Mercosur is more than a free-trade economic pact: the central idea behind
it is the creation of a regional environment that would encourage democracy,
productive transformation, and the competitive participation of its member
countries in the world economy. The group is a result of a common strategic
vision its individual members share as to the requirements for their own
internal political and economic modernization, as well as for their own
ability to participate competitively in an increasingly multipolar and
globalized world. From the outset, however, the pooling of markets and
resources among countries enjoying full membership in Mercosur-Argentina,
Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay-also has been closely associated with the
re-establishment over the past decade of the values, social attitudes,
and institutions of democratic society.
This relationship between integration and democracy is one of the distinguishing
characteristics of Mercosur. To be sure, it does not imply that the present
democratic system in each of the member countries will be able to sustain
itself solely due to the existence of the pact. Nor does it necessarily
mean that Mercosur will always be able to play a decisive role in preventing
a backslide into non-democratic systems by any of its members-especially
those with the least developed economies.
That relationship does, however, highlight two critically important facts.
The first is the fact that the predominance of democratic values and institutions
creates an appropriate climate for neighboring countries to opt to work
systematically together, gradually developing a fabric of de facto common
concerns and willingness to compromise. This in turn generates an environment
of moderation and rationality, promoting peace and stability within a
given region and, thus the effective consolidation of democracy.
Second, the success of integration efforts in the economic arena makes
it possible for member countries to stabilize their own efforts to transform
their productive sectors and improve their competitive edge in world markets,
thus facilitating the development of an economic basis for sustaining
democracy.
The connection between integration and democracy was evident in 1996
as Mercosur played a crucial role in overcoming the first serious attempt
against the nascent democracy of Paraguay when a general in the armed
forces attempted to overthrow President Juan Carlos Wasmosy. The governments
of Argentina and Brazil (together with the US) warned the insurgents they
would not tolerate a return to dictatorship in Paraguay. Their pointed
messages made cooler heads prevail.
Indeed, that incident led to approval at the next presidential Mercosur
Summit of the "democratic clause" which conditions participation
in Mercosur on the existence of fully democratic institutions before a
country can become a member. That clause stipulates that "any change
in the democratic regime constitutes an unacceptable obstacle to the continuation
of the process of integration underway with respect to the affected member
state." For such cases, the clause provides for consultations among
member countries and the adoption of measures, including the suspension
of Mercosur rights and obligations for the country whose democratic process
was interrupted. Both Chile and Bolivia, which are now associated with
Mercosur through free-trade agreements, have formally endorsed this democratic
commitment.
So Near, Yet So Far
Geographic proximity prevents Mercosur's member countries from ignoring
each other. What is novel, however, is that in the course of the past
ten years they have made the political decision [to work together, authorizing
reciprocal access to their respective markets and resources and gradually
developing similar approaches particularly with regard to macroeconomic
and foreign trade policies.
Until Argentina and Brazil launched a bilateral integration program in
1986-which was a direct precursor of Mercosur created by the Treaty of
Asunci6n five years later- their relationship was marked by potential
and real conflicts which led occasionally to tensions and even, in the
remote past, to direct confrontations of limited; scope. The two countries
were uncomfortable, distant neighbors suspicious of each other.
In point of fact, they knew very little of each other. The identifying
characteristic of their international involvement in all spheres, including
the economic and cultural, was the rest of the world, particularly Europe.
Even today, 80% of their trade is with other countries, chiefly with those
of Europe, the US, and other Latin American nations. Most of their financial
and direct foreign investment flows originate in the OECD countries.
These two countries, as well as Paraguay and Uruguay, had common borders
of separation, not of integration. Physical infrastructure was not designed
for ease of intra-regional communication. The absence of bridges over
shared rivers also was symbolic of a tendency within the region toward
the predominance of the forces of fragmentation, not unification of economic
and political forces.
The change in the relationships among the Mercosur countries that occurred
beginning in the 1980s resulted in part from the worldwide technological
revolution and the expansion of world trade. However, the main sources
for these countries' growing closeness are essentially internal to each
of them.
