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    | A NEW STAGE OF MERCOSUR?: Clear horizons 
      after the San Juan Summit |  
   
    | by Félix PeñaAugust 2010
 
 English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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    |    | Has a path opened up towards a new stage in the development 
        of Mercosur? The actual facts support an affirmative answer. The results 
        of the San Juan Summit have been considered positive, among other reasons, 
        because they have shown progress in three fronts that are key for the 
        construction of a space of regional integration among Mercosur member 
        countries. Furthermore, these three fronts are interconnected.
       The first and foremost of these fronts is the strategic 
        association between Argentina and Brazil. The cooperation in the nuclear 
        field, a key issue in the strategic relations between the two countries, 
        received a new thrust at San Juan. The second front is the development 
        of Mercosur's full potential. Several were the results of the Summit on 
        this regard. However, the most important ones are related with the consolidation 
        of the customs union through the approval of instruments, such as the 
        Customs Code, which had been pending for several years. The third front 
        is that of the trade negotiations with third countries. On this regard 
        the conclusion of a free trade agreement with Egypt and, in particular, 
        the concrete signals towards joint negotiations with the EU based on a 
        customs union can be highlighted. 
       While holding the pro-tempore presidency of Mercosur, 
        during the second semester of this year, it is to be expected that President 
        Lula promotes initiatives to agree on the new objectives of integration 
        and to make the conclusion of the EU- Mercosur agreement -at least of 
        its most relevant aspects- a priority at the Foz de Iguazú Summit 
        next December. This would be an attainable goal if both sides show political 
        will, strategic vision and technical ingenuity to cater, with flexible 
        instruments, to the respective sensibilities.
       |  
   
    | Has a path opened up towards a new stage in the development of Mercosur? 
        The results of the San Juan Summit of the 2nd and 3rd of August would 
        indicate that the conditions to move forward with the construction of 
        Mercosur are now present. This would seem to be the idea conveyed by the 
        Brazilian government through the interview given by the Foreign Affairs 
        Minister Amorim to the newspaper Valor Econômico on August 9. In 
        it he pointed out that some important steps have already been taken but 
        that it would be necessary to move forward. The following were mentioned 
        as some of the issues that will require additional attention: the elimination 
        of the exceptions to the common external tariff; an agreement of government 
        purchasing which results in actual preferences; and a broader services 
        agreement that grants national treatment to the businesses belonging to 
        the block in all of its countries. He added that "em vez de negociar 
        setorzinho por setor será que nâo devemos ter meta para definir, 
        que devem ser alcanzadas?, and wondered whether it would be time to "pensar 
        grande novamente no futuro? Additionally, he made a cautious reference 
        to the progress that might be achieved in the negotiations with the European 
        Union (EU) and considered it more realistic to anticipate advancements 
        during this year but not necessarily the conclusion of an agreement.  The fact that Brazil has held the pro-tempore presidency of Mercosur 
        in this second semester -and thus the coordination of the negotiations 
        with the EU- has given the declarations a special significance. They are 
        supported by real facts, precisely that the results of the San Juan Summit 
        have been positive and, in a certain way, unexpected (for another view 
        of the results of the Summit see the article by the Ambassador Rubens 
        Barbosa, "A saga do Mercosul", in the newspaper O Estado de 
        Sâo Paulo of May 10, 2010). These results have been made manifest 
        in three interconnected fronts.  The first front is the consolidation of the strategic association between 
        Argentina and Brazil. Launched by the agreements Alfonsín-Sarney, 
        its fundamental aspects remain unaltered after a quarter of a Century. 
        However, in a certain way, it is a permanent work under construction. 
        It constitutes an alliance upheld by two basic pillars. 
 One of these pillars is the mutual trust in relation to the multiple 
        outcomes of nuclear development in Argentina and Brazil, and the appreciation 
        of the reciprocal cooperation in the field. The signals resulting from 
        the San Juan Summit indicate that both countries firmly stand by their 
        commitments on this regard (for the texts both in Spanish and Portuguese 
        of the Declarations of the San Juan Summit of August 3 - San Juan Declaration, 
        Joint Declaration on Malvinas, Joint Declaration on Nuclear Cooperation 
        - go to http://www.itamaraty.gov.br/). 
        This is what makes this bilateral relation the hard core of peace and 
        political stability in South America. Within the current regional and 
        global context this is not a minor fact. As such, it even contributes 
        to generate a favorable climate for the implementation, by businesses, 
        of investment decisions and productive clusters that help develop the 
        huge potential that the region has within the new global economic scenario. The other basic pillar of this strategic association is that of economic 
        and trade preferences, conceived as instruments for facilitating the joint 
        productive transformation and the capability for negotiating with other 
        countries. This is a pillar that, while preserving the bilateral identity 
        and dynamics, is inserted within a wider Mercosur framework which in several 
        aspects has a clear South American dimension. On this regard, it should 
        be noted that the functions and objectives of Mercosur's and UNASUR's 
        institutional spaces may be considered complementary. This month's events 
        in the relations between Colombia and Venezuela would illustrate this 
        point (on the relations between both institutional spaces and their possible 
        complementation, see our article "La integración del espacio 
        sudamericano: ¿La Unasur y el Mercosur pueden complementarse?", 
        in Revista Nueva Sociedad Number 219, January-February 2009).
 
