| Argentina is focusing its current strategy for insertion into the world 
        economy on four main foreign negotiation fronts: the foreign debt, the 
        liberalization of world trade, the development of the idea implicit in 
        the so-called Enterprise of the Americas Initiative and Mercosur.  The four are closely inter-linked. And even though they have distinct 
        time dimensions given that their effects are graduated differently in 
        time, they are mutually conditioning because the evolution of each necesarily 
        takes into consideration what goes on in the whole.  For example, the evolution of the strategy of the development of Mercosur 
        will depend to a large extent on the progress reached in the GA TI talks 
        to achieve international trade discipline which makes it possible to offset 
        current protectionist tendencies and discriminatory unilateral actions 
        in the OECD and to achieve the introduction of radical changes in the 
        agricultural policies of industrialized nations, including a substantial 
        reduction in agricultural export subsidies.  The Foreign Debt  The negotiating front regarding the fo· reign debt is basically 
        focused on current talks with the lnternational Monetary Fund and creditor 
        banks to obtain, in the context of the so-called Brady Plan, a substantial 
        reduction of the fiscal charge which implies fulfillment of the obligations 
        contracted in the past, with c1ear inflationary implications, and thus 
        fully reestablish the country's financial credibility and ability to participate 
        actively in the flow of international financing. [1] It could be said that the objective is to reestablish the normalcy lost 
        in the decade of the 1980s in order to consolidate solid and reasonable 
        macroeconomic conditions for the national effort for international competitiveness. 
       The other three negotiating fronts take as givens the achievement of 
        such competitive macroeconomic conditions and are strongly centered on 
        substantially improving the conditions of the country's access to the 
        major foreign markets and thus attract national and international investors 
        toward productive activity geared to both the domestic and world market. 
       Mapping out the respective negotiating strategies for these fronts begins 
        from the recognition of an international economic reality dominated by 
        the formation of mega-markets and a strong pro pensity toward protectionism 
        and administered trade. It shares the analysis of Arthur Dunkel in the 
        sense that the precariousness in access to world markets constitutes one 
        of the most efficient forms of non-tariff restrictions to world trade. 
       It recognizes that all of our competitors seek to form alliances with 
        other nations in economic blocs to obtain a sort of insurance against 
        protectionism, transforming their access to the markets of the respective 
        bloc in a legally protected right and not in a unilaterally granted privilege, 
        likewise easy to unilaterally and eventually arbitrarily take away.  From it come conceptual and practical consequences of the motivations 
        which for example led Canada to negotiate a free trade zone with the United 
        States, and later Mexico, on beginning the current trilateral negotiation 
        towards creating the NAFTA. GATT and access to OECD markets  The negotiations in the Uruguay Round aimed at obtaining greater openness 
        of world markets and guaranteeing international multilateral discipline 
        in world trade are critical for our country, especially for its trade 
        relations with the OECD nations. That has been the country's position 
        in the framework of the Cairns Group, especially in relation to the changes 
        it hopes to introduce in the farm policies of industrialized nations, 
        not only the EEC, and, in particular, in relation to export subsidies. 
       Only in the context of international multilateral talks that end strengthening 
        GA TT and its ground rules is it considered possible to achieve radical 
        change in EEC agricultural policy and in the so called "farm subsides 
        war" which has caused so much harm to our country's farm trade.  The experience of the last two decades has clearly shown that Argentina's 
        isolated efforts, both regarding the EEC and the United States, were incapable 
        of bringing about the minimum amount of change needed for a highly efficient 
        and competitive economy in farm trade.  One indication of the relative importance of this question for Argentina 
        's economy is the fact that a fourth of our total exports are presently 
        made up of agricultural based primary and manufacturing products geared 
        toward the EEC market.  The country's enormous agricultural potential would doubtlessly benefit 
        by a greater opening and greater security of access to OECD markets and 
        fm the substantial reduction of the so-called protectionism of third markets 
        obtained through a policy of US and EEC farm export subsidies which have 
        displaced, placed a ceiling on or surrounded in uncertainty our own access 
        to third country markets, especially in the developing world.  Without a doubt, together with the factors originated in our own macroeconomic 
        policies, the limitations and uncertainties in our access to world markets 
        in recent years has been a powerful dissuasive factor fm investment focused 
        on expanding the country's agricultural production.  But for Argentina, the Uruguay Round of talks are not only important 
        for their agricultural significance. They are looked on as the beginning 
        of a broader negotiating process in which, starting from the final conclusions 
        of the current round, a multilateral framework is obtained which effectively 
        disciplines principle world trade leaders.  The national interest of a medium weight country with limited importance 
        in world markets, which has opened up to international trade and has reasonable 
        prospects of being an efficient competitor, necessarily relies on the 
        effectiveness of world trade ground rules, which offset the unilateral 
        arbitrary actions of countries or blocs and substantially reduce unfair 
        trade practices and guarantee fluid access lo the more developed markets 
        of OECD nations.  That explains the importance to our country; for example, of an efficient 
        system lo solve trade disputes, ground rules or world economic competition 
        and even ecological norms and practices which influence our exports. These 
        are some of the core GATT issues that Argentina should act on in the future 
        in its character as a contracting party, joining other contracting parties 
        with like interests just as it has done in recent years in the framework 
        of the Uruguay Round. The Enterprise for the Americas Initiative and Access to the US Market The development of the idea implicit in the Enterprise fm the Americas 
        Initiative represents another negotiating front of undoubtable importance 
        for the national interest (lf an Argentina determined to be an efficient 
        world market competitor. lt is a crucial negotiating front for Argentina's 
