (0.25%) up or down, would be
calculated monthly and would be based on the Fund's performance against the
IFCG Mexico Index for the most recent twelve months (the "Performance
Adjustment"). If the Fund were to outperform the IFCG Mexico Index during the
most recent twelve months, the Fund's advisory fee would increase by the
Performance Adjustment. If the Fund were to underperform the IFCG Mexico Index
during the most recent twelve months, the advisory fee paid to the Fund's
investment adviser would be reduced by the Performance Adjustment.

   If the Performance Adjustment is approved, the Adviser would continue to
receive the Base Fee it currently receives, subject to adjustment upward or
downward depending on the Fund's performance compared to the IFCG Mexico Index.
For any month, the Base Fee of the Fund will equal the Fund's average net
assets for that month multiplied by the annual rates applicable (as described
above, 0.85% of average daily net assets up to $200 million, 0.70% of such
assets between $200 million and $400 million and 0.60% of such assets in excess
of $400 million), multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of days in the month and the denominator of which is 365 (366 in leap
years). The Base Fee is then adjusted based upon the Fund's performance during
the prior 12 month period compared to the IFCG Mexico Index over the same time
period. To do so, the Fund determines the amount of the Performance Adjustment
based upon the extent to which the Fund overperformed or underperformed the
IFCG Mexico Index. The Fund takes the Performance Adjustment rate (0.025% for
every 1% difference in performance against the IFCG Mexico Index) and
multiplies it against the average net assets of the Fund for that month, which
is then multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of days
in the month and the denominator of which is 365 (366 in leap years). The
resulting amount is then added to (if overperformance) or subtracted from (if
underperformance) the Base Fee.

   If the Performance Adjustment were in place during the fiscal year of the
Fund ended October 31, 2001, the Adviser would have received $6,465,656 or
$100,157 more than the advisory fees received for the 2001 fiscal year, a
difference of 1.57%. The increased fees would have been paid because the Fund's
performance in fiscal 2001 exceeded the IFCG Mexico Index. The Adviser's
compensation pursuant to the Contract in fiscal 2001 was $6,365,499.

   The following is an example of application of the effect of the Performance
Adjustment in a 30 day month based on average net assets of $944 million (the
Fund's average net assets during fiscal 2001). The following example
demonstrates the effect of the Performance Adjustment in situations where the
Fund has outperformed, underperformed and approximately matched the IFCG Mexico
Index.


                                      11



            Hypothetical Effect of Proposed Performance Adjustment



        Return Last Twelve Months         Annualized Fees                    Monthly Fees
------------------------------    -------------------------------- --------------------------------
                                            Performance                      Performance
           IFCG Mexico            Base Fee  Adjustment  Total Fees Base Fee  Adjustment  Total Fees
  MXF         Index    Difference (in 000s)  (in 000s)  (in 000s)  (in 000s)  (in 000s)  (in 000s)
  ---      ----------- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------- ----------- ----------
                                                                 
 10.0%        8.0%        2.0%     $6,364      $ 472      $6,836     $530       $ 39        $570
  9.0%        8.0%        1.0%     $6,364      $ 236      $6,600     $530       $ 20        $550
  8.0%        8.0%        0.0%     $6,364      $   0      $6,364     $530       $  0        $530
  7.0%        8.0%       -1.0%     $6,364      $(236)     $6,128     $530       $(20)       $511
  6.0%        8.0%       -2.0%     $6,364      $(472)     $5,892     $530       $(39)       $491


   Set forth below is a table showing the effect on the Fund's expense ratio
under the Contract if the Performance Adjustment is approved. The figures are
based on the amounts that would have been paid according to the Base Fee and
the maximum and minimum expense ratios taking into account the performance fee
component for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2001 and average daily net
assets of $944 million and the expense ratios effective during fiscal year 2001.

        Proforma Expense Ratio Based on Proposed Performance Adjustment



                                                      Existing
                                                      Contract            Proposed Contract
                                                     ----------  ----------------------------------
                                                                  Minimum     Base Fee    Maximum
                                                                 ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                             
Amount of Advisory fees paid or that would have been
  paid in fiscal 2001                                $6,365,499  $3,568,203  $6,365,499  $9,552,967

Percentage difference                                       N/A      -43.94%       0.00%      50.07%

Management Fee(1)                                          0.74%       0.49%       0.74%       0.99%
Other Expenses %                                           0.33%       0.32%       0.33%       0.35%

Expense Ratio                                              1.07%       0.81%       1.07%       1.34%

--------
(1)  Management fee includes investment advisory and administrative fees paid
     to the Adviser.

   Below is a table showing hypothetically the expenses you would pay on a
$1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return, initial Fund net assets of $944
million and operating expenses similar to those effective during fiscal year
2001.



                           Number of years you own your shares
                           -----------------------------------
                              1        3        5        10
                             ---      ---      ---      ----
                                          
                  Base Fee $11      $35      $60      $132
                  Maximum  $14      $44      $76      $169
                  Minimum  $ 8      $25      $44      $ 95


                                      12



About the Board's Support for this Proposal

   This proposal is unanimously supported by the Fund's Board of Directors. The
Board is committed to obtaining shareholder approval for adoption of a
performance fee component to the advisory compensation paid by the Fund and
will continue to seek shareholder approval until a performance fee is adopted.
Since 2000, the Board has considered the benefits of a performance fee as a
further means to align the interests of the management of the Fund with the
interests of its shareholders. During their deliberations the Board was advised
by independent legal counsel and received substantial information about
performance fees and the fee that is the subject of this proposal. The Board
was given the opportunity to ask questions and request additional information
from management.

   In the course of its deliberations, the Board of Directors considered, among
other things, (a) the importance of investment performance in attracting
investors to the Fund; (b) the importance of the Fund's investment performance
on the discount to Net Asset Value; (c) the impact of the proposed Performance
Adjustment on the total fees to be paid for advisory services and the manner in
which the adjustment may further align the interests of management and the
Fund; (d) the appropriateness of the amount of the proposed Performance
Adjustment and the use of the IFCG Mexico Index as the benchmark to measure the
Fund's performance and calculate the Performance Adjustment; (e) the historical
performance of the Fund and the resources committed by the Adviser to manage
the Fund; (f) the ability of the Adviser to compete in the marketplace to
attract and retain qualified investment professionals; and (g) the effect that
the Performance Adjustment will have on the total expense ratio of the Fund.