 The second interconnected front is the realization of Mercosur's full 
        potential. This is a multidimensional and long term project. It is a continuous 
        process with no finishing line or guarantees of irreversibility. Such 
        as what is more evident today with the EU, Mercosur does not follow any 
        text book models nor any of the models developed in other regions. It 
        is, as it should be, an attempt at joint work between a group of countries 
        that tries to respond to the characteristics, interests and realities 
        that are particular to the region. It is not an easy task to accomplish 
        in practice and this is the reason why it will always seem incomplete 
        and far removed from any ideal. Even the adjective "imperfect" 
        normally used in the academic world to describe the customs union that 
        is the aim of Mercosur may be signaling some difficulties in the understanding 
        of the real world in which almost anything may be considered imperfect 
        or incomplete in comparison with the ideal models. It could also be reflecting 
        a lack of understanding of the regulations that, within the framework 
        of the World Trade Organization, define such modality of market integration 
        - especially article XXIV, 8 a) of GATT-.
 Among other relevant issues, (see the text of the Joint Declaration of 
        the Presidents of the Mercosur member countries on http://www.itamaraty.gov.br/), 
        what was achieved at the San Juan Summit was a significant progress in 
        the development of those unresolved matters that had been pending since 
        the approval of the external common tariff in Ouro Preto in 1994 (see 
        the Minutes from the XXXIX Meeting of the Mercosur Council and Decisions 
        that were approved on http://www.mercosur.org.uy). 
        These are the Customs Code (Decision CMC 27/10 on http://www.mercosur.org.uy 
        or click 
        here); the elimination of the double imposition of the external tariff 
        and the distribution of the customs revenue (Decision CMC 10/10, on http://www.mercosur.org.uy/ 
        or click 
        here); the single administrative document, (Decision CMC 17/10, on 
        http://www.mercosur.org.uy/ 
        or click 
        here),and the procedures manual for the control of customs value (Decision 
        CMC 16/10, on http://www.mercosur.org.uy 
        or click 
        here). What was agreed regarding these issues involved reconciling 
        different interests and views. Additionally, during the final stage of 
        San Juan, it also demanded technical ability and a great deal of political 
        will.  Even when it may be considered a clear success of the Argentine presidency 
        of Mercosur during the first semester of this year, what was achieved 
        in San Juan does not mean that the job regarding these issues is over. 
        Still ahead are the meaningful steps that need to be taken for the commitments 
        to become effective and impact reality. Driving them further will probably 
        be one of the priorities for this year. This may be a hard task to accomplish. 
        However, it is a normal aspect of any integration process between two 
        sovereign nations that aspire to remain so, particularly when there are 
        marked asymmetries in their size and relative economic power. The idea 
        of linear paths with no jolts is not compatible with the political and 
        economic realities, they only exist in theory. On the contrary, the voluntary 
        integration between sovereign nations entails winding journeys characterized 
        by crisis, setbacks and, sometimes -as was the case here- forward leaps. 
        These are processes that can even result in failure or morph into something 
        different from what was originally planned.  In order to assess the work that still needs to be done regarding the 
        issues that were approved in San Juan we should note that in the past 
        other basic instruments of Mercosur, such as for example those related 
        to the defense of competition or how to deal with investments, were never 
        fully approved internally by each country. In a manner of speaking it 
        could be said that Mercosur has several "legal corpses" in its 
        history. A previous version of the Customs Code had already been approved 
        in 1994. It is possible that the buildup of agreements that cannot go 
        beyond the stage of formal approval by the Mercosur Council is one of 