Profound transformations have taken place in Mercosur's member countries,
beginning with Argentina and Brazil that have gradually led them to recognize
they have shared challenges and values. All the Mercosur nations are experiencing
the three-pronged process of democratic consolidation, technological improvement
of their productive sectors, and greater participation in the world economic
arena.
The internal discipline resulting from their Mercosur commitments (especially
the customs union) constrains the natural tendency of the member governments
toward discretional, unilateral behavior. This discipline has a clear-cut
impact by reinforcing attitudes favoring dialogue and commitment among
members within each country's political system. In short, Mercosur is
not only nourished by democratic values but also reaffirms those values.
The predominance of cultural values typical of open societies- particularly
tolerance, moderation, and respect for others- has begun to permeate the
foreign policies of Mercosur members, particularly those with their neighboring
countries. The creation of a regional environment of stability and peace,
then, becomes not only an outcome of the changes taking place in internal
values and attitudes but also a value in and of itself that furthers the
changes each country requires to modernize and to compete effectively
in world markets. This regional momentum is similar to that of the rebuilding
and modernization of Europe immediately after World War II, the subsequent
democratization of Spain and Portugal, and the current transition in Central
and Eastern Europe.
The creation of a regional environment of integration and democracy also
has a clear impact on defense and security policies, as well as on the
role of the military in the corresponding political systems. Mercosur
reflects-and in turn supports-substantial changes, particularly in Argentina
to Brazil, with respect to defense spending, subordination of the armed
forces to civilian advantages it would gain. What is important to bear
in mind is that in this type of voluntary integration process between
sovereign nations, members decide to work together because they understand
that it is in their own best interest and that it is better to be a member
of the group than to remain an outsider. And this is not only desirability
in economic rule, and nuclear and missile government policy.
Building on Self-Interest
As has occurred in other regions, the starting point in the creation
of Mercosur is the national interest of all its members. This is the prism
through which each country analyzes the desirability of membership. For
example, Chile decided in 1990 that it was then not in its best interest
to participate as a full member in what was later to become Mercosur;
subsequently it did indeed become an associate member because of the terms;
for example, the gains to be made from participating in reciprocal trade
or of attracting foreign investments.
It is precisely the perception of a vision of mutual gains that explains
the origin of this and other integration groups. In other words, it is
the dynamic of creating and maintaining the potential for a "win-win"
situation that explains the move by countries towards integration over
time. When such a situation does not occur, this kind of integration process
fails. Though almost never openly, the integration group disintegrates
and the effort slides into economic and political irrelevance.
In short, Mercosur is part of the contemporary phenomenon of voluntary
processes of integration between sovereign nations, which are in turn
the result of voluntary agreements (of a greater or lesser degree of formality)
between sovereign nations. Because they share a geographic and historic
area, these sovereign nations have opted to work together in systematically
opening their markets and: resources with a view to achieving the commonly
valued objectives of increased well-being, peace and democracy, and negotiating
capacity. The techniques used to open their respective markets may differ,
from the many variants of free-trade zones, customs unions, and common
markets-but most fall within the framework of Article XXIV of GATT.
An integration group's economic and political effectiveness will depend
to a considerable extent on the perception of investors and third countries
as to its, effective capacity to dynamically preserve the potential for
mutual gains among its members. This, in turn, will be judged looking
at the group's economic effects on each of its individual members:
- Does integration increase a member's reciprocal trade and economic
growth, as well as result in gains in productivity and competitiveness?
- Does it enhance a country's rules of the game and their effectiveness
to draw in foreign investment?
- Does it enhance the capacity of a country's institutions to reconcile
national interests and enforce the integration commitments its policy
makers have made?
In this dynamic vision of Mercosur, integration is not seen as a final
product that will eventually supplant previously existing national elements.
It is not a matter of a new autonomous unit of power someday replacing
preexisting units. Nor is it a process of political federalization. Rather,
Mercosur is a continuous and incremental process of joint efforts in which
each party conserves its individuality within the framework of a shared
vision and common rules of the game. It assumes the recognition by each
member of the importance of the others for its own overall national development.