   The Board also felt that the adoption of the Performance Adjustment is
consistent with the Board's efforts to increase shareholder value. These
efforts have included adoption of the share ownership policy for directors,
approval of an open-market repurchase program for up to ten percent of the
Fund's outstanding shares completed in 2001, and the Fund's current proposal to
conduct periodic in-kind repurchases at no less than 98% of net asset value
pursuant to a policy under consideration by regulatory authorities.

   While no one factor was controlling, the Board concluded that the proposed
Performance Adjustment to the advisory fee will benefit shareholders by further
aligning the interests of management with the interests of shareholders while
permitting the Adviser to continue to provide the quality of service to the
Fund it has in the past and compensate its staff at competitive levels. The
Board of Directors considered the impact of the Performance Adjustment on the
overall expenses of the Fund and concluded that the total expense ratio of the
Fund would continue to be competitive in the industry. The Board voted
unanimously to approve the Performance Adjustment finding that it is fair and
reasonable to all shareholders.

More About the Adviser

   The Adviser is a Mexican corporation. The president and chief executive
officer is Jose Luis Gomez Pimienta. The directors of the Adviser are Jose Luis
Gomez Pimienta, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Impulsora del Fondo
Mexico, S.A. de C.V., Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico,
D.F., Mexico; Enrique Trigueros-Legarreta, Chairman's Advisor, Casa de Bolsa
BBV-Probursa, Montes Urales 424-3rd Floor, Col. Lomas de Chapultepec, 11000
Mexico, D.F., Mexico; Ernesto Ortega-Arellano, Director, Capital Markets,
Inversora Bursatil, S.A. de C.V., Av. de las Palmas 736, 11000 Mexico, D.F.,
Mexico; Edgardo Cantu Delgado, Investment Funds and Money Market Director,
Vector Casa de Bolsa, S.A. de C.V., Presidente Masarik 29-1st Floor, 11550
Mexico, D.F., Mexico; Sadi Lara Reyes, Director of Capital Markets, Casa de
Bolsa Bital, S.A. de C.V., Paseo de la Reforma 156-18th Floor, 06600 Mexico,
D.F., Mexico; Jorge Alegria Formoso, Director General, ABN AMRO Securities
(Mexico), S.A. de C.V. Casa de Bolsa, Paseo de la Reforma #600-320, Col. Sta.
Fe, 01210 Mexico, D.F., Mexico; Gabriel Kuri Labarthe, Director General, Casa
de Bolsa Santander Mexicano, Reforma 213-9th Floor, 06500 Mexico, D.F., Mexico;
and Jose Antonio Orvananos, Deputy Director, Casa de Bolsa Inverlat, S.A. de
C.V., Bosque de Ciruelos 120, 11700 Mexico, D.F., Mexico. The officers of the
Adviser are Carlos H. Woodworth Ortiz, Deputy Director, Impulsora del Fondo
Mexico, S.A. de C.V.,

                                      13



Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico, D.F., Mexico; Alberto
Osorio Morales, Director of Finance, Impulsora del Fondo Mexico, S.A. de C.V.,
Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico, D.F., Hector Trigos del
Rio, Director of Analysis, Impulsora del Fondo Mexico, S.A. de C.V.,
Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico, D.F., Mexico; Eduardo
Solano Arroyo, Director of Economic Research, Impulsora del Fondo Mexico, S.A.
de C.V., Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560 Mexico, D.F., Mexico.
Messrs. Gomez Pimienta, Woodworth, Trigos, Osorio and Solano are also officers
of the Fund. Mr. Gomez Pimienta, Aristoteles 77-3rd Floor, Col. Polanco, 11560
Mexico D.F., Mexico also owns greater than ten percent of the Adviser's equity
interests.

   The Adviser also provides administrative services to the Fund pursuant to an
Amended and Restated Administrative Services Agreement dated June 30, 2001
including assisting the Fund with preparation of financial statements and
regulatory filings, calculation of the Fund's net asset value, and maintenance
of the Fund's web site. For these services, the Adviser is paid a monthly fee
of 0.07% of the Fund's average daily net assets. The Adviser was paid $463,398
pursuant to this contract during fiscal 2001.

   The Fund paid $3,303.21 or 0.32% of total brokerage commissions paid by the
Fund to an affiliated broker. The affiliated broker is ACCIVAL, S.A. de C.V.
and is affiliated to the Adviser by virtue of one of the Fund's directors being
a director of the broker.

Effect of Approval/Absence of Approval

   If this proposal is approved, the Performance Adjustment will take effect on
the first day of the first month following approval by shareholders of the
Fund. Beginning with the month in which the proposal is approved, the Fund
would calculate the Performance Adjustment based on the prior twelve month
period. If the proposal is not approved, the Base Fee will remain in effect as
the advisory fee paid by the Fund and no Performance Adjustment will be made.
However, the Board is committed to approval of a performance fee component for
the Fund's compensation paid to the Adviser and intends to solicit shareholder
approval again in the future should the proposal not be approved at the Annual
Meeting.

Percentage of Votes Required for Approval

   Approval of the amendment to the Contract incorporating the Performance
Adjustment requires the "yes" vote of a majority of the Fund's outstanding
voting securities as provided in the 1940 Act. For this purpose, this means the
"yes" vote of the lesser of (a) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the
Fund, or (b) 67% or more of the shares present at the Meeting, if more than 50%
of the outstanding shares are present at the Meeting in person or by proxy.
Because abstentions and broker non-votes are treated as shares present but not
voting, any abstentions and broker non-votes will have the effect of votes
against this proposal.

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE
AMENDMENT OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT TO INCLUDE
A PERFORMANCE FEE COMPONENT.

     PROPOSAL 3: ADOPTION OF FUNDAMENTAL POLICY REQUIRING PERIODIC IN-KIND

                       REPURCHASE OFFERS OF FUND SHARES

Background of the Proposal

   As the Fund has disclosed in recent periodic shareholder reports, in a
letter dated March 5, 2001 and in a press release issued the same day, the
Board of Directors has approved a policy whereby the Fund would offer to
repurchase a previously disclosed percentage of Fund shares from shareholders
at least once each fiscal year and as frequently as quarterly.