        the clearest indicators of the institutional inadequacies of the integration 
        process. Common rules are often approved without having previously been 
        screened by the filters of the respective national interests or by the 
        competent technical bodies of each government. The need to produce successful 
        summits has demonstrated, in the twenty years of Mercosur's existence, 
        that this can be, depending on the circumstances, either a fact that encourages 
        the progress of real integration or that only generates episodes of "media 
        diplomacy", i.e.: headlines for next day's papers that later fail 
        to translate into facts.  The third of the fronts is that of Mercosur's international trade negotiations 
        with third countries. A new free trade agreement with Egypt was signed 
        in San Juan, (for the full text of the agreement and its annexes go to 
        http://www.mercosur.org.uy/show?contentid=2370). 
        Previously, an agreement had been signed with Israel. Additionally, there 
        are those preferential agreements signed with other developing countries. 
       More than the relative importance of such agreements, measured by their 
        incidence in the trade and investment flows, what becomes relevant is 
        that they confirm a strategic idea that had been challenged at times by 
        some sectors of the member countries. Lately this idea had been questioned 
        by several personalities in Brazil (see 
        the July 2010 edition of this Newsletter). What is called into question 
        is if Mercosur may be able to carry out preferential trade negotiations 
        with other countries and, in particular, with those with which economic 
        relations are, or could be, of great significance. Thus the need to prioritize 
        bilateral trade negotiations that would involve a change in the fundamental 
        rules of Mercosur has been raised. This could lead to the deterioration 
        of the necessary mutual trust which constitutes the foundation behind 
        the idea of the strategic alliance that has been promoted for the last 
        twenty five years. An interesting precedent on this regard was precisely 
        the reaction of Brazil, and of Argentina as well, to Uruguay's attempt 
        to conclude a Free Trade Agreement with the US. during the presidencies 
        of Jorge Batlle and Tabaré Vázquez. (For an excellent analysis 
        of this precedent, see the book by Roberto Porzecanski listed under Recommended 
        Reading). From there the importance of the signals that have clearly emerged from 
        the San Juan Summit in relation to the recently re-launched bi-regional 
        negotiations with the EU Three of these signals are worth noting. The 
        first and foremost is the reaffirmation by the partners of their commitment 
        to strengthen Mercosur, even placing commercial differences within the 
        broader perspective of a strategic intent that transcends the economical. 
        On this regard we can recall the definition given not so long ago by the 
        Foreign Affairs Minister Amorim when he pointed out that, for Brazil, 
        Mercosur was a synonym of peace and political stability in South America. 
        The second signal comes precisely from the measures adopted to complete 
        the basic instruments of a customs union. The Customs Code, the double 
        imposition of the external tariff, and the distribution of the customs 
        revenue, have been some of the main priorities in the expectations list 
        of the EU in order to negotiate with Mercosur. Finally, the third signal 
        has been the reaffirmation by President Lula of his interest in a fast 
        progress of the bi-regional negotiation.  While holding the pro-tempore presidency of Mercosur during the second 
        semester of this year, it is only natural that President Lula should make 
        of the progress towards the conclusion of an EU-Mercosur agreement -at 
        least in its fundamental aspects- a priority of the Foz de Iguazú 
        Summit next December. This is an attainable goal if both sides show a 
        good dose of political will, strategic vision and technical ingenuity 
        in order to tend with flexible instruments (multiple-speed, variable geometry, 
        safety valves, differential treatment) and with the specific rules of 
        origin, to the respective sensibilities. These are present in all the 
        participating countries and on both sides of the Atlantic. Additionally, 