        economic relation with the United States, to which it currently exports 
        a reduced number of goods considering the dimension of the North American 
        market.  The idea implicit in the initiative is that there is a shared interest 
        among all nations of the Americas to develop an hemispheric free trade 
        system that grants great fluidity in the flow of trade and investment 
        in the region. lt counts on the development of an alliance for trade and 
        investment between the United States and Canada and the rest of the countries 
        of the hemisphere, open to trade with the entire world.  Argentina's objective regarding the Initiative is for it to help create 
        a regional economic context favorable to its efforts for international 
        competitiveness, centered on fluid and guaranteed access to the US market, 
        and also for establishing ground rules in all countries of the hemisphere 
        which facilitate the movement of capital and the flow of technology.  Another priority objective is strengthening and thoroughly overhauling 
        ALADI as a framework for expanding the trade of its Latin American member 
        states and openly integrating them into the world economy. ALADI can even 
        be visualized as a precedent of an institutional methodology and a highly 
        flexible guideline, extendable on a hemispheric scale, for a common discipline 
        in mutually opening markets and compatibilizing actions aimed at economic 
        integration between pairs or groups of countries.  There are no formal negotiations geared to giving content to the trade 
        and investment aspects of the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative. 
        There has been an initial period of exploring ideas around the concept 
        of an hemispheric free trade system in the framework of the OAS Trade 
        Conference (October 1991).  A financial structure has been set up in the Inter-American Development 
        Bank through the Multilateral Investment Fund to strengthen the institution's 
        role as a catalyst of foreign financing for the region and its private 
        sector. There have also been exploratory ideas among the Latin American 
        ALADI members about the development of the trade aspect of the Initiative 
        (September and December 1991) and also among the SELA states. A framework 
        accord for free trade between the United States and the four Mercosur 
        nations (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay) have been set up and 
        its Advisory Council has already held two meetings (November 1991 and 
        May 1992).  It is very probable that in these USMercosur Advisory Council meetings 
        and also OAS and ALADI encounters, as well as private sector gatherings 
        in the framework of the IDB, efforts will continue to develop ideas concerning 
        future forms of hemispheric trade and investment. These exploratory sessions 
        will be strongly conditioned by the outcome of the current Uruguay Round, 
        by the talks underway for creating the NAFTA and by the evolution of the 
        proocess of Latin American economic inteegration, especially Mercosur. Will NAFTA and Mercosur be the main axes for developing a hemispheric 
        free trade system, bearing in mind the relative participation of the countries 
        innvolved in the industrial product and trade of the region? Is it possible 
        to envision an association between both schemes of free trade and integration? 
        Or, on the contrary, will NAFTA be the principie magnet to which the other 
        counntries, or groups of countries in the heemisphere will have to gradually 
        gain acccess to, to the extent that they fulfill the macroeconomic conditions 
        and ground rules for trade and investment needed to participate in what 
        is more and more cooming to be called a quality free trade area? These are only some of the questions that are beginning to fIoat throughout 
        the hemisphere regarding the trade and investment aspect of the Enterprise 
        for Americas Initiative. The answers to these and other questions which 
        will doubtlessly arise during consultations and negotiations will have 
        a profound political and economic impact on the fuuture of the Inter-American 
        system. They will be answered, among other factors, in function of the trade 
        expecctations generated from a trade alliance with the United States and 
        the macroeeconomic effects which can be expected as a consequence of such 
        an alliance, beecause not all countries can give such a dear answer as 
        that which results from the analysis made from the perspective of an economy 
        aIread y very integrated into the US as is the case of Mexico. In the immediate future, the answers to these questions will be strongly 
        connditioned by the future behavior of the US economy, which in Argentina's 
        case carries heavier weight due to the effect of servicing the foreign 
        debt and reduucing interest rates, of the impact that US recession has 
        on the economies of the OECD countries and their inclination tooward protectionism 
        than on the behavior of Argentine exports to the United States given the 
        low elasticity of incoming deemand of the country's main agrooexports. Mercosur and Access to the Brazilian Market The Mercosur negotiating front is al present the top priority for Argentina. 
        First, because it is not looked on as conntradicting the negotiating strategies 
        of the other fronts. On the contrary, for Arrgentina, Mercosur and the 
        development of an hemispheric free trade system in the contextof strengthening 
        trade disciipline and opcning world markets thhrough GATT are indivisible 
        parts of its stategy of insertion into the world ecoonomy. Second, because lhrough an ecoonomic alliance with Brazil and the other 
        Mercosur partners, Argentina hopes to acquire greater capacity to compete 
        and negotiate in a world economy ever more influenced by the mega-markets 
        and the strong prolectionist temptations of the OECD nations. Where does Mercosur stand now? It has made suhslantial progre ss in defiining 
        the ground rules and giving clear signs to the world market what the four 
        countries that make it up hope to achieve during the transitional period 
        which will culminate in December 1994.  As far as the ground rules go, lhe Treaty has been ratified by the Parliaaments 
        of all four countries, which means Mercosur is wholly huilt on demacratic 
        legitimacy. lts executive bodies, based on the experience Argentina and 
        Brazil gained in their process of bilateral inteegration begun in 1985, 
        are already functioning, especially the Common Market Group and its 11 
        working groups, which are the axes of the system of negotiating and execution 
        of the sub-regional integration process. At the first Mercosur Council meeting (Brasilia, December 1991) the maximum 
        decision-making body made up of the heads of state signed or approved 
        important instruments which will reguulate the functioning of the Common 
        Market, such as: 
        The Protocol on Settling Controverrsies, which includes obhgatory 
          arbitraation and provides mechanisms for individual parties to defend 
          the rights granted them in the Treaty of Asunción.
 
