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    | THE VALUE OF REGIONALISM IN A NEW GLOBAL 
      ARCHITECTURE Reflections on the relations between South American countries and the European 
      Union
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    | by Félix PeñaOctober 2009
 
 English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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    |    | Is the so-called Group of Twenty (G20) the institutional 
        space that will lead to collective answers for global problems that have 
        already become evident such as climatic change and its relation to world 
        trade?
       Still standing, after the Pittsburg Summit, is the 
        issue of knowing which are the countries that, if acting together, can 
        provide a sufficient critical mass of power to generate agreements that 
        nurture a new world order to replace the one that has already collapsed. 
        The number to be appended to the letter G remains an unanswered question, 
        in order to create an international political space that enables to translate 
        collective decisions into effective courses of action. Some countries 
        which currently form part of the G20 have sufficient relative power by 
        themselves. Others may increase their presence in the measure that they 
        are able to reflect the interests of their corresponding regional spaces.
       In any case, it would seem timely to reflect on the 
        role of organized regions in the creation of an effective global architecture 
        - in terms of being able to contribute collective solutions to problems 
        that are global in nature and that, due to their significance, may even 
        compromise world order or trigger tendencies towards international anarchy 
        - such as is the aim of the G20. 
       It is within this perspective that we should view 
        the relation between two regions which, if they could harmonize their 
        positions, could contribute a great deal in terms of relative power and 
        thus in their ability to cooperate towards en effective new world order. 
        The two regions we are referring to will meet again at the upcoming EU-LAC 
        Summit, to be held in Madrid in April 2010. 
       Several recent events enable to thread together a path towards a future 
        scheme of bi-regional relations between the EU and the LAC - including 
        Mercosur - that is functional to the strategic idea of strengthening regionalism 
        as a means of ensuring a reasonable set of rules for global governance |  
   