        it could be necessary to give special treatment to certain complex and 
        sensitive sectors such as the automotive one, among others, which has 
        had a special treatment since the inception of Mercosur. Something similar 
        has happened with the agricultural sector in the case of the European 
        Union.
 Other issues which have been the purport of agreements signed and decisions 
        adopted at the San Juan Summit give evidence of the density and relevance 
        that Mercosur's agenda will have in the future. The main ones refer to 
        the Guarani aquifer (for the text of the agreement signed by Argentina, 
        Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, go to  
        http://www.itamaraty.gov.br/); the financing of infrastructure and 
        productive projects of general interest (for the texts of the Council's 
        Decisions in reference to these projects go to http://www.mercosur.org.uy/), 
        and the cooperation with other countries reflected, in this opportunity, 
        by the trade preferences granted to Haiti http://www.mercosur.org.uy/ 
        or click 
        here).  The three issues mentioned by Minister Amorim, quoted above, should also 
        be included in the priorities of the future agenda of Mercosur. Two facts 
        should be mentioned here in relation to the issue of government purchases. 
        The first is the approval of Decision CMC 23/10 on the modification of 
        the Public Purchasing Protocol that is expected to be presented at Mercosur's 
        Council meeting next December (for the text of Decision CMC 23/10, go 
        to http://www.mercosur.org.uy 
        or click 
        here). The other fact is the approval by the Brazilian government 
        of the Provisory Measure nº 495 of 19 July 2010 (for the Explanatory 
        Reasons go to https://www.planalto.gov.br/ 
        and the text of the Provisory Measures on https://www.planalto.gov.br/), 
        which introduces modifications to the legal regulations of government 
        purchases to grant a preferential margin of up to 25% for goods and services 
        of Brazilian origin (the original text reads: "§ 6o A margem 
        de preferência por produto, serviço, grupo de produtos ou 
        grupo de serviços, a que refere o § 5o, será definida 
        pelo Poder Executivo Federal, limitada a até vinte e cinco por 
        cento acima do preço dos produtos manufaturados e serviços 
        estrangeiros"). Such preference is extended to the Mercosur countries 
        (once the Purchasing Protocol comes into force, which constitutes an incentive 
        for this to be achieved in the short term) and to those countries with 
        which Brazil has agreements regarding government purchases (the corresponding 
        text states that: "§ 10. A margem de preferência a que 
        se refere o § 6o será estendida aos bens e serviços 
        originários dos Estados Partes do Mercado Comum do Sul - Mercosul, 
        após a ratificação do Protocolo de Contratações 
        Públicas do Mercosul, celebrado em 20 de julho de 2006, e poderá 
        ser estendida, total ou parcialmente, aos bens e serviços originários 
        de outros países, com os quais o Brasil venha assinar acordos sobre 
        compras governamentais"). This generates an additional incentive 
        for European businesses to become interested in the conclusion of the 
        bi-regional agreement that is currently being negotiated between Mercosur 
        and the EU (on this Provisory Measure see the articles "Governo quer 
        frear China em licitaçâo pública", by Sergio 
        Leo; "Margen de preferencia será estendida e deve facilitar 
        acordo con UE", by Assis Moreira; and "Margen de preferencia 
        será estendida e deve facilitar acordo con UE", by Diego Z.Bonomo 
        published, all published in Valor Econômico on July 22, July 23, 
        and August 9, respectively). However, above all, in view of the progress achieved and of the negotiations 
        that are underway -as well as of others that will come as a consequence 
        of an eventual agreement with the EU and of the resulting preferences-, 
        Mercosur will require the refining of its institutions in order to guarantee 
        a greater transparency and efficiency of its ground rules and an active 
        involvement of the different social sectors in its future development 
        (on this regard see the on November 
        2009 edition of this Newsletter).  |  
   
