| I. The Mercosur level: Is Mercosur becoming increasingly irrelevant for its original member 
        countries, at the economic but also at the political level? In some way Mercosur seems to be loosing its original appeal.  As a playing field, it is perceived as to small - and to weak as a platform 
        to improve the capacity to negotiate and to compete at the global arena 
        - not only for Brazil but even for the smaller members. 1. Factors that could explain this perception: 
        The original "road map" has not been fully implemented even 
          in its less ambitious goals: Mercosur is far to be a real common market 
          and the original triangle of trade negotiations (Mercosur-US-EU) has 
          failed at least until now;
 
After Mercosur was launched the global scenario has suffer deep changes 
          both at the economic (i.e. WTO/DD Round; China, India and other new 
          protagonists; trade and investment as internal transactions within transnational 
          productive and services networks) and political level, (i.e. September 
          11 and March 11; Irak War; transnational criminal networks) and, at 
          the same time, South America - not only Mercosur - is not in the radar 
          screen that follow the main issues of the political agenda of the big 
          powers (i.e."2007 US-EU Summit Political Report" - April 30, 
          2007). But the new global landscape offer a lot of opportunities that 
          are available and accessible for countries rich in natural resources 
          as are almost all those of South America, and
 
Member countries do not perceive clear "win-win" results, 
          as a consequence of a significant gap between the original strategic 
          idea and road map, and its actual achievements. 2. However, Mercosur continues to have relevance at least at three levels: 
        As a source of rules that are applied to intra-Mercosur (plus Chile) 
          trade - in some way also investments - and to its extra-Mercosur trade 
          (the common external tariff);
 
As a core group (Mercosur plus Chile) for political stability, open 
          society and democracy within the South American geographic regional 
          space, and
 
As a symbolic reference of the idea of integration among its member 
          countries (nobody would like to afford the political costs of failure). 3. Even if it is less relevant than years before, it is difficult to realize 
        which could be a realistic and reasonable Plan B to Mercosur for each 
        of its original member countries, as soon as we consider simultaneously 
        political, economic and even legal factors. Its transformation in a kind 
        of FTA presents strong political, economic and even legal difficulties. 
        The gradual metamorphosis of Mercosur as a formal process of integration 
        (that in some way is already taking place) appears to be the most reasonable 
        approach to assure its future.
 II. The South American level:
 Is the South America geographic regional space becoming increasingly differentiated 
        as an international power subsystem (especially with respect to the Latin 
        American and Hemispheric spaces)?
 
 Could it eventually replace Mercosur as the main regional playing field 
        for its original member countries?
 
 In some way South America, as an international power subsystem and as 
        the main focal point for integration efforts, is becoming the new vedette, 
        particularly at the media level. But it seems that it do not have yet 
        a very well defined profile and sufficient attractiveness for the public 
        opinion of all the countries of the region.
  
        1. Some factors that could explain its emergent relevance:  
        
          The historical roots (Robert Burr) that even today have an influence 
            in some of the bilateral tensions or even conflicts (i.e. "papeleras", 
            Itaipu, among others);
 
The new role of energy in the regional power game (plus the Chavez 
            factor), and
 
The challenges of developments leading to an eventual pax mafiosi 
            (Juan Tokatlian).
 (They represent problems that cannot be solved only at the national 
            or at the Mercosur or Andean Community level, even if they could have 
            a strong impact in their strategies and images).
  
        2. As a geographic regional space and as a differentiated international 
          power subsystem, South America presents some main traits:
 
        
          Multipolarity in terms of real power distribution among its countries 
            and of their capacity to be relevant protagonists (no space for hegemonic 
            or unilateral leadership even from abroad, i.e. US, EU, China);
 
Differentiation of multiple layers of economic connectivity with 
            variable geometry (markets connections; energy potential complementarities 
            and networks; logistic and physical distribution of good; networks 
            of services), and
 
A trend toward some dissonances (even ideological), particularly 
            on the concepts of open societies and democracy, on the perceptions 
            of external challenges and of the international power and economic 
            competition. III. Some challenges ahead   
        1. At the Mercosur front: 
          Identity (political project? economic project? a South American 
            dimension?);
 
Efficacy (how to overcome the gap between political will and effective 
            rules and concrete results?), and
 
Credibility and social legitimacy (how to convince firms to invest 
            for the larger market and how to build strong citizens support?)
 If a Plan B doesn't exist, how to improve institutional quality and 
            how to conciliate methods of variable geometry and multiple speed, 
            with a reasonable degree of predictability on the rules of the game?
 2. At the South American front:
 
          A certain degree of multilateral institutionalization (is the new 
            born South American Union the right framework?) (are other approaches 
            possible, i.e. a kind of Energy Charter Treaty, and best practices 
            for trade and investments within the LAIA framework?);
 
A convergent approach for different national interests, realities 
            and visions (a kind of Deng Shiao-Ping philosophy: "What matters 
            the color of the cat as long as it catches mice"), and
 
The recognition that even the South American space is small in terms 
            of the new opportunities and challenges represented by the global 
            economic competition and security agenda. 3. At each national front:
 
          Multilayer and dynamic external strategies;Social cohesion and harmony, andHome grown domestic productive transformation strategy. Main conclusions:  
        At the Mercosur level:  
          The working together through a common market idea, will require 
            an clever mix of instrumental flexibility and enforced collective 
            disciplines - quiet a challenge for the technical level of governments, 
            business sector and academia -;
 
Mercosur could continue to be an strategic project within a larger 
            South American framework, but its (WTO consistent) heterodoxy will 
            increase, and its relevance for its member countries will strongly 
            depend on the quality of their own national strategies, both at the 
            domestic and international level. At the South American level:
 
          A pattern of reasonable regional governance, will require a strong 
            effort to build areas of convergence among different national situations, 
            visions and interests - quiet a challenge for the political leadership 
            -, and At each national level:  
          A feasible multipolar and dynamic external strategy will require 
            a clear definition of domestic priorities and needs, and a good diagnostic 
            of which is the real margin of international action for each country, 
            according to its perceived value for other countries at the global 
            and regional level - quiet a challenge for all the political and social 
            protagonists and, perhaps, the main lesson to draw after almost fifty 
            years of dreaming with the idea of Latin America integration -. |