    | President Barak Obama clearly stated the value that the fact that the 
        different countries assume their global and regional responsibilities 
        has for the US in his recent UN General Assembly speech of September 23. 
        In its October 11 edition, the Madrid newspaper El País summed 
        up perfectly his main messages by highlighting the following paragraphs: 
        "Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world 
        cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world's problems 
        alone. We have sought - in word and deed - a new era of engagement with 
        the world. Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility 
        for a global response to globalchallenges. (
) No one nation can or should try to dominate other 
        nation. No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over 
        another will succeed. The traditional divisions between nations of the 
        south and the north make no sense..."
 In the same manner, years ago, another US President, John F.Kennedy, 
        in his speech before the Irish Parliament during his 1963 visit to Dublin, 
        pointed out that "The problems of the world cannot possibly be solved 
        by skeptics or cynics, whose horizons are limited by the obvious realities. 
        We need men who can dream of things that never were, and ask why not." The fact that Barak Obama merges in practice the approach presented in 
        his speech together with a similar attitude to that expressed by Kennedy 
        may possibly explain the decision of granting him the Noble Peace Prize. 
        As some analysts have observed, with a mixture of critical spirit and 
        positive vision, such decision is more a prize for the hope of peace than 
        for peace as an actual result (see on this respect the commentary by Gideon 
        Rachman "A triumph of hope over achievement" in the Financial 
        Times of October 9, at www.ft.com). It is precisely in the attitude of 
        hope of a ruler and in the soundness of the abovementioned messages where 
        one can find the common thread for the difficult task of achieving the 
        guidelines for a sensible global governance, that enables us to move along 
        the current process of redistribution of world power in relative peace. This poses the following question: is the so-called G20 the institutional 
        space that will lead towards collective answers for global problems that 
        have already become evident, such as climate change and its relation to 
        world trade? (The latter was the central issue at the Multi-Stakeholder 
        Dialogu,e organized at the IMD in Lausanne by the Evian Group and the 
        Friedrich Ebert Foundation, on September 24-26). After the Pittsburgh 
        Summit of September 26, there are still doubts on this respect (see the 
        complete text of the Summit's Final Declaration at http://www.g20.org/). 
        The fact that no concrete steps have been taken to conclude the Doha Round 
        (on the current state of negotiations within the WTO and the results of 
        Pittsburgh, see the Bridge Weekly Review of the International Centre for 
        Trade and Sustainable Development, volume 13, number 33 of September 30 
        at http://www.ictsd.com 
        and the information provided on the WTO webpage http://www.wto.org) 
        or to guide the next Copenhagen Conference on climate change (see the 
        information on December's conference at http://es.cop15.dk/), 
        contribute to feed such doubts.  Still standing after this last Summit is the issue of knowing which are 
        the countries that, if acting together, can provide a sufficient critical 
        mass of power to generate agreements that nurture a new world order to 
        replace the one that has already collapsed. The number to be appended 
        to the letter G remains an unanswered question, so as to create an international 
        political space that enables to translate collective decisions into effective 
        courses of action.  One of the limitations of the current G20 may be precisely the heterogeneity 
        of the participating countries in terms of real power. Some of the countries 
        reflect their own endowment of relative power, such the case of the US 
        and China, maybe even Russia and India. Others may rightfully speak on 
        behalf of their own region with the certainty that it has sufficient relative 
        power. Beyond the differences of interests and visions that exist among 
        them, this is the case of the members of the European Union (EU) - such 
        as Germany, France and the United Kingdom- which is also represented by 
        the President of the European Commission. Other countries, even when they 
        are relevant in terms of relative power (at times more potential than 
        actual), can't necessarily uphold that they represent the opinion that 
        prevails in their corresponding region. Such is the case, for example, 
        of Argentina and Brazil, but also of Indonesia and South Africa.  Such situation leads to reflect on the role of organized regions in the 
        creation of an effective global architecture - in terms of being able 
        to contribute collective solutions to problems that are global in nature 
        and that, due to their significance, may even compromise world order or 
        trigger tendencies towards international anarchy -such as is the aim of 
        the G20. .  It is within this perspective that we should view the relation between 
        two regions which, if they eventually harmonized positions, could contribute 
        a great deal in terms of relative power - at least in some relevant issues 
        of the global agenda- and thus in their ability to cooperate towards en 
        effective new world order. In fact, its is in connection to this possibility 
        that we need to regard the relation between Latin America and the Caribbean 
        (LAC) - and maybe more specifically South America - and the European Union 
        (EU). Both regions will meet again next April at the upcoming Madrid Summit. 
        Will a strategic outlook that is attuned to the challenges faced by both 
        regions in relation to the relevant issues of the global agenda, and not 
        just the bilateral relation, result from this meeting? There are still 
        several months left to come up with a credible answer for this question. 
        Three different facts would need to be highlighted in the search of 
        an answer to this question. The first of them is that the objectives pursued 
        by ten years of strategic association are far from being achieved (on 
        this respect see the June edition of this Newsletter). The network of 
        bi-regional agreements that contribute at the same time to the regional 
        integration of the LAC and to the development of an effective multilateralism 
        has yet to be achieved. A key link of such network, the agreement between 
        EU and Mercosur, still cannot get past the realm of good intentions, which 
        are periodically renewed - they will meet again in Lisbon from November 
        4 to November 6 - apparently due to the fact that the Doha Round has not 
        been concluded (on this subject see the articles by Raúl Roccatagliata, 
        "A consensus to continue growing" published in Clarín 
        newspaper of October 11 and also "Dialogue between Mercosur and EU", 
        published in the Economy Section of La Nación newspaper of October 
        11, as well as the video of our September 21 presentation at the Institute 
        of International and European Affairs in Dublin, http://www.iiea.com:80/events/eu-mercosur-prospects). 
        As was previously mentioned, the conclusion of the Doha Round is still 
        a pending issue and the forecasts are not necessarily optimistic ones, 