The decision on sectorial accords, which lays down the guidelines 
          that buusinessmen must follow in arder to make intrasectorial integration 
          and specializaation compatible with the goals of Merrcosur.
 
The decision establishing administrative sanctions for non fullfillment 
          of the requirements of origen, which are cruucial in a process of integration. 
         As regards signs for the world markel, the governments have reafffirrned 
        at the highest political level that the mechanisms and timetable for eliminating 
        trade tariffs will be met to the full. On December 31 last year -and again 
        June 30 this year (2)- the preferred tariffs scheme was automatically 
        implemented, as it will be at the end of each semester until arriving 
        on December 31, 1994 with zero tarriff on all trade.  Each of the countries also met its commitment to eliminate a percentage 
        of its products included in the Exemption Lists, with both Argentina and 
        Brazil having to further reduce 20% of their respective lists at the end 
        of 1991.  Work has also begun on the methodology for defining the common external 
        tariff which should facilitate the foreign competition of their respective 
        economies as well as the steps Brazil announced February 19 to stimulate 
        its exports, including an anticipation of the timetable for reducing its 
        protective tariffs expliciting reiterating that a common external tariff 
        will be in force as of January 1, 1995.  One of Mercosur's main concerns is the coordination of economic policies, 
        to the extent necessary to facilitate the establishment of a Customs Un 
        ion. In December 1991, the four presidents reiterated the three key economic 
        policy priorities already identified by their Economy ministers and Central 
        Bank chairmen: a) economic stability achieved through strict fiscal and 
        monetary policies, b) more open economies for more competitive insertion 
        into the world economy, and e) more modern economies through deregulation 
        and privatization. Aside from the circumstantial difficulties in each country as a consequence, 
        inevitable sometimes, of their policies of stabilization and productive 
        transformation, the truth is that Mercosur is based on a common understanding 
        of what is necessary to do inside each country to overcome economies and 
        technological obsolescence and insert themselves competitively in the 
        world economy.  It is in the dynamic context of a de facto coordination of their economic 
        policies where we must analyze the asymmetric problems of relative costs 
        which can still be seen as a consequence of the carryover effects of the 
        macroeconomic policies which the four countries are finally determined 
        to overcome. The agenda of priorities for 1992, which the four Mercosur presidents 
        set down in their meeting last December, illustrate the scope and nature 
        of the integration process clearly aimed at the international competitiveness 
        of the individual national economies:
 