Forging Ties among Civil Society
Thus, the creation of trade and investment opportunities is a necessary
but not a sufficient condition to keep Mercosur-and other integration
groups-alive. Integration eventually becomes irreversible to the extent
that all aspects of social life are involved by the new regional dimension.
Hence economic integration has an impact on the cultural dimension-broadly
defined as the ways of life of a society, its values, its interests, and
its ways of thinking-and that leads to the development of a dense fabric
of interactions between member countries' civil societies and their institutions.
As a result of Mercosur, for example, an enormous network of linkages
in the region has begun to take shape at the level of corporations, universities
and scholars, municipalities and regions, political parties and labor
unions, and many other areas of social life which are becoming the source
of a common identity.
Examples of this growing reality abound. For example, look at the creation
of a growing number of academic consortia and researchers who are working
together in Mercosur. Or the forging of ties among women entrepreneurs
in the region and the growing number of Mercosur film festivals that celebrate
the work of artists in the four member countries. This growing social
and cultural dimension gives Mercosur its internal legitimacy in each
of the member's national communities. It is to the extent that the group
is perceived by the masses as providing mutual gains that it will be possible
to withstand natural tensions produced by integration. In particular,
the occasional inequalities among member countries in the distribution
of costs and benefits, for example, in trade flows or the location of
investments, can be mitigated through public support of the group as a
whole. In short, an integration group that has a low level of internal
legitimacy in one of its member countries is much more susceptible to
economic conflicts of interest.
Mercosur today enjoys the support of all the political sectors in its
member countries and can count on widespread acceptance by the general
public in each country as verified in periodic public opinion polls. This
important dimension of Mercosur transcends the economic and is also reflected
in concrete ways such as, for example, the fact that passports and other
personal identification documents already bear in some member countries
the word Mercosur, together with the name of the respective country.
The economic results achieved by Mercosur provide considerable room for
optimism about its future. The path to integration does not necessarily
follow a straight line. On the contrary, it tends to be plagued by contradictions,
sporadic problems, and even by crises. Mercosur is no exception. It has
not yet reached the point where it can be said with complete certainty
that the process is irreversible. But the fact that between 1990 and 1996
reciprocal trade increased four-fold is encouraging. So is the fact that
the number of firms in all sectors that develop marketing and investment
strategies as a result of the existence of Mercosur continues to increase.
For example, in the automobile sector alone international investments
on the order of $25 billion have been announced in Argentina and Brazil.
Approximately $40 billion in investment outlays are underway for infrastructure
projects, such as those in the energy sector, prompted by the increase
in reciprocal trade and by natural economic complementation in Mercosur.
A Promising Outlook
Moreover, Mercosur is open to the world. While imports originating in
member countries grew at an annual rate of 26% between 1990 and 1996,
those coming from the United States rose 23% per year and those originating
in Europe increased 22%. The average level of tariff protection in 1990
was 35%; today, it has dropped to a mere 12%. Global competitors from
all of the OECD countries are making direct investments and participating
in privatization projects in Mercosur's member countries.
The Mercosur countries' negotiations with the members of NAFTA regarding
the creation of the Free Trade Area of the Americas and negotiations with
the European Union-all of them within the framework of the regulations
of the World Trade Organization-will make it possible to construct a triangle
of regions characterized by their free-trade orientation.
The triangle is nourished by the common values of democracy: political
and economic freedom, respect for human rights, and social solidarity.
Its achievement may signify an invaluable contribution to peace and international
stability in the twenty-first century.
"Mercosur is one of the greatest achievements of my administration.
We have raised the flag of integration. In 1991, we signed in Asuncion
the corresponding protocols for the creation of Mercosur with Brazil,
Uruguay and Paraguay which have a combined population exceeding more than
200 million people. Since then, Bolivia and Chile have joined. And with
Chile's incorporation our countries now, enjoy the advantages of being
positioned both on the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans.
"By January 1995, we had established common outer tariffs covering
many products, thereby spurring our nations' economic growth. In 1991,
intra-Mercosur trade didn't reach $3 billion; now it totals approximately
$15 billion. The gross domestic product of each member country has grown
rapidly, so that today the combined economies of Mercosur's members exceed
one trillion dollars." Carlos Menem, President of Argentina
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