    |  Recommended Reading: 
        Aguirre Reveles, Rodolfo; Pérez Roch, Manuel, "The EU-Mexico 
          Free Trade Agreement Seven Years On. A warning to the global South", 
          Transnational Institute Mexican Action Network on Free Trade (RMALC) 
          ICCO, Debate paper Alternative Regionalisms, June 2007 en http://www.rmalc.org.mx; 
          http://www.tni.org. 
          
Brenton, Paul; Manchin, Miriam, "Making EU Trade Agreements Work. 
          The Role of Rules of Origin", Centre for European Policy Studies, 
          CEPS Working Document n° 183, March 2002, en http://www.ceps.eu/. 
          
Caballero Santos, Sergio, "El Mercosur Ideacional: Un enfoque 
          complementario para la integración regional sudamericana", 
          CERIR, Cuadernos de Política Exterior Argentina, Rosario, octubre-diciembre 
          2009, nº 98.
Centro de Economía Internacional, "Revista del CEI. Comercio 
          Exterior e Integración", CEI-MRECIC, Abril de 2010, Número 
          17, en http://www.cei.gov.ar. 
          
Cincunegui, Jorge Eduardo, "Análisis de factibilidad de 
          generar valor agregado en los complejos cerealeros y oleaginoso en base 
          a experiencias de países seleccionados", Fundación 
          INAI, Febrero 2010, http://www.inai.org.ar. 
          
Correa, Ana, "Ciudades, Turismo y Cultura. Nuevas perspectivas 
          para el desarrollo equitativo de las ciudades", Icrj mediaciones, 
          La Crujía, Buenos Aires 2010.
FUNCEX, "Revista Brasileira de Comércio Exterior: Logística 
          e Exortaçôes", Fundaçâo Centro de Estudos 
          do Comércio Exterior, Rio de Janeiro, Ano XXIV - abril/junho 
          de 2010.
Gathii, James Thuo, "African Regional Trade Agreements as Flexible 
          Legal Regimes", Albany Law School, Working Papers Series N° 
          20 of 2009, en http://works.bepress.com/ 
          or click 
          here.
Instituto de Relaciones Internacionales, "Relaciones Internacionales", 
          IRI-Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Año 19 - Nº 38, Diciembre 
          2009 - Mayo 2010.
Leiva Lavalle, Patricio (editor), "Relaciones Internacionales 
          y renovación del pensamiento", Instituto Latinoamericano 
          de Relaciones Internacionales, Universidad Miguel de Cervantes - Institut 
          dEstudis Humanistics, Santiago de Chile 2010.
Leiva Lavalle, Patricio (editor), "Diálogos sobre La Haya. 
          El límite marítimo entre Chile y Perú", Instituto 
          Latinoamericano de Relaciones Internacionales, Universidad Miguel de 
          Cervantes, KAS-Universidad Miguel de Cervantes, Santiago de Chile 2010.
Martín, Miguel Angel; Oddone, Carlos Nahuel (compiladores), 
          "Las ciudades y los poderes locales en las relaciones internacionales 
          contemporáneas", Estudios y Comentarios nº 13, Unión 
          Iberoamericana de Municipalistas (UIM) e Instituto de investigación 
          urbana y territorial (IUT), Granada 2010.
Martin, Philippe; Mayer, Thierry; Thoenig, Mathias, "The geography 
          of conflicts and regional trade agreements", WTO, January 4, 2010, 
          en http://www.wto.org/ 
          or click 
          here. 
Murray, Edmundo, "Becoming Irlandés. Private Narratives 
          of the Irish Emigration ton Argentina (1844-1912), L.O.L.A-, Literature 
          of Latin America, Buenos Aires 2006.
Narula, Rajneesh, "Much ado about nothing or sirens of a brave 
          new world? MNE Activity for developing countries and its significance 
          for development", Background paper for the "Perspectives on 
          Global Development 2010. Shifting wealth", OECD Development Centre, 
          Paris April 2010, en http://www.oecd.org/dev/gdo. 
          
Perales, José Raúl; Morón, Eduardo (eds.), "La 
          Economía Política del Tratado de Libre Comercio entre 
          Perú y Estados Unidos", Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars, 
          Latin American Program, Washington 2010.
Porzecanski, Roberto, "No voy en tren. Uruguay y las perspectivas 
          de un TLC con los Estados Unidos (2000-2010)", Debate, Montevideo 
          2010.
Rosen, Daniel H; Wang, Shi, "Deepening China-Taiwan Relations 
          through the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement", Peterson 
          Institute for International Studies, Policy Brief, Number PB10-16, Washington 
          June 2010, en http://www.petersoninstitute.org/ 
          or click 
          here. 
Tolstói, Lev, "Los cosacos", Atalanta, Girona 2009.
Woolverton, Andrea; Regmi, Anita; Tutwiler, M.Ann, The Political Economy 
          of Trade and Food Security", ICTSD Programme on Agriculture Trade 
          and Sustainable Development, Geneva July 2010, en http://ictsd.org/ 
          or click 
          here.  |  
  
    | 
        
 
   
    |  |   
    | 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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