         intensify the search for the definition of the common external tariff 
          starting from agreed-on methodology criteria.
 
 Adopt the measures which guarantee real conditions for loyal competition 
          in trade between the Mercosur countries and third nations. 
 
 Advance in deregulating transport between the four countries to substantially 
          reduce costs and stimulate the necessary private investment. 
 
 Give maximum priority to actions geared toward obtaining technical 
          norms which at the same time guarantee international quality and competitiveness, 
          facilitate trade expansion between the Mercosur countries and the protection 
          of the legitimate interests of the consumer. 
 
 Encourage initiatives aimed at completing projects which allow for 
          taking greater advantage of Mercosur's energy resources. 
 
 Coordinate positions in multilateral economic fora, especially GAIT 
          and the Carins Group.  In spite of the economic difficulties and the context of instability 
        still observed in 1991, trade between Argentina and Brazil has continued 
        to grow greater than overall foreign trade, especially in terms of exports, 
        confirming the firm tendency seen following the agreements reached between 
        the two countries in the framework of the bilateral Cooperation and Integration 
        Program (PICAB) begun in 1985.  Also during 1991, the business community expressed keen interest in taking 
        active part in sub regional trade, as seen in multiple accords on company-to-company 
        bases or the recently negotiated iron & steel industry agreement (March 
        1992), which resumes -in the spirit of the new guidelines set forth by 
        the Mercosur Council the efforts for intra-sectorial integration encouraged 
        through PICAB Both for Argentina and Brazil, the two main economies in the area which 
        moreover are following their own process of bilateral integration (ACE 
        14 ALADI), Mercosur is looked on as a key instrument -in spite of the 
        different relative importance that current bilateral trade represents 
        for both economies- in their respective strategies for competitive insertion 
        in world markets and, as such, of support for their processes of productive 
        transformation within democracy.  Neither of the two countries considers it solely in function of advantages 
        for their respective domestic markets, nor as an alternative to their 
        necessary opening to world trade. The option between integration in Mercosur 
        or integration in the world is not realistic, nor is it a question under 
        practical consideration in either country. The only real choice is Mercosur 
        in order to facilitate competitive integration into the world.  And what's more, in both cases the creation of Mercosur is part of a 
        broader process of setting up a sub regional framework which facilitates 
        cooperation in all areas and shores up the tremendous progress achieved 
        over the years since the return to democracy in the nuclear field, gradually 
        extending it to political, and especially, scientific and technological 
        cooperation. A Strategy of Multiple Alliances  Argentina's new strategy of insertion into the world economy, therefore, 
        is focused on creating a system of multiple a11iances with all the countries 
        in the region n and the world which share an interest in world trade that 
        is more open and less discriminatory.  It is not centered on only one are a of international economic action. 
        Even though the economic a11iance in Mercosur, based on the bilateral 
        alliance with Brazil, has a privileged place, the strategy is open to 
        integration in the framework of ALADI with the other Latin American countries, 
        especially neighboring nations like Chile and Bolivia, and al so in the 
        Americas to establishing a closer economic relation with the United States 
        in the context of the evolution of the idea 1'ostered in the Enterprise 
        for the Americas Initiative. But at the same time. these regional economic alliances are part of the 
        broader perspective of close links with the other world economies, especially 
        the OECD and Southeast Asian nations, for which special priority is placed 
        on developing multilateral international trade discipline through the 
        GA TI'.  The strategy of multiple alliances reflects the diversity of Argentina's 
        foreign trade, which is simultaneously oriented, both in exports and imports, 
        to both the region n and the main world industrial markets.  There is no one dominant market. lt also reflects the diversity of sources 
        of foreign investments in the country and the growing diversity of immigration 
        inflow. It is not just an external strategy, nor only governmental. It implies 
        transforming domestic industry to obtain reasonable levels of systematic 
        competition through controlling macroeconomic factors and business competitiveness, 
        which is the result of a great effort for productivity)' and incorporating 
        technological progress.
 It also implies social mobilization within democracy and social equality 
        so that it is society itself, including above all private business and 
        trade unions, which takes up the task of making Argentina a competitive 
        nation, projecting to world markets the country's capacity to produce 
        goods and offer services with the price and quality standards that consumers 
        in industrialized nations demand, and which are also more and more demanded 
        by the Argentine consumer public.
 Its success will depend on the answer of the business community and society 
        to the new macroeconomic conditions and the competitiveness that results 
        from the steps toward productive transformation now underway. And also 
        to the challenges implied in further opening up the country's economy 
        in the context of a world economy both charged with uncertainty and protectionist 
        tendencies originated basically in the current difficulties of the OECD 
        nations, but also in the opportunities presented by the globalization 
        01' the world economy -the fruit, not so much of the wills of nations, 
        as of the powerful forces 01' technological and even ideological change.
 
