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    | CONNECTIVITY, COMPATIBILITY, CONVERGENCE, 
      PREDICTABILITY Conditions for productive integration in a regional space.
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    | by Félix PeñaAugust 2015
 
 English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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    |    | It has been noted that at least three conditions are 
        necessary to advance economic integration between countries that share 
        a regional geographic space. They are also conditions to advance production 
        linkages between companies from different countries in the same regional 
        space. These conditions are connectivity, compatibility and convergence. 
        They involve sequential steps which begin with physical connectivity, 
        including communications and everything related to trade facilitation, 
        followed by the compatibility of goals, perceptions and values and eventually 
        concluding with the convergence of systems, policies and concrete actions.
       In this perspective, we can understand the efforts 
        made by the countries in the region or sub-regions within it, to generate 
        institutional mechanisms and common ground rules for economic relations, 
        not only as a means of increasing interactions and, therefore interdependence, 
        but also to regulate conflicts and to strengthen the elements of cooperation 
        in order to render such interdependence manageable, marking it with signs 
        of cooperation. All these are behaviors that prove functional for the 
        governance of a shared regional space.
       However, there is a fourth condition, which is the 
        predictability of the ground rules. It is essential for the sustainability 
        of the integration agreements through time, as well as for the expectations 
        that can be generated in business sectors, especially at the moment of 
        making productive investment decisions. 
       It is in relation to this fourth condition, that the role of law and 
        institutional mechanisms become more relevant in the development of regional 
        interdependence in Latin America. This role is to help strengthen the 
        centripetal forces in a common space that given its own dynamics, eventually 
        could be characterized by the presence of powerful centrifugal forces. 
        Common rules and institutions then acquire a historical and geopolitical 
        sense, in the perspective of a strategy aimed at countering the natural 
        tendencies towards conflict that are present in the relations between 
        nations that share the same geographical area. |  
   
    |  Latin American countries have gradually decreased the relative marginality 
        that long characterized their mutual relations. Additionally, the international 
        scenario, with the profound redistribution of relative power among nations 
        and the new geography of global economic competition, contributes to a 
        reassessment of the contiguous environment in the strategies for development 
        and international insertion of the countries of the region. This explains 
        why it is becoming increasingly difficult for these countries to be indifferent 
        to what is happening in their regional space. Both conceptually and in practical concrete actions, in recent years 
        Latin American countries have recognized the existence of multiple means 
        adapted to the purpose of strengthening their mutual relations and promoting 
        cooperation and integration with their neighbors. These include those 
        instruments characteristic of formal processes of economic integration 
        as well as bilateral or multilateral ones, regional or partial (sectoral 
        or sub regional), governmental or social, cooperative with third parties 
        or intraregional. They include as well, multiple forms of joint ventures 
        and partnerships between companies from two or more countries of the region 
        (a subject previously addressed in the June 
        issue of this Newsletter, of which this is a continuation, on http://www.felixpena.com.ar). The economic and political importance of developing joint projects and 
        undertakings involving two or more countries, often-contiguous ones, began 
        to be perceived at the beginning of the experience initiated in the region 
        in the late fifties with the signing of the first treaties that formally 
        established integration objectives. This idea was linked to the sharing 
        of space and resources, both for the construction of physical works or 
        for the development of productive activities, which due to their nature 
        and scope, required to be addressed in more than one country. A bridge, 
        a railway, a dam, a road, an electrical interconnection, communications 
        networks, the joint exploitation of natural resources, the joint development 
        of contiguous or common maritime areas, industrial undertakings or servicing, 
        have been typical cases. A very recent example, with a projection that 
        transcends the region, is the joint airline created by LAN Chile and TAM 
        of Brazil.  The different types of joint ventures are one of the most effective ways 
        to generate "de-facto solidarity" -in the sense proposed by 
        Jean Monnet, one of the founding fathers of European integration and inspirator 
        of its existential and methodological dimension- between nations that 
        share a common regional space. Of these result concatenation effects that 
        may contribute to render permanent the economic and political ties that 
        are generated. Hence, their value to support, over time, the efforts to 
        facilitate the governance of a region, understood in the sense of the 
        prevalence of peace and political stability in the relations between countries 
        sharing a common geographical space.  Both in the construction of LAFTA (1960) first and the LAIA (1980) later 
        and in the sub-regional experiences, such as those of the original Andean 
        Group (1969), the Program for the Integration and Cooperation between 
        Argentina and Brazil -PICE- (1986), and then Mercosur (1991), the idea 
        of advancing through sectoral integration and joint ventures was present. 