                                      14



   A regulatory filing for exemptive authority to conduct the in-kind share
repurchases has been pending with the SEC since March 2, 2001. The Fund has
pursued SEC approval aggressively since the filing was made. In November 2001,
the staff of the SEC informally advised the Fund it intended to provide the
Fund with additional comments on the Fund's application. As of the date of this
Proxy Statement, the Fund has not received those comments. While the Fund
continues its dialogue with the staff of the SEC, the Board of Directors has
determined to seek the requisite shareholder approval to adopt the repurchase
policy prior to the anticipated receipt of SEC approval.

   At the Meeting, shareholders are being asked to approve adoption of a policy
requiring the Fund to conduct periodic in-kind repurchase offers of its shares
at no less than 98% of net asset value at least once each fiscal year. Under
the repurchase policy, the Fund is committed to offer to repurchase a minimum
of five percent of its outstanding shares each fiscal year. For each repurchase
offer, the Fund would offer to repurchase between one and twenty-five percent
of the Fund's outstanding shares. Participating shareholders would generally
receive a pro-rata distribution or "slice" of the Fund's portfolio securities
in return for their repurchased shares as further described below. In other
words, in exchange for shares of the Fund, shareholders would receive actual
shares of Mexican companies from the Fund's portfolio, generally in proportion
to the interest represented by the shares accepted for repurchase.
Implementation of the repurchase policy would not occur prior to the Fund's
receipt of certain regulatory relief from the SEC.

   The repurchase policy would be a "fundamental policy" of the Fund. To change
a fundamental policy requires shareholder approval. Accordingly, once
shareholders approve the repurchase policy, the Board would be unable to change
or terminate it without shareholder approval. With adoption of this policy,
shareholders would be assured an annual opportunity to liquidate a portion of
their shares of the Fund at no less than 98% of net asset value in return for a
pro-rata "slice" of the Fund's investments. The policy is designed, in part, to
seek to provide shareholders with additional liquidity for their Fund shares
and possibly to reduce the discount to net asset value at which shares of the
Fund have historically traded on the New York Stock Exchange. There can be no
assurance, however, that adoption of the policy will result in the Fund's
shares trading at a price that equals or approximates net asset value.
Moreover, while the policy is designed, in part, to promote stable portfolio
management and maintain the Fund for its long-term shareholders as a viable
investment vehicle, there can be no assurance that the policy will lead to such
results.

   Rule 23c-3 of the 1940 Act permits closed-end funds to periodically
repurchase their shares at net asset value minus a repurchase fee. Pursuant to
the repurchase policy proposed, repurchases could be made as often as quarterly
for amounts between one and twenty-five percent of the Fund's outstanding
shares. Furthermore, the Fund would be obligated to offer to repurchase not
less than five percent of its outstanding shares each fiscal year. The
percentage of shares that the Fund would offer to repurchase would be
established by the Board of Directors prior to commencement of the offer. The
Board may change the percentage of shares to be repurchased and the intervals
at which the repurchase offers are conducted to occur as frequently as
quarterly or semi-annually; but there would be at least one repurchase offer
each fiscal year and the Fund would offer to repurchase at least 5% of its
outstanding shares each fiscal year.

   Shareholders submitting shares to be repurchased pursuant to an offer under
the fundamental policy would receive an in-kind pro-rata distribution of equity
portfolio securities except for (a) securities which, if distributed, would be
required to register under the Securities Act of 1933; (b) securities issued by
entities in countries which restrict or prohibit the holding of securities by
non-nationals other than through qualified investment vehicles; and (c) certain
portfolio assets (such as forward currency exchange contracts, futures and
options contracts, and repurchase agreements) that, although they may be liquid
and marketable, include the assumption of contractual obligations, require
special trading facilities or can only be traded with the counterparty to the
transaction in order to effect a change in beneficial ownership. Additionally,
the Fund may pay cash for fractional shares and/or odd lots of securities
and/or amounts attributable to any cash positions (including short-term
non-equity securities); distribute odd lots, fractional shares and any cash
position to shareholders; round off (up or down) odd lots or fractional shares
so as to eliminate them prior to distribution; or pay a higher pro-rata
percentage of equity securities to represent those items.

                                      15



   In order to participate in the repurchase offers, shareholders will need to
arrange for appropriate custodial arrangements with Mexican custodians. This
requires that accounts be established by participating shareholders with a bank
or broker in the Mexican market. Shareholders may be able to do this through
their U.S. broker. Requests for repurchase which fail to provide this
information will be voided.

   Participation in a repurchase offer is optional and the Fund anticipates
that the repurchase offers will not alter the Fund's investment strategy.

Repurchases in Excess of Amount Offered for Repurchase

   The Fund may, but is not obligated to, purchase up to an additional 2% of
the Fund shares outstanding on the deadline for submitting repurchase requests
during an offer period if the amount submitted for repurchase is greater than
the percentage of shares offered to be repurchased by the Fund. If the Fund
determines not to repurchase more than the repurchase offer amount, or if Fund
shareholders participating in an offer tender shares in an amount exceeding the
repurchase offer amount of the offer plus 2% of the shares outstanding on the
repurchase request deadline, the Fund shall repurchase the shares submitted for
repurchase on a pro-rata basis. Payment for any shares repurchased must be made
by seven days after the repurchase pricing date.

Determination of Price at which Shares are Repurchased; Notification of Offers

   Repurchases pursuant to the fundamental policy will be made at no less than
98% of the net asset value of the Fund determined on the "repurchase pricing
date" which will be no later than the fourteenth day after the deadline for
submitting shares for repurchase, the repurchase request deadline (or the next
business day if that is not a business day).

   Shareholders will be sent notification containing specified information at
least 21 days, and no more than 42 days, before a repurchase request deadline.
The information provided will include the repurchase offer amount, the
repurchase request deadline date, the repurchase pricing date, the repurchase
payment deadline date, and whether repurchases will be at net asset value or
less (but not any less than 98% of net asset value). Notification will also
include the procedures for shareholders to submit their shares for repurchase,
procedures for modifying or withdrawing their requests for repurchase,
procedures under which the Fund may repurchase such shares on a pro-rata basis,
and the circumstances under which the Fund may suspend or postpone a repurchase
offer under the fundamental policy. The Fund will provide shareholders with the
net asset value of the shares, which will be computed no more than seven days
before the date of notification, the market price of the shares on the date on
which the net asset value was computed, and the means by which shareholders may
ascertain the net asset value and market price thereafter.