 NAFTA and by the evolution of the process of Latin American economic 
        integration, especially Mercosur. Will NAFTA and Mercosur be the main axes for developing a hemispheric 
        free trade system, bearing in mind the relative participation of the countries 
        involved in the industrial product and trade of the region? Is it possible 
        to envision an association between both schemes of free trade and integration? 
        Or, on the contrary, will NAFTA be the principie magnet to which the other 
        countries . or groups of countries in the hemisphere will have to gradually 
        gain access to, to the extent that they fulfill the macroeconomic conditions 
        and ground rules for trade and investment needed to participate in what 
        is more and more coming to be called a quality free trade area? These are only some of the questions that are beginning to float throughout 
        the hemisphere regarding the trade and investment aspect of the Enterprise 
        for Americas Initiative, The answers to these and other questions which 
        will doubtlessly arise during consultations and negotiations will have 
        a profound political and economic impact on the future of the Inter-American 
        system. 
 [1] In July the Paris Club agreed to write off 35% of Argentina 's debt 
        with creditor banks, which have August and September to decide on accepting 
        the payment proposal for the balance: 60% in Par Bonds and 40% with discount. [2] At their second Mercosur Council meeting (Buenos Aires June 27), 
        the four presidents formally approved the timetable for economic reforms 
        that will lead to the full integration of their countries into a regional 
        trading bloc by January 1995, The Joint Action Agreement stipulates that 
        the deadlines for economic policy coordination may only be modified by 
        officials and technicians who make up the Common Market Group and never 
        be extended for more than three months. The Joint Action Agreememt sets dates through to the end of 1994 to finalize 
        trade, customs, technical, tax, monetary and land transportation agreements. 
        It also sets deadlines for implementing measures covering maritime transport, 
        energy use, labor regulations and industrial, techonogical and agricultural 
        policies.  Among these, anti-dumping regulalions must be presented for the Common 
        Market Group's approval by this Octobre, a timetable for progressively 
        eliminating non-tariff regional trade barriers by December 1992 and the 
        synchronization of export promotion schemes by September 1993. On June 26, the four Mercosur member states plus Bolivia and Chile signed 
        an immigration accord, which in Argentina's case should benefit some 300,000 
        illegal aliens who are citizens of the other five countries. All except 
        Chile also approved a Paraguay-Parana River project to make the 2,077-mile 
        waterway navigable 24 hours a day year round by 2001. There was also special 
        interest in building an international highway linking Buenos Aires and 
        Porto Alegre, with possible extension to the Pacific. |