        It has also been so in Central America and the Caribbean. In the case 
        of the Andean Group, it was reflected by Decision 46 about Andean multinational 
        enterprises and, in particular by sectoral programs of industrial integration. 
        In the case of the PICE and later Mercosur, it was reflected by the economic 
        complementation agreements, for example, those related with the automotive 
        sector, among others, and by Decision CMC 3/1991 regulating the seldom 
        used instrument of sector agreements, provided for in Article 5 d of the 
        Treaty of Asuncion. In the original development of LAFTA, the instrument of industrial complementation 
        agreements, provided for in Articles 16 and 17 of the Treaty of Montevideo 
        of 1960, responded precisely to the idea of progressing through sectoral 
        approaches in the construction of a space of Latin American integration. 
        They had, indeed, a commercial purpose, but their underlying aim was to 
        promote productive linkages with preferential trade measures designed 
        to encourage investment. This figure may be perhaps the one which best 
        reflected the original concept that led to the negotiation of what would 
        become the LAFTA. It was external pressure that forced to insert that 
        first regional agreement into the framework of a free trade area provided 
        under Article XXIV of the GATT, altering the original ideas, in particular 
        of Argentina and Brazil. This is the basis of the subsequent failure of 
        the LAFTA and its transformation into the LAIA. Already in the 1980 Montevideo Treaty, which created the LAIA, the figure 
        of the agreement of partial scope takes center stage, defined and regulated 
        in its different variants in Section Three of Chapter II and, with regard 
        to economic complementation agreements, by Article 11. Resolution 2 of 
        the LAFTA Council of Ministers, of 12 August 1980, regulated them (see 
        its text on http://www.aladi.org/). 
        They do not require the participation of all member countries. And in 
        order to harmonize the approach of the new Treaty with GATT rules, and 
        especially with Article XXIV, the countries of the region members of the 
        GATT played a leading role in driving the adoption at the Tokyo Round 
        (1979) of the so called "Enabling Clause". In the absence of 
        such clause, at the moment of the creation of the LAFTA, it was not possible 
        to reconcile the sectoral scope of the industrial complementation agreements 
        with the abovementioned Article XXIV of the GATT (on the original scope 
        of the LAFTA and, in particular, of the complementation agreements, refer 
        to the responses by the member countries to the questionnaire that, at 
        the time, was made by the GATT to the Contracting Parties and LAFTA members. 
        For the questions go to https://www.wto.org/, 
        and for the answers, to https://www.wto.org/. 
        Additionally, see the excellent analysis made by Bernardo Sepulveda Amor, 
        in his article on "The Regime of the most Favored Nation in GATT 
        and LAFTA" on http://codex.colmex.mx:8991/, 
        especially pages 351 et seq.). In the current approaches of "convergence in diversity", especially 
        between the countries of Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, what was mentioned 
        above may have much practical value. The main aim would be, precisely, 
        to facilitate joint ventures and production linkages between companies 
        in countries of the region and to take advantage of the increased demand 
        for goods and differentiated services by urban consumers of middle class 
        income, either in the region itself or in emerging countries from other 
        regions such as Asia, Africa and the Middle East. There could be productive 
        linkages that develop around specific projects, even including some countries 
        involved in various sub-regional integration schemes, as may eventually 
        be the case of agreements between countries that are members of Mercosur 
        and others participating in the Pacific Alliance (see the paper entitled 
        "Latin America, between convergence and fragmentation" on http://www.felixpena.com.ar/). Other important elements, in relation with a strategy for productive 
        articulation at the sectoral level, are those referred to the regimes 
        of origin, technical standards and other regulatory frameworks. They can 
        also be addressed with a regional scope within the institutional and regulatory 
        framework of the LAIA. It has been noted that at least three conditions are necessary to advance 
        economic integration among countries that share a regional geographic 
        space (they were raised, in due course, by Robert Erbes in an article 
        included as recommended reading of this Newsletter). These conditions 
        can also help promote the productive articulation between companies from 
        different countries in the same regional space. Such conditions are: connectivity, 
        compatibility and convergence. They involve sequential steps, beginning 
        with the physical connectivity, including communications and everything 
        related to trade facilitation; followed by the compatibility of goals, 
        perceptions and values and eventually concluding with the convergence 
        of systems, policies and actions. In this perspective, we can understand the efforts made by countries 