Source of Proceeds

   Since participating shareholders will receive their pro-rata share of the
Fund's portfolio securities, the Fund will not need to generate cash, except
for the purposes noted above, for the repurchase offers nor will the Fund be
required to maintain a liquidity reserve to fund the repurchase offers. In
addition, conducting the repurchase offers will substantially reduce the
realization by the Fund of gains or losses since the Fund will not need to
liquidate portfolio holdings to fund the repurchase offers, except as noted
above. Therefore, shareholders not participating in the offers do not
experience a taxable event at the Fund level.

Withdrawal Rights

   Repurchase requests submitted pursuant to an offer under the fundamental
policy will be irrevocable after the repurchase request deadline. However,
shareholders may modify the numbers of shares submitted for repurchase or
withdraw shares submitted for repurchase at any time up to the repurchase
request deadline.

Tax Consequences of Participation in Repurchase Offers

   The following discussion summarizes the federal tax consequences of
submitting shares for repurchase pursuant to a repurchase offer. You should
consult your own tax adviser regarding specific tax consequences, including
local and state tax consequences, of participation.

                                      16



   Submitting shares for repurchase will be a taxable transaction for federal
income tax purposes.

   A request for repurchase of shares pursuant to an offer will be treated as a
taxable sale or exchange of the shares if the tender (i) completely terminates
the shareholder's interest in the Fund, (ii) is treated as a distribution that
is "substantially disproportionate" or (iii) is treated as a distribution that
is "not essentially equivalent to a dividend." A "substantially
disproportionate" distribution generally requires a reduction of at least 20%
in the shareholder's proportionate interest in the Fund after all shares are
tendered. A distribution "not essentially equivalent to a dividend" requires
that there be a "meaningful reduction" in the shareholder's interest, which
should be the case if the shareholder has a minimal interest in the Fund,
exercises no control over Fund affairs and suffers a reduction in his or her
proportionate interest.

   Under these rules, if a shareholder submits for repurchase all shares that
he or she owns or is considered to own and all the shares are accepted for
repurchase, the shareholder will realize a taxable sale or exchange. If the
transaction is treated as a sale or exchange for tax purposes, any gain or loss
recognized will be treated as a capital gain or loss by shareholders who hold
their shares as a capital asset and as a long-term capital gain or loss if such
shares have been held for more than one year. If a shareholder submits for
repurchase less than all of the shares that he or she owns or is considered to
own, the repurchase may not qualify as an exchange, and the proceeds received
may be treated as a dividend, return of capital or capital gain, depending on
the Fund's earnings and profits and the shareholder's basis in the repurchased
shares.

Suspension and Postponement of Offers

   The Fund may suspend or postpone an offer by vote of a majority of the Board
of Directors (including a majority of the Directors who are not "interested
persons," as that term is defined in the 1940 Act, of the Fund), but only (1)
if repurchases pursuant to the offer would impair the Fund's status as a
regulated investment company under the Internal Revenue Code; (2) if the IRS or
a change in the Internal Revenue Code alters or revokes the private letter
ruling granted to the Fund regarding the tax treatment of the in-kind
repurchases; (3) if repurchases pursuant to the offer would cause the shares to
be neither listed on any national securities exchange nor quoted on any
inter-dealer quotation system of a national securities association; (4) for any
period during which the NYSE or any other market in which the securities owned
by the Fund are principally traded is closed, other than customary weekend and
holiday closings, or during which trading in such market is restricted; (5) for
any period during which an emergency exists as a result of which disposal by
the Fund of securities owned by it is not reasonably practicable, or during
which it is not reasonably practicable for the Fund fairly to determine the
value of its net assets; or (6) for such other periods as the SEC may by order
permit for the protection of shareholders of the Fund.

   If an offer is suspended or postponed, the Fund will provide notice thereof
to shareholders. If the Fund renews a suspended offer or reinstitutes a
postponed offer, the Fund will send a new notification to all shareholders.

Special Risk Considerations

   Shareholders should be aware of the following special risk considerations
associated with periodic interval repurchases:

  .  In the event of an oversubscription to the offer, all of the shares
     submitted by shareholders may not be accepted for repurchase by the Fund.

  .  There is a risk of decline in net asset value as a result of the delay
     between the repurchase request deadline and the repurchase pricing date,
     due to declines, among other things, in prices of securities held by the
     Fund and fluctuations in the Mexican peso relative to the U.S. dollar.
     There is an additional risk of decline in the value of the proceeds
     received between the repurchase pricing date and the repurchase payment
     deadline because participating shareholders are receiving portfolio
     securities of the Fund whose values are subject to change based on market
     activity.

  .  By receiving and holding portfolio securities of the Fund, participating
     shareholders are subject to the risks associated with investing in foreign
     equity securities, including market-, currency-, and country-related risks.

                                      17



  .  Liquidation of portfolio securities received as proceeds from a repurchase
     may cause downward pricing pressure on those securities.

Fundamental Repurchase Policy

   If this proposal is approved and the regulatory relief requested from the
SEC is obtained, the Fund shall adopt the following fundamental policy
regarding periodic repurchases:

      (a) The Fund will make offers to repurchase its shares at least once each
   fiscal year based on the number of outstanding shares at the beginning of
   the fiscal year.

      (b) The Fund will offer to repurchase no less than five percent of its
   outstanding shares each fiscal year.

      (c) Repurchase request deadlines shall be disclosed in the notification
   provided to shareholders of a repurchase offer. Repurchase request deadlines
   shall be determined by the Board consistent with the 1940 Act, applicable
   SEC regulations and the terms of any exemptive order issued to the Fund by
   the SEC.

      (d) The date on which the repurchase price for shares is to be determined
   shall occur no later than the fourteenth day after a repurchase request
   deadline, or the next business day if such day is not a business day.

