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    | UNCERTAINTIES IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING 
      SYSTEM: Their effects on economic integration and trade strategies in the region.
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    | by Félix PeñaSeptember 2015
 
 English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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    |    | Three issues, which were addressed in different sessions 
        of the XIX Annual CAF Conference in Washington, deserve special attention 
        due to their relevance in relation to the future of regional governance 
        and economic integration in Latin America.
 The first of these issues is the positive impact that can be expected 
        from the process of rapprochement initiated last December in the relations 
        between the United States and Cuba. It is difficult to predict how long 
        it will take to consolidate this process. Unforeseen difficulties could 
        still arise in the course of the next few months. Nothing seems to indicate 
        that it will be an easy or linear process. But the sole fact that it has 
        begun introduces a radical change in the relations between all the countries 
        of the hemisphere.
 A second issue relates to the renewal of concepts and methods to facilitate 
        a more effective regional governance that is, in turn, functional to the 
        logic of cooperation and economic integration among the countries of the 
        Latin American space. The strategic idea of convergence in diversity gains 
        strength not only to facilitate the articulation between processes such 
        as Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, but also to include countries from 
        the sub regional spaces of Central America and the Caribbean -and therefore 
        Cuba. This implies a departure from the idea of integration as a way of 
        joining together a set of separate parts into a new unified whole. A third issue is linked to the agenda of international trade negotiations, 
        whether at the multilateral or the inter-regional level. Establishing 
        a functional link between this agenda and the construction of an effective 
        system of governance and regional integration, which helps neutralize 
        the negative effects that may result from current trends in the global 
        economy and, in turn, enhance the value that the region still holds for 
        the world -among other reasons due to its food production capacity and 
        its human resources -will be one of the main future challenges for the 
        leadership of Latin American countries. One conclusion that can be drawn from the abovementioned Conference 
        refers to the need to redouble efforts in the region for an assertive 
        strategy of trade integration in all interregional fronts, including as 
        a priority the negotiation of different forms of strategic economic cooperation 
        agreements, especially, but not exclusively, with the European Union, 
        the United States and China. This would imply continuing with all the 
        necessary efforts to preserve and, if possible, strengthen the role of 
        the WTO as the institutional backbone of the global multilateral trading 
        system. |  
   
