The reasons for Mexico being such a difficult country are many. First, Mexico has always had a problem with forged stamps. The central government of Mexico in the nineteenth century had trouble controlling the vast area of the country. Many postal forgeries were made (postal forgeries are stamps that are forged by people trying to use them as postage to defraud the postal system). Postal forgeries have only been a real problem in a few countries (Spain is another). Postal forgeries are a form of counterfeiting and tend drive governments crazy (countries go to great lengths to prevent counterfeiting even when it is comparatively uncommon). Mexico’s response to the postal forgery problem was to create short lived issues (so postal forgers couldn’t use their forged plates for long), use various watermarks on the paper (which were very h
If this were not enough, because Mexico had so many rare stamps so early in its philatelic history, and because Mexican law didn’t recognize counterfeiting demonetized stamps as a crime, philatelic forgeries of classic Mexico are very common and quite difficult to distinguish (Most philatelic experts get a pretty good feel for the genuine and fake of most countries. Mexico is quite a different matter). Raoul de Thuin was a famous Mexican (and Latin American) forger who made hundreds of different Mexican forgeries alone. No one could get the Mexican government to stop him, and the American Philatelic Society finally had to buy out his stock and his plates in the 1960s.
In the post-WWII period, where the philately of most countries is a walk in the park, Mexico continues its complexity. The definitives and airmails have scores of scarce and hard to distinguish varieties. Overall, Mexico is a challenge to collect and not a pleasant one.
Specialty Catalogs: Whenever a country is as difficult to collect as is Mexico, some of the
Specialty Albums: Scott makes a very good specialty album. The Lighthouse hingeless specialty album for Mexico is excellent.
Availability of Material: Overall, Mexico has issued thousands of different stamps. Most are inexpensive and readily available. An interesting sub-specialty of collecting Mexico is collecting district overprints on early stamps. To avoid counterfeiting and postal theft, the Mexican authorities overprinted early stamps with district and consignment numbers when they sent stamps to various post offices. Most district overprints are fairly common though some are rare. Books listing the overprints and their scarcity are available from the American Philatelic Research Library.
Overall Collecting Grade: C