Necessary Regulatory Relief for Repurchase Offers

   In order to conduct the repurchase offers in the manner proposed by the
Fund, the Fund applied in March 2001 to the SEC and the Internal Revenue
Service (the "IRS") to obtain necessary interpretations and exemptive relief to
conduct the periodic in-kind repurchase offers. The IRS has provided the Fund
with a private letter ruling as to the tax treatment of the periodic in-kind
repurchase offers which agrees with the Fund that the repurchase offers will
not result in the realization of gains or losses at the Fund level. The Fund
has been working with the SEC to obtain the exemptive relief necessary to
conduct periodic in-kind repurchase offers on the terms described herein and to
permit shareholders of the Fund owning more than 5% of the Fund's outstanding
shares to participate. However, the Fund has not obtained the necessary relief
from the SEC as of the date of this Proxy Statement. Implementation of the
fundamental policy that is the subject of this proposal is dependent on the
SEC's approval of various aspects of the proposed in-kind repurchase offers.
The Fund cannot implement the proposed periodic in-kind repurchase offers
without the necessary regulatory relief from the SEC. Accordingly,
implementation of this proposal is contingent upon both shareholder approval
and obtaining the necessary exemptive relief from the SEC to effectuate the
proposal.

About the Board's Support for this Proposal

   This proposal is unanimously supported by the Board as a means to increase
shareholder value without jeopardizing the management of the Fund consistent
with its investment objective. The Board believes that this proposal will
provide shareholders with additional liquidity for their investment in the Fund
at the same time that it takes into account the market in which the Fund
invests and the interests of all of its shareholders. In approving this
proposal, the Board has considered other alternatives such as open-ending,
tender offers, and open market repurchases. The Board finds that this proposal
gives shareholders the choice to periodically receive close to net asset value
for their shares without penalizing those shareholders (such as, for example,
in the form of taxable capital gains or losses realized by the Fund if it had
to liquidate securities to conduct a tender offer, open market repurchases or
open-end and the consequent effect on portfolio management) who choose to
remain invested in the Fund. In addition, the Board considered the effect of
other alternatives on the Mexican securities market and continued management of
the Fund. The Board believes that this proposal represents the alternative
which will result in the least possible disruption of the Mexican securities
market while preserving the objectives of the Fund.

Effect of Approval/Absence of Approval

   Approval of the proposal as a fundamental policy (see "Fundamental
Repurchase Policy") of the Fund includes recognition by shareholders that the
requisite approval by the SEC may not have been received, and that

                                      18



modifications to the repurchase policy may be made by the Board to bring the
policy into compliance with an SEC order, if issued. The Fund anticipates that
it would commence periodic in-kind repurchase offers as soon as practicable
after it has obtained shareholder approval and the regulatory relief it has
requested from the SEC. If the proposal is not approved by shareholders or the
SEC, or not approved by the SEC in a manner satisfactory to the Board, the
Board will continue to work with the SEC to obtain the relief it has requested
and, if necessary, solicit shareholder approval again in the future after it
has obtained the requested relief from the SEC.

Percentage of Votes Required for Approval

   Approval of adoption of the repurchase policy that is the subject of this
proposal requires the "yes" vote of a majority of the Fund's outstanding voting
securities as provided in the 1940 Act. For this purpose, this means the "yes"
vote of the lesser of (a) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund,
or (b) 67% or more of the shares present at the Meeting, if more than 50% of
the outstanding shares are present at the Meeting in person or by proxy.
Because abstentions and broker non-votes are treated as shares present but not
voting, any abstentions and broker non-votes will have the effect of votes
against this proposal.

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR ADOPTION OF
THE REPURCHASE POLICY REQUIRING THE FUND TO CONDUCT PERIODIC IN-KIND REPURCHASE
OFFERS AT LEAST ONCE EACH FISCAL YEAR.

                       PROPOSAL 4:  SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL

Statement of Receipt of Shareholder Proposal

   Advantage Partners, L.P., The Victor Building, Suite 110, 326 West Lancaster
Avenue, Ardmore, PA 19003, have submitted the following proposal for inclusion
in this Proxy Statement. Advantage Partners, L.P. claims that it has owned
shares of the Fund with a market value of at least $2,000 continuously for the
preceding year and intends to maintain the required ownership through the date
of the Meeting. The Board of Directors and the Fund accept no responsibility
for the accuracy of either the proposal or of Advantage Partners, L.P.'s
supporting statement.

Shareholder Proposal and Supporting Statement of Advantage Partners, L.P.

   As of the shareholder proposal submission deadline in October 2001, the
Fund's proposed periodic in-kind repurchase plan suffers from a shortage of
concrete details regarding the timing and frequency of implementation, as well
as the amount of shares that shareholders can redeem at any redemption date.
Therefore, be it RESOLVED that shareholders of the Fund recommend the Board of
Directors expedite the process to convert the Fund to an open-end investment
company so Fund shares can trade at net asset value (NAV) daily.

   Without a firm commitment from the Fund to provide the opportunity for
shareholders to have redeemed a minimum of 50% of shares by September 2002, and
at least 25% of shares in each successive year thereafter, as part of the
Fund's proposed plan to conduct periodic in-kind repurchases at no less than
98% of NAV, we believe promptly open-ending the Fund is a better alternative
for the majority of Fund shareholders.

   Smaller and/or infrequent tenders will not achieve meaningful narrowing, let
along eradication, of the discount to NAV -- open-ending can only succeed. The
Fund's proposal was initially announced way back on March 5, 2001, and lack of
clarity should be viewed as a bad sign for shareholder interests.

   Without a definite timetable, it is quite conceivable that it may take far
longer for shareholders to have any meaningful opportunity for shares to be
worth NAV, than by open-ending the Fund promptly, which would provide for NAV
every day -- a level not seen since 1995! For over 6 years, the stock has
perpetually traded at a discount to NAV, at times greater than 30%.

                                      19



   If the Fund proceeds with the bare minimum, 1% annual tender offer that its
current plan allows for, or some other insufficient effort, the entire process
should be construed as an extraordinary waste of shareholder assets in
comparison to the value-added that would occur through converting the Fund to
an open-end fund. Voting FOR this proposal will send that vital message to the
Board.