    |  The XIX Annual Conference of the CAF - Development Bank of Latin America 
        took place in Washington DC from 9 to 10 September of this year. It was 
        jointly organized with the Inter-American Dialogue and the OAS. Approximately 
        nine hundred participants from the most diverse countries attended the 
        debates. The full program, including the names of the speakers and the 
        videos of all sessions, can be found on http://www.caf.com/ 
        and also on http://www.thedialogue.org/. 
        After almost twenty years of continuous development, this CAF event has 
        become one of the main ambits for the review of the relevant issues of 
        the political and economic agenda of Latin America.  The context in which the CAF Conference took place was introduced in 
        the following way by the organizers: "This is a period of both uncertainty 
        and opportunity for the Western hemisphere. This year's parliamentary 
        and presidential elections influence several national agendas on the grounds 
        of Inter-American relations. The growing presence of China in Latin America 
        prompts the analysis on decision-making strategies regarding the region's 
        stance towards this country and all its implications. On the economic 
        subject, the lowering oil prices could boost the growth of some countries 
        in 2015. However, the European, Japanese and Chinese economies' deceleration 
        could compensate the earnings derived from the fall in oil prices". 
       This approach was reflected by the seven topics covered in subsequent 
        sessions, which were the following: the geopolitical challenges in the 
        hemisphere; elections and political scenarios in different countries of 
        the region; the present and future challenges of Latin American development 
        given the current global environment; the growth of the middle class and 
        its future sustainability; the course of regional integration in Latin 
        America; the relations between Latin America and Asia, and the new horizons 
        for Cuba after December 17, 2014.  As a very remarkable fact, it should be noted that there was also a provocative 
        and stimulating hour-long conversation on Latin America and the world, 
        in which Moses Naim interviewed Enrique V. Iglesias. Of the various topics addressed, three deserve to be highlighted for 
        their relevance in relation to the future of regional governance and economic 
        integration in Latin America.  The first one refers to the expected positive impact of the process of 
        rapprochement started last December in the relations between the United 
        States and Cuba. It is difficult to predict how long it will take to consolidate. 
        Unforeseen difficulties could still arise during the course of the next 
        months. Therefore, nothing indicates that it will be an easy or linear 
        process. However, the sole fact that it has begun introduces radical changes 
        in hemispheric relations.  The future evolution of the Cuban economy and the quality of its relationship 
        with the United States may be favored by the active cooperation of other 
        countries of the region. This may result in the inclusion of Cuba in the 
        regional Latin American network of increasingly dense interconnections 
        at all levels, including trade, investment and technical cooperation. 
        The existence of such a network will help facilitate a commercial strategy 
        for Cuba's international integration that is diversified and multipolar 
        at the same time. The second topic that should be highlighted relates to the need to undertake 
        a renewal of concepts and methods to facilitate a more effective regional 
        governance functional to the logic of cooperation and economic integration 
        among the countries of the Latin American geographic space. It is a renewal 
        in which academic and technical reflection could contribute greatly. In 
        this sense, and due to its conceptual and methodological flexibility, 
        the strategic idea of convergence in diversity gains strength, not only 
        to facilitate the articulation between processes such as Mercosur and 
        the Pacific Alliance, but also to include countries from the sub regional 
        areas of Central America and the Caribbean -and therefore Cuba.  Such conceptual and methodological renewal would imply a departure from 
        the idea of integration as a means of joining together a set of separate 
        components into a new unified whole, with the ensuing dogmatic vision 
        of concepts such as 'customs union' or 'common market'. On the contrary, 
        it would involve recognizing that, if agreeing to work together, even 
        with common institutions, the countries would preserve their sovereignty 
        and national identities.  However, this would not prevent them from agreeing, voluntarily and in 
        a stable and permanent manner, collective disciplines for the exercise 
        of their sovereignty within their national territories and jurisdictions. 
        These are collective disciplines that require reconciling the flexibility 
        needed for navigating highly complex and dynamic contexts, with the predictability 
        that will naturally be demanded by those who have to make rational decisions 
        about productive investment depending on guaranteed access to two or more 
        national markets.  A third issue that should be noted is linked to the agenda of international 
        trade negotiations involving countries of the region, whether at the multilateral 
        or inter-regional level.  Two facts are especially important when it comes to defining a strategy 
        in this regard. The first of them has to do with the ongoing negotiations 
        in the multilateral global system of the WTO. There is not a great deal 
        of optimism regarding the results that can be expected from the next Ministerial 
        Conference, to be held in Nairobi in December. On the contrary, it is 
        possible that such opportunity is used to verify the definitive failure 
        of the Doha Round. If this were the case, it would be difficult to avoid 
        a serious impact on the perceptions that the countries might have on the 
        future of the WTO. The menace of a tendency towards fragmentation of the 
        world trading system, with its foreseeable consequences in international 
        political governance, would then be difficult to avoid. None of this would 
        seem desirable for Latin American countries.  A second fact is linked to the results that can be expected in terms 
        of the evolution of the current negotiations of mega inter-regional preferential 
        agreements between countries of the Pacific and the Atlantic, in both 
        cases with a clear leadership of the United States.  The negotiations that have the greatest potential for being concluded, 
        even before the end of this year, are those of the Transpacific Partnership. 
        So far, they include three countries in Latin America. But their eventual 
        conclusion, coupled with the stagnant front of WTO negotiations which 
        depend on the results of the Ministerial Conference of Nairobi, could 
        help increase the trend present in some Latin American countries, particularly 
        in business sectors, to introduce significant changes in the strategies 
        of trade negotiations within the region, inter-regionally and globally. 
        Mercosur could be affected by an intensification of this trend. In this 
        perspective, it becomes more important that the bi-regional negotiations 
        between Mercosur and the European Union are resumed.  Everything indicates that this is the intention, at least, of the four 
        Mercosur governments participating in the bi-regional negotiations and 
        it has also been reflected in recent announcements on both sides of the 
        Atlantic. This is -along with the need to make progress in restoring the 
        effectiveness and efficiency of the commitments already made by Mercosur 
        partners, especially regarding mutual trade- one of the two main priorities 
        of this second half of the year in which the Pro-Tempore Presidency of 
        the Mercosur is held by Paraguay. It was precisely its Chancellor who 
        participated in the session of the Washington CAF Conference in which 
        the question of the status of regional integration was discussed (see 
        his interventions in the video of the fifth session on https://www.youtube.com/). One of the main future challenges for the leadership of Latin American 
        countries will be, precisely, to find a way to establish a functional 
        link between the agenda of international trade negotiations with countries 
        from other regions and the construction of an effective system of governance 
        and regional integration. This will need to be so if the aim is to neutralize 
        the negative effects that may result from the current trends in the global 
        economy and, at the same time, enhance the value that the region still 
        has for the world-among other reasons for its food-producing capacity 
        and human resources.  In this sense, it is possible to extract as one of the conclusions of 
        the weighty debates of the XIX Conference of the CAF in Washington, the 
        need to redouble efforts in terms of governance and regional integration 
        based on an assertive trade integration strategy in all interregional 
        fronts. This could include primarily negotiations of various forms of 
        strategic economic cooperation agreements, taking advantage of the "constructive 
        ambiguities", especially, but not exclusively, with the European 
        Union, the United States and China.  Such need would imply continuing with every effort to preserve and, if 
        possible, strengthen the role of the WTO as the institutional backbone 
        of the global multilateral trading system. |  
   
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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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