By Luis Gómez Romero

It is already clear that 2017 will be a difficult year for Mexico – and not just because it will (or won't) have to pay for a "big, beautiful wall."

On New Year's Day, gas prices in the country jumped 14 percent to 20 percent after the Mexican government's decision to eliminate state oil subsidies.

U.S. politics have also unleashed what Mexico's central bank president has described as an economic "hurricane." Immediately after Donald Trump's election, the Mexican peso dropped 12 percent against the U.S. dollar, a sign of uncertainty about the future of Mexican exports, such as automobiles and oil.

Last week, the currency fell another 2.5 percent as investors grappled with potential changes in trade policy. Ford Motors, for example, has yielded to Trump's protectionist threats, canceling Mexican projects worth billions of dollars. Fiat Chrysler is also considering closing its Mexican factories.

The spike in fuel prices, or "gasolinazo" (gasoline blow), coupled with the weakened currency, has sparked discontent across the country.

Is this just a "zero-degree protest" – Slovenian cultural critic Slavoj Žižek's term for violent actions demanding nothing? Or, as Mexican journalist Carmen Aristegui has suggested, are we witnessing a "Mexican Spring" – a protest movement that could blossom into an organized force for political change?

Gasoline is flammable

Under the 2013 overhaul of energy laws, last year Mexico enabled the private sector to import gasoline and open service stations, realms formerly monopolized by the state-run Petróleos Mexicanos. Price controls will be gradually lifted throughout 2017.

These changes are intended to improve the competitiveness of Mexico's economy. But today Mexicans pay for gasoline almost as much as Australians and Canadians – in a country where the daily minimum wage is currently 80 pesos (US$3.60).

The Mexican government claims that this domestic privatization process has simply, and unfortunately, coincided with an increase in the price of international oil.

In a televised address, President Enrique Peña Nieto asked for understanding, saying that if the government hadn't raised petrol prices, it would have been forced to cut social services.

"I ask you," Peña Nieto said, "what would you have done?"

#WhatWouldYouHaveDone?

His question quickly became a social media meme, with thousands of Mexicans tweeting alternative solutions like "lower the president's salary" and "Make Mexico great again."

Among serious responses, combating corruption is a favoured proposal. Peña Nieto recently apologised for the conflict of interest surrounding his wife's purchase of a $US7 million home from a government contractor. And several high-profile members of his Revolutionary Institutional Party are facing criminal charges, including Javier Duarte, the ex-governor of Veracruz who went missing after being accused of embezzlement.

Cutting government expenditure, some of which is spent on outrageous benefits for public officials, was another popular suggestion.

Though Peña Nieto declared that the government had already cut expenditure by 190 billion pesos ($US8.8 billion) before raising gas prices, this information was false: in 2015, the government was overbudget by 186 billion pesos ($US8.6 billion).

The shortfall isn't necessarily due to expensive social programs. In a country where the average household income is US$12,806 a year, Peña Nieto's government pays out "Christmas bonuses" of US$11,000 per senator and $6,500 per congressman.

As the rallies calling for his resignation multiplied, Peña Nieto belatedly outlined measures that he said would help families mitigate the impact of the increase in petrol prices. He promised, for example, to police price increases for staple goods and invest in modernizing public transportation.

Mexicans, however, will not be easily appeased this time. A recent opinion poll across the country has shown that 87 percent of surveyed people believe these measures will not make up for the overnight 20 percent increase in the price of gasoline.

Upping gas prices thus seems to have been the last straw. Over the past week, gasoline has fueled the flames of revolt, as deeply discontented Mexicans lash out against a culture of corruption, stagnant politics and a decade of unceasing violence.

The Apprentice

It is a surprising moment to announce a cabinet reshuffle, and especially mystifying that Peña Nieto would, on January 4, appoint former finance minister Luis Videgaray to lead Mexico's foreign ministry.

Not only do Mexicans blame Videgaray for much of the country's economic woes (as finance minister, he promised that gas prices would not increase), but he is also the person who advocated for then-candidate Trump's August 2016 visit to Mexico.

This strategic error – a public relations embarrassment for Peña Nieto and legitimacy-booster for Trump – forced Videgaray to resign his post as finance minister.

Videgaray has acknowledged that he is no diplomat, saying – with apparent humility – that he's "here to learn." A social media backlash also came quickly after that statement.

Mexico has plenty of career diplomats and ambassadors. But Videgaray is tied to Jared Kushner, Donald Trump's son-in-law. Peña Nieto may believe that having an amigo in the White House will help temper the Mexico-U.S. relationship under Trump.

Either way, Peña Nieto has sent Trump an apprentice (pun intended!) at a delicate political juncture for Mexico, and the government's apparent meekness and gullibility in the face of Trump's aggression has enraged the Mexican people.

Donald Trump, revolutionary

Last year, Slavoj Žižek infamously declared that he would prefer that Donald Trump win the US election because his brazenly discriminatory and oppressive policy proposals could motivate global resistance and spur change.

Is this what's happening in Mexico?

In tweet after tweet, Trump has destroyed what Mexicans thought they knew about their nation's relationship with the US. Not since Woodrow Wilson invaded Veracruz in 1914 has the US shown any interest in openly and extensively destabilizing Mexico.

This is basically a matter of prudence: if you set your neighbor's house on fire, you risk reducing your own home to ashes.

But America's president-elect seems quite satisfied by the misfortune he is causing down south. "This is just the beginning – much more to follow", he bragged about Ford revoking its Mexican investments.

Like Karl Marx's revolutionary bourgeoisie, for Mexico Trump has made all that is solid melt into thin air and all that is holy profane.

The Mexican government's demonstrated inability to manage the social and economic repercussions of Trump's election – not to mention whatever happens once he actually takes power – has compelled its citizens, no strangers to revolution, to revolt. Marx would be disappointed if they didn't.

Looting will not reshape society, of course. As Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman says, it is simply an expression of the "defective and disqualified consumers" borne of global capitalism's failures.

Will Mexico's gas riots and social media protests develop into real social and political change, a "Mexican spring" to follow this winter of discontent? That's for the people to decide.