   The Fund no longer requires the closed-end format to effectively manage
shareholder money. The persistently wide and unacceptable discount to NAV in
recent years has caused shareholder returns to underperform NAV returns over
the long haul. To add salt to the wounds, NAV returns on a long-term basis have
underperformed the Fund's benchmark. By our calculations, the Fund has been one
of the worst closed-end fund performers vs. its applicable benchmark over the 5
year period ending September 30, 2001. What then do shareholders have to show
for maintaining the closed-end fund structure?

   The Fund traded at greater than a 30% in 2000, and even with shareholders
anticipating some possibility for achieving NAV, the shares have settled into
the 14%-18% discount range. A 15% discount represents an economic cost to
shareholders of nearly $131 million as of October 12, 2001. Shareholders should
vote their own best interests, not the best interest of Fund management, which
gets paid based on assets under management.

Statement of Position of the Board of Directors in Opposition to the
Shareholder Proposal

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL AND
BELIEVES THAT THE PROPOSED PERIODIC IN-KIND SHARE REPURCHASE OFFER POLICY IS IN
THE BEST INTERESTS OF ALL FUND SHAREHOLDERS.

   The Board of Directors opposes Advantage Partners, L.P.'s ("AP") proposal
because it feels open-ending is not the most effective means to deliver
long-term added value to the majority of shareholders. Open-ending provides
only short-term benefits, which are outweighed by long-term negative
ramifications to shareholders who remain invested in the Fund. Moreover, AP's
proposal does not accurately reflect the potential benefits to all Fund
shareholders offered by the Fund's proposed periodic in-kind share repurchases.

   As further described below, the Board of Directors opposes AP's proposal
because:

  .  An open-end fund structure limits the Fund's ability to provide you with
     optimal returns in less liquid markets such as Mexico.

  .  Conversion to an open-end structure is likely to result in an increased
     expense ratio, realization of significant taxable capital gains, and
     fundamental changes in the Fund's investment objective, policies and
     strategy.

  .  It reflects a misunderstanding of the periodic in-kind repurchases
     proposed by the Fund currently under consideration by regulatory
     authorities.

Contrary to AP's opinion, a closed-end fund remains the most advantageous
structure for fulfilling your Fund's investment objective: investing in the
Mexican securities market to produce long-term capital appreciation. This is
especially the case given the characteristics of the market in which your Fund
invests. The Mexican Stock Exchange continues to be relatively small and less
liquid compared to other major world markets. For example, the dollar value of
the daily average trading volume of the Mexican Stock Exchange for calendar
year 2001 has been $152.9 million dollars compared to $42.3 billion dollars of
the New York Stock Exchange. The Mexican Stock Exchange is also small in
relation to the size of the Mexican economy, as its total market value at the
end of 2000 represented only 22% of Mexico's gross domestic product, compared
with 171% in the case of the New York Stock Exchange, with 86% in the case of
Chile and 38% in the case of Brazil. Open-end funds are constrained in their
ability to invest in markets like Mexico due to the need to have readily
available cash to pay to redeeming shareholders on short notice. Conversely,
closed-end funds allow investment in less liquid markets like Mexico without
the need for cash reserves and readily disposable investments to meet
redemptions.

                                      20



   In addition, a closed-end fund is not restricted by the SEC rule that limits
investment in illiquid securities to only 15% of the fund's portfolio. A
security is deemed "illiquid" when it cannot be sold in an orderly manner in
less than seven days. The Fund would have difficulty disposing of a significant
portion of its portfolio positions in an orderly basis.

   Furthermore, any elimination of the Fund's market discount preceding
open-ending may be counteracted by the decreased returns and consequent effect
on performance resulting from the premature sale of the Fund's portfolio
securities to meet shareholder demand. The AP proposal does not assess the
economic cost to shareholders of this aspect of open-ending. Nor does the AP
Proposal assess the potential cost to Fund performance of maintaining cash
reserves to meet redemptions in an open-end fund.

   Because of the market in which the Fund invests, open-ending may also
require the Fund to change its investment objectives, policies and strategy to
accommodate the effect of needing to invest in more liquid securities. Having
to anticipate cash redemptions on a daily basis and perhaps large-scale initial
redemptions upon conversion would restrict the flexibility of the Fund to
invest in many positions in a less liquid market such as Mexico's. As mentioned
below, the Fund has recently benefited in the form of improved performance
partly due to increased investment flexibility granted to the Fund's investment
adviser through shareholder approval of a non-diversified structure and a
concentration policy. Open-ending would curtail the range of possible
investment for the Fund in the primary market in which it invests.

   In considering AP's proposal, you should also assess the effect that
open-ending may have on the Fund's expense ratios based on the decrease in
asset size typically accompanying an open-ending and the increased
transactional costs of maintaining a more liquid portfolio and operating an
open-end fund. The Fund currently has one of the lowest expense ratios of any
closed-end country fund. Closed-end funds do not need the same marketing,
distribution and communication activities of open-end funds, and therefore, all
costs can be kept to a minimum.

   The Board also believes that it would be helpful to provide you with some
empirical data on the long-term effects of open-ending closed-end country
funds. A 1998 study by a mutual fund tracking service found that conversion
from a closed-end to open-end structure is generally not in the best long-term
interest of shareholders in the fund. Eight of nine funds it studied saw a
decrease in asset size as a result of open-ending as well as an increase in
expense ratio for all nine funds in the study.

   Open-ending the Fund would also result in untimely liquidation of a large
portion of the Fund's portfolio since open-end fund conversions typically
produce large scale shareholder redemptions. The disposition of Fund assets to
satisfy the large-scale redemptions that typically accompany open-ending
generates realization of long-term capital gains. As of October 31, 2001, 22%
of the Fund's total net asset value is unrealized capital gain.

   Moreover, as is demonstrated in the chart below, the Fund's returns on
market price have generally been better than on net asset value. Had the Fund
been an open-end fund, shareholders would generally have received less return
than they did from the Fund in the closed-end structure in which it currently
operates.



                   THE MEXICO FUND, INC. PERFORMANCE RETURN
                            AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2001
         ------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          Excess of
                                                        Market Returns
         Time Period Market Price Returns* NAV Returns*    over NAV
         ----------- --------------------- ------------ --------------
                                               
          1 year....          6.71%           -8.15%        14.86%
          3 years...         55.80%           26.82%        28.98%
          5 years...         32.67%           19.70%        12.97%
          10 years..         30.18%           31.70%        -1.52%

--------
*Source: Lipper Inc.


