Title: ECON5335 - International Economics
1ECON5335 - International Economics
- Chapter 7
- Regional Integration
2Regional integration background
- Regional integration allowed under GATT article
XXIV - States that The contracting parties recognize
the desirability of increasing freedom of trade
by the development, through voluntary agreements,
of closer integration between the economies of
the countries parties to such agreements. They
also recognize that the purpose of a customs
union or of a free-trade area should be to
facilitate trade between the constituent
territories and not to raise barriers to the
trade of other contracting parties with such
territories. - What is a customs union?
- What is a free trade area?
3Regional integration background
- para 5 of section XXIV states Accordingly, the
provisions of this Agreement shall not prevent,
as between the territories of contracting
parties, the formation of a customs union or of a
free-trade area or the adoption of an interim
agreement necessary for the formation of a
customs union or of a free-trade area
4Balassas steps of regional economic integration
- Bela Belassa (1963) first came up with steps for
countries to be more economically integrated - Steps are as follows
- Free trade
- Customs union
- Common market
- Economic union
- Monetary union
- Fiscal union
- Political union
- Whats the difference between a free trade area
and a customs union? - Do countries wanting more regional integration
have to follow in the order above?
5Examples of different stages of integration
Level of integration Description Characteristics Examples
0 Regional autarky - bilateral trade agreements Japan (before ASEAN)
A FTA - tariffs and quotas removed internally - national tariffs retained against outside NAFTA
B Customs union - tariffs and quotas removed internally - common external tariff Mercosur
C Common market - free movement of factors of production, goods and services EU (before EMU)
D Economic union - harmonization or coordination of some national policies - transfer of some policies to supranational level Competition policy in the EU
E Monetary union - single currency - single central bank ECB in the EU
F Fiscal union - harmonization of taxes - fiscal sovereignty EU to some degree
G Political union - effective and democratic body at supranational level Does not exist out of a regional integration project
6Examples of different stages of integration
7Integration in practice
- Many examples of regional economic integration
around the world - North America CUFTA and NAFTA
- Europe EU, EFTA, BAFTA, CEFTA
- Caribbean CARICOM
- Central and South America Mercosur, SELA, CAN
- Africa AU, SACU, COMESA, WAEMU
- Asia ASEAN, AFTA
- Australasia ANZFTA
- - see http//www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/region_
e/region_e.htm for more
8Welfare effects of FTA vs CU (from Robson chapter)
9NAFTA
- Grew out of CUFTA idea was to extend to Mexico,
but whole new agreement happened - Basically a free trade area, but with side
agreements on labor standards, environment, and
migration of professionals - Rules of origin allow for duty free trade as
long as 62.5 of value added within NAFTA - Environmental commission set up in Montreal to
oversee complaints about environmental
degradation - Snap-back provision allows for tariffs to be
restored if surge of imports threatens domestic
industry - Trade dispute mechanism consists of 3 experts
usually resolves disputes amicably exceptions
though (e.g. softwood lumber)
10NAFTA
- Maquiladora program
- US boom of the 90s benefited maquiladoras, but
Chinas entry into the WTO has eroded
competitiveness of plants, with many closing - Critics say that although trade has increased,
Mexican real wages in manufacturing have fallen,
and also environmental degradation evident - Difficult to say if NAFTA has had large effects,
as phased in over 10 years, and also lots of
other events happening - Impact clearly much greater on Canada and Mexico
than on the US
11EU
Yellow EU members Grey Candidate countries
Cream Non-members
12EU
- Originally formed as a customs union for steel
and coal (Treaty of Rome 1958) - Grew into EEC customs union
- Then EC common market (Single Market 1992)
- Then EU economic union and some political
pooling of sovereignty (European Parliament) - Now EMU, which also involves monetary union
(euro) (Treaty of Maastricht, 1991) - Big debate in 90s surrounded widening vs
deepening - Now 27 member states, with EMU adopted by only 13
member states - Switzerland and Norway do not want to join, and
France has effectively stopped Turkey from
joining
13EU
- Trade creation significant
- Trade diversion also present, although size
differs depending on study - EMU is thought to have increased trade
significantly, although estimates vary widely - Growth and Stability pact has coordinated
fiscal policy - Commission acts as civil service but can also
impose fines - European Council decides on major issues
14EMU timeline
- ERM of the EMS (79)
- Delors report (89)
- Treaty of Maastricht (91)
- Currency crisis (92-93)
- Euro introduced and exchange rates fixed (99)
- Money euro introduced (02)
- Greece added (04)
- Slovenia added (07)
- Cyprus and Malta added (08)
- Slovakia added (09)
- Estonia added (11)
15The euro and the crisis
- Euro also used by other countries sometimes
outside Europe - ECB runs monetary policy but no centralized
fiscal policy - Hence SGP (Dublin 1996)
- No exit clause for EMU in Maastricht
- Major cause of problems for Greece
- Now austerity packages for all PIIGS
- One size fits all monetary policy means fiscal
policy takes all the strain