        even after the informal ministerial meeting of New Delhi and the Pittsburgh 
        Summit.   The European Commission document on the strategy with regards to the 
        LAC, presented on September 30, opens a window to a renewed vision of 
        the bi-regional relations. This is the second recent event to take into 
        account. It is interesting to note that the Commission's proposal seems 
        to move away from the negotiation of bi-regional preferential agreements 
        as the main instrument of the relation with LAC. In fact, it places the 
        stress on new issues of the bi-regional agenda which not necessarily require 
        agreements that are compatible with article XXIV of the GATT, that is 
        to say OMC-plus (see the full text of the European Commission communication 
        to the European Parliament and Council under the title "The European 
        Union and Latin America: Global Players in Partnership" at http://ec.europa.eu/). 
        The third recent fact is the EU-Brazil Summit, held at the highest level 
        in Stockholm on October 6, within the frame of the strategic alliance 
        devised by the two parties (see the text of the final Declaration under 
        note nº 503 of October 5 on the Itamaraty webpage, http://www.mre.gov.br). 
        Simultaneously, a third Brazil-EU business meeting was held in Stockholm 
        and its agenda can be found at http://www.medefinternational.fr/. 
        A final declaration was approved as a result of this business meeting 
        under the title "Building cooperation for the post-crisis world" 
        (see http://www.cni.org.br/). 
       In practice, both meetings seem to have favored the European relation 
        with Brazil vis-à-vis what was proposed by the 1995 Treaty of Madrid 
        as a space for cooperation between Mercosur and the EU which, even when 
        still valid and with an extensive agenda, has not been developed until 
        the present day.  The following paragraph of the business declaration is worth mentioning 
        since it denotes the intention of moving forward on a bilateral path on 
        issues that supposedly belonged in the bi-regional arena: "Sectoral 
        dialogues under the Strategic Partnership need now to move forward and 
        begin to deliver trade and investment opportunities for companies: The 
        EU Brazil Strategic Partnership is an important milestone in our economic 
        relations, recognizing the pre-eminent role of the bilateral relationship 
        in Latin America and acknowledging the shared economic objectives for 
        both parties. EU and Brazilian companies note with approval that steps 
        have been taken toward the establishment of regulatory dialogues on important 
        industrial sectors (steel, non-ferrous metals and minerals; forest products; 
        and textiles and clothing). Industry is ready to work with the Brazilian 
        government and the European Commission to tackle the problems of their 
        sectors. Companies now call for a recommitment to taking action on both 
        sides. In time other dialogues can be envisaged, particularly on intellectual 
        property rights, customs policy and regulations on climate change affecting 
        trade in goods and services". One of the assumptions of this strategic partnership is Brazil's potential 
        for regional leadership, especially in the South American space. One consideration 
        should be made on this respect. It is a fact that Brazil -undoubtedly 
        a relevant country- has achieved regional and global prominence and a 
        certain prestige based mostly on its economic dimension - greatly improved 
        by an unquestionable success of its economic policies during the last 
        ten years and by its recent discovery of an enormous wealth of oil reserves 
        - and by a growing institutional quality whose origins can be traced back 
        to what was achieved during the governments of presidents Fernando Henrique 
        Cardoso and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva- (on this issue refer to 
        the notes included in the Business supplement of the Madrid newspaper 
        El País of October 11 under the title "Brazil jumps. The South 
        American country rises as an economic power while facing the challenge 
        of eliminating poverty"). With all the positive aspects that this 
        fact entails, even for Argentina and the South American region, this does 
        not necessarily imply that, as a consequence of its relative power and 
        its growing prestige, Brazil can legitimately claim that it speaks on 
        behalf of South America, nor that it can wield an undisputed regional 
        leadership. A recent article by Julio María Sanguinetti, published 
        in La Nación newspaper on October 2 under the eloquent title "Brasil 
        and triumphalism", rightfully warns about the risks of a "triumphalism" 
        that leads to assume such leadership. Taking for granted the future quality 
        of Brazil's relations with its South American partners, even with Argentina, 
        is not advisable because it could lead to serious errors of the strategic 
        type (on the relations between Argentina and Brazil see the analysis by 
        Roberto Bouzas in his article "Argentina, Brazil and the challenge 
        of finding the lost path", published in the Enfoques section of La 
        Nación newspaper of October 11). Added together, the three facts that were mentioned previously enable 
        to thread together the paths for a future scheme of bi-regional relations 
        between LAC and the EU - including Mercosur - that is functional to the 
        strategic idea of strengthening regionalism as a means of ensuring reasonable 
        guidelines for global governance. This should start by acknowledging that 
        regional governance, particularly in the South American space, will require 
        joint leaderships that can precisely be threaded together - among other 
        things - by the leading role that Brazil is in condition to play. At the 
        same time, such acknowledgement implies the strengthening of the institutionalization 
        of regional cooperation based on a network of common rules that are in 
        effect applied, particularly in the realm of UNASUR and Mercosur. This 
        institutionalization may be promoted by the actions developed by the EU 
        within the framework of its new strategic approach and by the joint action 
        of Mercosur members and of other relevant countries of the region, especially 
        Chile. Within such perspective, it would be convenient that action is 
        supported by the strategic partnership EU-Brazil in order to actively 
        resume the relations with Mercosur by making use of the full potential 
        of the EU-Mercosur framework agreement, signed in Madrid in 1995, without 
        injury to the attempts to conclude the pending preferential commercial 
        negotiation.   If meetings such as the recent Stockholm one contributed to this, the 
        South American region would be in better condition to assume its responsibilities, 
        in line with what was called for by President Obama in his aforementioned 
        speech at the United Nations. In this sense, the strategic partnership 
        between the EU and Brazil might have a positive irradiation effect on 
        the advancement not only of the bi-regional alliance but also of the very 
        same South American regional governance.
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    |  Recommended Readings of Recent Publication: 
        Aikins, Kingsley; Sands, Anita; White, Nicola, "The Global Irish 
          Making a Difference Together. A comparative review of international 
          diaspora strategies", The Ireland Funds, Dublin 2009, at http://www.irlfunds.org. 
          
