Maquiladoras qualify as such.
They are known as maquiladoras.
GM, Ford and Chrysler have assembly plants in Mexico.
Not to culture, but to economy: maquiladoras are factories and assembly plants owned by foreign investors in Mexico, close to the US-Mexico border. Some examples include electronics, automotive or household assembly plants.
"Maquiladora"
False. Maquiladoras are manufacturing or assembly plants.
You should note that not all factories in Mexico have this term; only foreign-owned assembly plants are known as maquiladoras.
Most of them. Mexico has assembly plants from General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Volkswagen, Nissan, Toyota and Honda. See related questions.
Poinsettia are cultivated as commercial pot plants all over the world. They are native to Mexico.
It is the 7th largest city in Mexico (2010) with 1.7 million inhabitants. It is also the largest on northwestern Mexico and is an important industrial hub, where many assembly plants or maquiladoras are located.
The literal translation is "fabrica". However, assembly plants that manufacture products for export are commonly known as "maquiladora".
Many of them, yes. LG, Samsung, BenQ, Philips or Sony (and many more) have TV assembly plants located in Mexico.
Only one, known as Delphi Automotive Systems Ashimori de Mexico S.A. de C.V. It most probably has several manufacturing locations throughout Mexico, close to vehicle and truck assembly plants in Mexico.