        of the region, to generate institutions and rules for their economic relations, 
        as a means of increasing interdependence and to regulate conflicts, as 
        well to strengthen elements of cooperation in order to render such interdependence 
        manageable, through cooperation and solidarity. This means behaviors functional 
        to the governance of a shared regional space.  But there is a fourth condition to consider. It is the predictability 
        of the ground rules. It is essential for the sustainability of the integration 
        agreements, as well as of the expectations that can be generated among 
        businesses at the time of having to make productive investment decisions. It is in relation to this fourth condition, that the role of the law 
        and of the institutional mechanisms for the development of a system of 
        regional interdependence in Latin America becomes most relevant. This 
        helps strengthen the centripetal forces in a common space that could eventually 
        be signed, given its own dynamics, by the presence of powerful centrifugal 
        forces. Common rules and institutions acquire then a historical and geopolitical 
        sense, in the context of a strategy aimed at countering the natural tendencies 
        towards conflict in the relations between nations that share the same 
        geographical area. Indeed, the effectiveness of the results of the efforts to increase business 
        participation in the cooperative relations and economic integration of 
        Latin America has been limited by the effect of some factors. Among others, 
        we can mention that businesses have not always been able to develop expectations 
        of stability, especially with regard to the legal and economic conditions 
        that have characterized the opening of markets negotiated in the framework 
        of multilateral and bilateral integration and economic cooperation agreements. 
        This is because these agreements have often been conceived by governments 
        as instruments for the promotion of short-term trade, responding more 
        to the idea of cyclical loan markets or of trade surpluses and shortages, 
        than to the creation of real -and not just rhetorical- long-term conditions 
        to induce investments and promote the expansion and modernization of productive 
        activities. The main factors of instability in the opening of markets that lead to 
        a situation of unpredictability, usually affecting the behavior of businesses 
        in intraregional trade, have been the legal precariousness of the preferences 
        granted, since they are often easily altered by unilateral actions or 
        behaviors from the granting country, or by the abrupt and erratic fluctuations 
        in exchange rates. The atmosphere of instability can have the effect of 
        discouraging businesses, often preventing them from making decisions that 
        would justify the cost of undertaking commercial or investment agreements 
        with long-term effects between companies in different countries of the 
        region. As it has been rightly pointed out, this precariousness may become, 
        in fact, the equivalent of a significant non-tariff restriction on regional 
        trade.  A concrete business may be viable when imagined in terms of the expanded 
        markets, as a result of the frameworks that are established by governments 
        and developed at the administrative level and by daily management. Businesses 
        will seriously consider such frameworks in their calculations only to 
        the extent that they perceive them as relatively stable and effective. 
        For example, would you as a Minister, run risks based on your own capital 
        and savings by investing in a new plant, expanding the production capacity 
        of the existing one, or incorporating new production or organization technologies 
        in view of the market apparently opened up by a preferential or integration 
        agreement signed with a colleague or colleagues from Latin American countries? 
        This is a key question that political operators must answer when materializing, 
        through agreements, their vision of the architecture of integration. If 
        the answer were negative or doubtful, why should a positive response is 
        expected from a local or foreign investor acting rationally? In order 
        to make an investment or to decide the participation in a transnational 
        production network, businesses will not only assess the seriousness of 
        the design of the integration process and its economic and political rationality. 
        They will also ask about its practical applicability when their products 
        arrive at the customs border of the other country. They will also relate 
        the promised opening of the market, with other internal and external economic 
        factors of the exporting and importing countries, that may affect the 
        calculation of the return of their investment in order to seize the business 
        opportunity that are offered. |  
   
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    | Félix Peña Director 
        of the Institute of International Trade at the ICBC Foundation. Director 
        of the Masters Degree in International Trade Relations at Tres de Febrero 
        National University (UNTREF). Member of the Executive Committee of the 
        Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI). Member of the Evian 
        Group Brains Trust. More 
        information. |  
 
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