                                      21



   AP's proposal reflects a misunderstanding of the facts concerning the Fund's
proposed in-kind share repurchases. In its press release dated October 16,
2001, three days prior to submission of AP's proposal to the Fund, the Fund
reiterated that on March 5, 2001, it filed documents with the SEC seeking
regulatory approval to conduct periodic in-kind repurchases and stated that
through its proposed in-kind periodic repurchases it will repurchase no less
than five percent of the Fund's outstanding shares each fiscal year. During any
one periodic repurchase offer, the Fund may repurchase between one and
twenty-five percent of its outstanding shares. This is substantially different
from the one percent that AP incorrectly states in its proposal.

   The Fund believes that these periodic in-kind repurchases will be beneficial
to all Fund shareholders, not simply short-term holders who would liquidate
their position in the Fund upon its conversion to an open-end structure. First,
shareholders who do not participate in the in-kind repurchase offers will not
incur capital gains as the result of a ruling the Fund has received from the
IRS regarding the treatment of the in-kind distributions. This means that the
Fund can repurchase its shares in-kind periodically without the sale of
portfolio securities that may generate long-term capital gains and result in
taxable events to shareholders who do not participate. With this favorable tax
ruling, the in-kind repurchases represent a taxable event only for shareholders
who have shares repurchased by the Fund during the periodic repurchases.
Second, the Fund's investments need not be liquidated to conduct the repurchase
offers and the Fund can continue its current investment strategies and
policies. Third, shareholders benefit from a constant fundamental policy that
the Fund will repurchase its shares at no less than 98% of net asset value at
least once a year, rather than a one-time event such as open-ending that
dramatically alters the cost structure and management of the Fund. This type of
periodic repurchase may benefit loyal long-term shareholders by reducing the
number of shares available for sale at a discount thereby creating price
pressure and by increasing net asset value without any additional risk.
Shareholders who view the Fund as a long-term, tax efficient investment may be
better off in a closed-end structure at a nominal or moderate discount which
fluctuates.

   Finally, AP's supporting statement fails to give you a complete picture of
the Fund's performance and efforts to achieve shareholder value. The Fund, like
virtually all closed-end country funds, tends to trade at a market discount.
However, the Fund's market discount has been halved in the last year to 12.0%
as of October 31, 2001 and reflects a consistent narrowing trend, which has
extended beyond completion of the Fund's open-market repurchases in May 2001.
AP's statement that the Fund underperformed against its benchmark in the last
five years omits the unusual circumstance that two issuers represented 35% of
the benchmark in 1999 (a benchmark which the Fund had not yet adopted for
performance purposes) and those issuers' performance increased 126.5% and
177.9% in 1999. The Fund was precluded by law from investing to a comparable
degree in those issuers at that time. In addition, AP fails to point out that
the Fund has outperformed its benchmark and provided a positive investment
return in the last year since it restructured its portfolio following
shareholder approval permitting it to become a non-diversified fund and
concentrate in certain industries. Lastly, the Board has listened to its
shareholders and approved a performance fee component to the Fund's advisory
contract which adjusts adviser compensation based on Fund performance and not
simply assets under management.

   In conclusion, attempts to deliver net asset value immediately to a portion
of the shareholders who wish to exit the Fund may well destroy or diminish the
advantages otherwise enjoyed by the remaining shareholders. The Board remains
unanimously committed to realizing the potential of the Fund without changing
its fundamental nature and for that reason:

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE AGAINST THE PROPOSAL.

                                OTHER BUSINESS

   The Board of Directors is aware of two potential proposals which may be
brought before the Meeting other than those set forth above. The first proposal
pertains to two nominees for election as directors other than the nominees
named in Proposal 1. The second proposal relates to the Fund's investment
advisory and management agreement and recommends its termination. The Board has
reviewed the potential proposals and is unanimously opposed to both proposals.
Should the persons named on the enclosed proxy card have discretion to vote on
such

                                      22



matters, those persons intend to vote AGAINST such matters. The Board of
Directors knows of no other business to be brought before the Meeting. If,
however, any other matters properly come before the Meeting, it is the
intention of the persons named on the enclosed proxy card to vote such proxies
on such matters in accordance with their best judgment.

                            ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Investment Advisory and Administrative Services

   The Adviser and Administrator. Impulsora del Fondo Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (the
"Adviser"), 77 Aristoteles Street, 3rd Floor, Polanco, 11560 Mexico D.F.,
Mexico, has served as the investment adviser of the Fund from the time the Fund
was established in 1981. Pursuant to the Investment Advisory and Management
Agreement between the Fund and the Adviser, the Adviser receives an advisory
fee at the rate of 0.85% of the Fund's average daily net assets up to $200
million, 0.70% of such assets between $200 million and $400 million, and 0.60%
of such assets in excess of $400 million. For the fiscal year ended October 31,
2001, total advisory fees paid by the Fund to the Adviser aggregated $6,365,499
based on average net assets for the fiscal year of approximately $943,969,059.
The Adviser is a Mexican corporation incorporated in 1980.

   Pursuant to an Administrative Services Agreement, effective April 1, 1994,
which was amended and restated as of June 30, 2001, the Adviser also provides
certain administrative services to the Fund which were previously performed by
the Fund's Trustee, including the determination and publication of the net
asset value of the Fund, the provision of assistance to the Fund to enable the
Fund to maintain its books and records in accordance with applicable United
States and Mexican law and the provision of assistance to the Fund's auditors
in the preparation and filing of tax reports and returns. The Fund pays the
Adviser an annual fee of 0.07% of average daily net assets of the Fund as
compensation for services provided under the Administrative Services Agreement.

Compliance with Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

   Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and
Section 30(h) of the 1940 Act require the Fund's officers and Directors,
Adviser, affiliates of the Adviser, and persons who beneficially own more than
ten percent of a registered class of the Fund's securities ("Reporting
Persons"), to file reports of ownership of the Fund's securities and changes in
ownership with the SEC and the New York Stock Exchange. Reporting Persons are
also required by such regulations to furnish the Fund with copies of all
Section 16(a) forms they file.

