viernes, 3 de agosto de 2018

MERCOSUR- Pacific Alliance Summit. The dream of Simon Bolivar or one step closer to the ALCA?

Two weeks ago the 13th summit of the Pacific Alliance took place, the initiative of regional integration conformed by Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru created in 2011. The relevance of this meeting was the participation of the members of MERCOSUR, the other important initiative of integration of the region, 20 years older and formed by Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay. Was this the beginning of a process of convergence between both mechanisms?
 
 The Pacific Alliance and the MERCOSUR have different conceptions, the former was created with the objective of having a traditional free trade zone in the inside and a higher tariff for non-members; the latter is based on the premise of allowing its members to freely negotiate trade agreements with other countries, but giving priority to the negotiation as a group with the Asian region. In the end, the difference is the ideological approach to free trade.

 The first decade of the XXIst century appeared as the time to shine for Latin-America, with most governments of the region politically left oriented and supported by commodity high prices. Big plans were made for the region based on a common agenda that rejected the proposal of the United States of a Pan-American free trade zone, the ALCA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) in 2005 and concluded with the creation of a regional financial institution “el Banco del Sur” the bank of the south. That was the time of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in Brazil and Néstor Kirchner in Argentina, among others, the time passed and Banco del Sur never started operations.

 Nowadays the ideological pendulum has shifted and most countries in the region have right wing presidents and the MERCOSUR is stuck, first they admitted Venezuela, then the country was suspended and no additional steps have been given to conform the common market, each one prefers to move individually, protecting their exportations. That is the core reason why MERCOSUR countries have turn their look to the Pacific Alliance, there is no ties with the commercial block.

 In a deeper look the Pacific Alliance there is more a marketing strategy than an integration process, there is no such a thing as a common market. Whenever someone talks about it, the data shown is the internal product of the region as percentage of the world and the potential consumers of the region, but it is often forgotten to mention the low exchange of goods between members and the scarce results of the strategy to remove 92% of tariffs on goods traded since 2016. In other words, the Pacific Alliance has been successful in one thing, the idea of Latin America as a single Market.  As the Comunidad Andina became irrelevant compared to the MERCOSUR, the MERCOSUR now has become less attractive for investment compared to the Pacific Alliance. In the beginning, the Pacific Alliance was planned to accept other countries as full members under the same conditions, free trade agreements with the rest of the members; Costa Rica and Panama got in the middle of that process but finally desisted, now it appears to be limited de facto, with a new category of members (Associate states) for those countries with free trade with the Alliance members, at the moment Canada, Singapore, New Zealand and Australia.

 Is that process the right pad for the region? It depends on the expectations, so far, the results are more cosmetic than structural: common embassies in Asia, common stands in commercial fairs, academic cooperation and many, many plans but not as ambitious as to compromise their monetary policy by a common reserve fund as the Latin American Reserve Fund or a unit of accounts that ease commerce. So far, it looks that the future of Latin America Integration is more close to the ALCA proposed by United States than to the Patria Grande (Great Fatherland) of Simon Bolivar.

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