Regionalismo para el desarrollo 
Autor : Supachai Panitchpakdi
Date : November 7th, 2007
Comentarios : 7
Hace ya muchos años que los especialistas debaten acerca de si los acuerdos comerciales regionales son “piedras de construcción” o “piedras en el camino” del desarrollo y el libre comercio. Hace poco el regionalismo ha vuelto a la primera plana, porque los lentos avances de la Ronda de negociaciones de Doha han llevado a muchos países a tratar cada vez más de aplicar agendas regionales. Las frecuentes crisis monetarias y bancarias registradas en las últimas décadas en los mercados emergentes también han fomentado la desconfianza en las instituciones financieras multilaterales y en su capacidad para prevenir y afrontar esas crisis, y han acrecentado el interés por la cooperación financiera y monetaria a nivel regional.
Algunos estudios recientes realizados por la secretaría de la UNCTAD sobre las ventajas e inconvenientes de los acuerdos regionales para los países en desarrollo han producido algunos resultados interesantes a este respecto, que pueden aportar una importante contribución al debate.
En un estudio pormenorizado de los acuerdos comerciales regionales y de sus consecuencias para los países en desarrollo, la UNCTAD concluyó que tiende a haber una diferencia importante entre los acuerdos regionales Norte-Sur, es decir, los acuerdos de libre comercio (ALC) bilaterales entre países desarrollados y países en desarrollo, y los acuerdos regionales entre países en desarrollo, llamados acuerdos Sur-Sur. Concretamente, en nuestro estudio se llegó a la conclusión de que los países en desarrollo debían reforzar la cooperación regional con otros países en desarrollo y actuar con prudencia en los acuerdos bilaterales Norte‑Sur.
El principal motivo es fácil de entender: muchos de esos acuerdos Norte-Sur no incluyen la perspectiva del desarrollo, al menos por tres razones:
1. Los ALC bilaterales a menudo convierten las antiguas preferencias comerciales no recíprocas entre los países desarrollados y los países en desarrollo en regulaciones simétricas de acceso a los mercados; así pues, se va eliminando la piedra angular del sistema internacional de comercio de la posguerra, o sea, el trato especial y diferenciado de los países en desarrollo;
2. En los ALC Norte-Sur se incorporan cada vez con más frecuencia las normas OMC plus y los temas de Singapur, como las normas laborales y ambientales, de contratación pública, inversión y política de competencia, mientras que queda excluido de ellos el sector en el cual los países en desarrollo son muy competitivos, a saber, la agricultura. Además, esos ALC no suelen prever en absoluto la cooperación monetaria, aun cuando la competitividad general de los países en desarrollo es muy vulnerable a las crisis externas. Así pues, los países en desarrollo a menudo tienen que aceptar compromisos de largo alcance en comparación con su anterior política interna clásica sin verse compensados adecuadamente en términos de garantía de acceso a los mercados y éxito comercial; y
3. La participación simultánea en muchos ALC con normas y ámbitos de aplicación diferentes hace cada vez más difícil coordinar las políticas de los países en desarrollo, en particular en lo que respecta a conciliar los objetivos nacionales de desarrollo con los compromisos regionales y las normas y reglamentaciones multilaterales.
Por el contrario, en el estudio de la UNCTAD también se llegó a la conclusión de que los acuerdos Sur-Sur ofrecen a los países en desarrollo muchas ventajas, que por el momento no se consiguen a nivel multilateral ni están incorporadas en los acuerdos Norte-Sur.
Una de las razones fundamentales de que los países en desarrollo establezcan acuerdos con otros países con un nivel de desarrollo similar en la misma zona es el acceso a los mercados. Naturalmente, los beneficios del acceso a los mercados, como las economías de escala o la diversificación de la producción, son argumentos que se aplican a la integración comercial en general, sea con países desarrollados o en desarrollo. Sin embargo, para muchos países en desarrollo que se encuentran en la etapa inicial de desarrollo industrial, una orientación regional que englobe a países con estructuras económicas y capacidades tecnológicas similares puede considerarse una opción más viable. La competencia extranjera inicial dentro de la región tal vez sea menos difícil de manejar, la brecha tecnológica que los separa de los competidores de países más adelantados de fuera de la región tal vez sea más fácil de superar y habrá más posibilidades de establecer reglas de juego uniformes. En otras palabras, el mercado regional suele establecer elementos de comparación menos exclusivos que la competencia con los proveedores desarrollados, por lo que incluso la producción en la etapa industrial incipiente puede aumentarse satisfactoriamente. La cooperación Sur-Sur también puede ser ventajosa cuando se trata de competir para atraer IED y evitar carreras a la baja.