   Based solely on its review of the copies of such forms received by it and
written representations of certain Reporting Persons, the Fund believes that
during fiscal year 2001, its Reporting Persons complied with all applicable
filing requirements.

                       SOLICITATION OF PROXIES; EXPENSES

   The solicitation of proxies will be primarily by mail. In order to obtain
the necessary quorum and shareholder participation at the Meeting,
supplementary solicitation may be made by mail, telephone, telegraph, or
personal interview by directors, officers or agents of the Fund.

   The expense of preparation, printing and mailing of the enclosed form of
proxy and accompanying Notice and Proxy Statement will be borne by the Fund.
The Fund will reimburse banks, brokers and others for their reasonable expenses
in forwarding proxy solicitation material to the beneficial owners of the
shares of the Fund. Morrow & Co., Inc. has been engaged by the Fund to assist
in the distribution, tabulation and solicitation of proxies. The anticipated
cost of Morrow & Co., Inc.'s services is $50,000 plus out-of-pocket expenses.

                                      23



                                 VOTE REQUIRED

   The presence in person or by proxy of the holders of a majority of the
outstanding shares of the Fund is required to constitute a quorum at the
Meeting. Election of Directors (Proposal 1), and the shareholder proposal
(Proposal 4) will require the approval of the majority of votes validly cast at
the Meeting. The adoption of an amendment to the Fund's investment advisory and
management contract adopting a performance fee component (Proposal 2) and
approval of a fundamental policy requiring periodic in-kind repurchases
(Proposal 3) will require the approval of the lesser of: (i) 67% of the Fund's
outstanding shares present at a meeting at which holders of more than 50% of
the outstanding shares are present in person or by proxy; or (ii) more than 50%
of the Fund's outstanding shares.

                             SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

   If a shareholder intends to present a proposal at the 2003 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders of the Fund and desires to have the proposal included in the
Fund's Proxy Statement and form of proxy for that meeting, the shareholder must
deliver the proposal to the offices of the Fund by September 25, 2002 for
consideration by the Fund.

   Shareholders wishing to present proposals at the 2003 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders of the Fund not to be included in the Fund's proxy materials
should send written notice to the Secretary of the Fund of such proposals,
which notice should be received by the Secretary of the Fund by December 7,
2002 but no earlier than November 7, 2002 in the form prescribed in the Fund's
By-Laws.

SHAREHOLDERS WHO DO NOT EXPECT TO BE PRESENT AT THE MEETING AND WHO WISH TO
HAVE THEIR SHARES VOTED ARE REQUESTED TO DATE AND SIGN THE ENCLOSED WHITE PROXY
CARD AND RETURN IT IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED IF MAILED
IN THE UNITED STATES.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                          Samuel Garcia Cuellar
                                          Secretary

Dated: January 23, 2002

                                      24



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                WHITE PROXY CARD

                             THE MEXICO FUND, INC.

            Proxy Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors for
                         Annual Meeting of Shareholders

     The undersigned shareholder of The Mexico Fund, Inc., a Maryland
corporation (the "Fund"), hereby appoints Jose Luis Gomez Pimienta and Sander M.
Bieber and each of them proxies of the undersigned, with full power of
substitution, to vote and act in the name and stead of the undersigned at the
Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the Fund, to be held at 30 Rockefeller Plaza,
23rd Floor, New York, NY, 10112, on March 7, 2002 at 2:00 P.M., New York City
time, and at any and all adjournments thereof, according to the number of votes
the undersigned would be entitled to cast if personally present.

     The shares represented by this proxy will be voted in accordance with
instructions given by the shareholder, but if no instructions are given, this
proxy will be voted in favor of proposals 1, 2 and 3 against proposal 4 as set
forth in this proxy.

     The undersigned hereby revokes any and all proxies with respect to such
shares heretofore given by the undersigned. The undersigned acknowledges receipt
of the Proxy Statement dated January 23, 2002.

                          (Continued on reverse side)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                        Please date, sign and mail your
                      proxy card back as soon as possible!

                         Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                             THE MEXICO FUND, INC.

                                  March 7, 2002

                Please Detach and Mail in the Envelope Provided
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A [X]  Please mark your
       votes as in this
       example


             This proxy/voting instruction card will be voted FOR proposals 1, 2 and 3 if no choice is specified.
                             The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR proposals 1, 2 and 3.

                                                                                                              

                      FOR   WITHHELD                                                                        FOR    AGAINST   ABSTAIN
1. Election of the   [_]    [_]         Nominees:                       2. Approval of addition of a        [_]      [_]       [_]
   nominees listed                          Juan Gallardo T.               performance fee component
   at right to serve                        Emilio Carrillo Gamboa         to the Fund's investment
   as members of                                                           advisory fee.
   the Fund's Board of Directors, as Class III
   Directors, for a term expiring in 2005 and until                     3. Approval of adoption of a        [_]      [_]       [_]
   their successors are elected and qualified:                             share repurchase policy
                                                                           requiring the Fund, on a
For, except as marked to the contrary below:                               periodic basis, to offer
                                                                           to repurchase in-kind Fund
______________________________________________                             shares at no less than 98%
                                                                           of net asset value.


                                                                        This proxy/voting instruction card will be voted AGAINST
                                                                        proposal 4 if no choice is specified.

                                                                        The Board of Directors recommends a vote AGAINST proposal 4.

                                                                                                            FOR    AGAINST   ABSTAIN
                                                                        4. To consider a shareholder        [_]      [_]       [_]
                                                                           proposal that the shareholders
                                                                           of the Fund recommend that the
                                                                           Board of Directors expedite the
                                                                           process to convert the Fund to
                                                                           an open-end investment management
                                                                           company.

                                                                        5. In the discretion of the above named proxy holders, such
                                                                           other business as may properly come before the Meeting
                                                                           or any adjournment thereof.



SIGNATURE(s)________________________________________   DATED_________________

SIGNATURE(s)________________________________________

TITLE:__________________________________________

NOTE: Please sign, date and return promptly. Signature(s) should be exactly as
      name or names appear on proxy. If shares are held jointly, each holder
      should sign. If signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or
      guardian, please give full name.
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