Amorín, Carlos, "Inserción internacional de Uruguay 
          en una época de crisis", Consejo Uruguayo para las Relaciones 
          Internacionales, Análisis del CURI nº 09/09, September 16, 
          2009, at http://www.curi.org.uy. 
          
Campbell, Malcolm, "Ireland's New Worlds. Immigrants, Politics, 
          and Society in the United States and Australia, 1815-1922", The 
          University of Wisconsin Press, Madison Wisconsin 2008.
Casanova, Lourdes, "Global Latinas. Latin America's emerging 
          multinationals", INSEAD Business Press - Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.
CELARE, "10 Años de la Asociación Estratégica 
          ALC-UE", EUR-LAT Revista de Relaciones Eurolatinoamericanas del 
          Centro Latinoamericano para las Relaciones con Europa, nº 80 - 
          Year 16 - Vol.3 - Santiago de Chile, October 2009.
Coogan, Tim Pat, "Wherever Green is Worn. The Story of the Irish 
          Diaspora", Arrow Books, London 2002. 
Cordón, Carlos; Vollmann, Thomas E., "The Power of Two. 
          How smart companies create win-win customer-supplier partnerships that 
          outperform the competition", Palgrave MacMillan, New York 2009.
Enterprise Ireland, "Global Irish Economic Forum. Enterprise 
          Ireland Briefing", Dublin 2009, at http://www.enterprise-ireland.com. 
          
Estevadeordal, Antoni; Suominen, Kati; Teh, Robert (editors), "Regional 
          Rules in the Global Trading System", IDB-WTO, Cambridge University 
          Press, New York 2009.
Evenett, Simon J. (ed.), "Broken Promises: A G-20 Summit Report 
          by Global Trade Alert", Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), 
          London 2009.
Evenett, Simon, "What can be learned from crisis-era protectionism? 
          An initial assessment", University of St.Gallen and CEPR, 30 September 
          2009, forthcoming in Business & Politics, October 2009.
Government of Ireland, "Building Ireland's Smart Economy. A Framework 
          for Sustainable Economic Renewal", Department of the Taoiseach, 
          Dublin 2008, at http://www.taoiseach.gov.ie. 
          
Gray, Peter, "The Irish Famine", Thames & Hudson, London 
          2007.
Grevi, Giovanni, "The interpolar world: a new scenario", 
          European Union Institute for Security Studies, Occasional Paper, number 
          79, June 2009, at www.iss.europa.eu. 
Henry, William, "Coffin Ship. The Wreck of the Brig St.John", 
          Mercier Press, Dublin 2009.
Michel, Serge; Beuret, Michel, "La Chinafrique. Pékin 
          à la conquête du continent noir", Hachette Littératures, 
          Paris 2009.
Murphy, David; Devlin, Martina, "Banksters. How a Powerful Elite 
          Squandered Ireland's Wealth", Hachette Books Ireland, Dublin 2009.
Murphy, Ignatius, "Before the Famine Struck. Life in West Clare 
          1834-1845", Irish Academic Press, Dublin 2008. 
O'Donnell, Rúan, "The Irish Famine", Pocket History, 
          The O'Brien Press, Dublin 2008.
Ó Tuathaigh, Gearóid, "Ireland Before the Famine, 
          1798-1848", Gill & Macmillan, Dublin 2007.
Póirtéir, Cathal, "Famine Echoes", RTÊ 
          Radio 1, Gill & Macmillan, Dublin 2008.
Reynolds, David, "Summits. Six Meetings that Shaped the Twentieth 
          Century", Penguin Books, London 2007.
Saner, Raymond; Michalun M.Varinia (editors), "Negotiations Between 
          State Actors and Non-State Actors: Case Analyses from Different Parts 
          of the World", Republic of Letters Publishing, Dordrecht 2009.
Schropp, Simon A.B., "Trade Policy Flexibility and Enforcement 
          in the WTO. A Law and Economics Analysis", Cambridge University 
          Press, New York 2009.
Tóibin, Colm; Ferriter, Diarmaid, "The Irish Famine. A 
          Documentary", Profile Books in association with London Review of 
          Books, London 2004.
Valdez, Gabriel, "Sueños y memorias", Taurus, Aguilar 
          Chilena de Ediciones, Santiago de Chile 2009.
Wihbey, Paul Michael, "The Rise of the New Oil Order", Academy 
          & Finance, Geneva 2009. |  
  
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    | Félix Peña Director 
        of the Institute of International Trade at the ICBC Foundation. Director 
        of the Masters Degree in International Trade Relations at Tres de Febrero 
        National University (UNTREF). Member of the Executive Committee of the 
        Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI). Member of the Evian 
        Group Brains Trust. More 
        information. |  
 
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