Esta conclusión queda asimismo corroborada por la evidencia empírica de un aumento de la parte relativa de las manufacturas y los productos de media y alta tecnología en el comercio intrarregional, lo que indica que la cooperación regional entre países en desarrollo puede ser un medio importante para acelerar la industrialización.
Además, la cooperación regional en los ámbitos monetario y financiero puede ofrecer instrumentos importantes para estabilizar los tipos de cambio intrarregionales, reduciendo así la posibilidad de que se conviertan en fuente de inestabilidad o en mecanismo de transmisión de las crisis mundiales. Del mismo modo, la cooperación en proyectos de inversión importantes puede reducir los obstáculos comunes en materia de infraestructuras públicas como las de suministro de energía o agua.
Creo que estas conclusiones ofrecen una nueva perspectiva interesante en el debate sobre el regionalismo.
El informe completo sobre la cooperación regional para el desarrollo se encuentra aquí.
Dick Kamuganga
Date : January 27th, 2008 10:45:03
Developing Countries are in a “catch 22” call it a chicken and egg situation if you will! Whether to cooperate amongst themselves (south-south cooperation) or with the north (North-South cooperation) is not a choice they will make. There are basic facts here; i) regionalism seems to be a permanent phenomenon, ii) regionalism whether North-South or South-South confers different advantages as well different challenges in the increasingly globalized world today, iii) whether regional cooperation based on regional preferential trade agreements which forms part of the general debate on the relationship between trade liberalisation-economic growth-poverty reduction, delivers more regional development will continue to be contested for sometime, iv) whether developing countries want it or not, the trade policy space/leverage conferred by Special And Differential Treatment under multilateral trading system is rapidly waning under FTAs i.e. developing countries will continue to lose preferential margins under special and differential treatment as trade is continuously getting liberalised world wide (via MFN liberalisation, unilateral liberalisation-as is largely the case amongst the ASEAN group, or through numerous FTAs between North-North or South-North Or South-South FTAs), so southern countries pursuing special and differential objectives within any trading arrangement may not necessarily be a panacea for them and for long.
UNCTAD`s Trade and Development 2007 (Regional Cooperation For Development) presents very fascinating scenarios as summarized above by Dr. Supachai Panitchpakdi’s contribution on this blog. First, the overriding recommendation of the report that “developing countries should strengthen regional cooperation with other developing countries, but proceed carefully with regard to North-South bilateral or regional preferential trade agreements” can have far reaching implications as far as continuous marginalisation of these countries in the global trading system is concerned! While it’s obvious that developing countries need to strengthen cooperation amongst themselves, they need to be more pragmatic and proactive rather than being retrogressive when it comes to their northern neighbours. Caution and suspicion will not help them prepare to rip the enormous benefits that come with the unstoppable globalisation forces. This implies that;
(i) Developing countries need to prepare for a parallel approach toward “external” and “internal” integration processes not sequencing them, as the pace of global integration forces will not present them with that luxury of sequencing development strategies,
(ii) The global community including the northern rich countries should have a moral responsibility to make efforts toward reducing global poverty, this implies in the bilateral or regional FTAs they sign with their southern counterparts, should ensure that preconditions identified by the report i.e. a certain level of local production capacity, skill and technological sophistication, an array of supporting market institutions and good infrastructure are established in the process of integrating these poor countries,
(iii) It’s upon the developing countries to front their development objectives as part of their negotiations agenda package. Otherwise if their development objectives are not fulfilled they would not sign up to the bilateral FTAs. Northern countries have been able to bring on trade negotiations agenda many “trade related” (to some people-trade unrelated) agendas, why not developing countries adopting similar strategy and make developing a capacity to trade a trade related and front it on both multilateral, regional and bilateral cooperation initiatives?
(iv) However, I consider that it will be more difficult for developing countries to technologically catch up under overemphasised South-South cooperation, because it will largely be between technological adopters and not innovators. And its innovators and not adopters that extend the frontiers of technology and hence development forward. Take for instance Sub Saharan Africa, its difficult to envisage the technological spillovers that will emerge from cooperation between Rwanda, Uganda and Ethiopia when all of them deal in exporting one single primary commodity-coffee as opposed to cooperation between Ethiopian coffee firm managers dealing with Starbucks executives when exporting their coffee beans (here am referring to management skills being part of technological learning and not disadvantaged export of coffee beans anyway!!). The point here, is that emphasising technological learning/spillovers from South-South cooperation may delay the technological catch up process, by not only prolonging the lag of adoption and learning but also these countries missing out on making a strong case for achieving technological learning and innovation through international linkages of international trade (largely through the import of capital goods), FDI (through ensuring joint ventures) and licensing (UNCTAD, 2007).
In summary I would argue that rather than overemphasising South-South Cooperation as a the most viable option for fast integrating the poor countries into the global economy, emphasis should be placed on how the two processes of “internal and external integration” can be parallelly achieved, how southern countries can pragmatically and proactively engage their Northern neighbours to deliver conducive environment for technological learning, innovation and catch up opportunities, through the established international linkages of international trade, FDI and licensing and development aid.
International community (including international organisations) need to respond to the immediate needs of developing countries in building national and regional trading capacities, national and regional institutions (that are essential to reducing entry costs of forming regional trading and development cooperation blocks). .
It’s up to the South governments now to identify the key strategic areas that will help them integrate with the rest of the world-“it takes two to tango”. Its easy and conventional wisdom to keep blaming the north for all marginalisation of the south. But after 60 years of efforts toward global integration, what has the south learned?
Overemphasising south-south cooperation at the expense of strategically engaging the north may further marginalise the south on trade, technology and innovation frontiers as well as financial and capital integration with the rest of the world. Otherwise there is a need to unpackage the “policy space agenda”, what new lessons will be used when this policy space is achieved that has not been able to work in the last more than half a century ago?
Che Thuy Nhu
Date : November 5th, 2007 11:59:10
Now in Vietnam the flood after flood in the Central region and in North mountain’s areas. The life of grassroots is very hard. The reason may be the destruction of forests in Vietnam, Lao, Campuchia ,Thailand and South China for long time ?
I think the collaboration in Forest’s protection between countries in Region is neccesary .
Thank you for your attention .
Alagi B. Gaye
Date : October 24th, 2007 06:26:58
The article is indeed concise and factual. James Teered raised interesting questions, which I have thought about in the past. Looking at the genesis of trading arrangments between the South and the North would shed some light on some of the factors responsible for the status quo, where an insignificant proportion of the South’s international trade is amongst countries in the South compared to North-South trade.
Most of the countries in the South, particularly in Africa were colonies of countries, which constitute countries in the North. We are therefore still left with colonial legacies, whereby the economies of colonised countries have been deliberately designed to be appendages or peripheries of the colonisers. Thus colonised economies were structured in terms of infrastructure and superstructure for the production of raw materials to serve the colonial governments. An example in the service industry is telecommunications, where calls from an African country destined to another African country are routed through countries in the North. In Air transport, sometimes travelling from one African country to another one can take over 24 hours because of the lack of direct routes within African countries. Having said that, some countries, particularly in Asia that have been colonised have overcome some of these legacies by adopting practical and relevant development programmes supported by the right political will.
I strongly believe that regional bodies hold great potential to practically and gradually integrate our economies and lead to more South-South trade. However, for that to happen, countries in the South, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, which is the only region in the World that has not prospered over the last 25 years, have to do a thorough self-assessment of their performance with a view to changing course in terms of our trading arrangements. There has to be the political will to ensure that regional bodies have the required resources and mandates to ensure more South-South trade, which research by UNCTAD have shown to hold great potential.
folounshor
Date : October 24th, 2007 06:13:32
Regionalization is a concept designed to distract the increasingly impatient african masses from their ultimate goal, i.e. African union. These are a few of the flaws of regionalization:
-It will not resolve trans-African access via road or rail as each region will attempt to develop in isolation,
-regionalization is simply an expansion of the status quo 53 enclaves that Africa is today,
-these regional entities could be played against each other just as it is done today by supreme extra-African powers.
I could go on, but this is just a taste of what I am putting together in a book form these days.
Regionalization is just another delaying tactic, just like the good old OAU was to the generation of my grandfather and father.
Olumide Abimbola
Date : October 23rd, 2007 10:09:02
I just read an overview of the UNCTAD report, and I really appreciate the recommendations of the report.
My reaction to the report is inspired by my relative familiarity with regionalization in West Africa. New regionalist scholars have praised different regionalising forces - NGOs, informal transboder traders and other organisations that extend beyond the borders of particular countries - as true integrating forces, but studies close to the ground have shown that they have not been much of that. Informal transborder traders in the region, for instance, play on the differences in the fiscal and monetary policies of the countries to make gains. And even the amount of trade in goods that originates in the region is meager when compared with the volume of non-west African goods which the informal transborder traders trade. It all sounds very impressive in a report, but the actual practice in the regions is way different from what one would expect.
Prof.vidya
Date : October 22nd, 2007 07:49:30
The archaic concepts of territoriality and sovereignity have acquired a new meaning in this era of free trade. Using the principle of comparative advantage, every state is learning the intricate methods of strategic management to gain benefit through regional and international cooperation. Regional agreements form an important component of an effective political strategy to accelerate the economic growth of every state.
James Teered
Date : October 22nd, 2007 03:39:13
Very interesting material. I am sure we would all like to hear Pascal Lamy comment on your piece. As for me, I simply wonder why South-South FTAs are so few if they really are to bring so many benefits. Are there any entry costs that prevent them from emerging ? Or is there any internal political economy reason for that ?