By Jaime Daremblum
May 16, 2013
Chilean finance minister Felipe
Larraín has called it "the most exciting thing going on today
in Latin America." Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos believes it is "perhaps the most significant and
profound integration process in the history of Latin America." A recent headline said it has created "a new Latin
American superpower." It has also been hailed as a "bridge to Asia" and "a promising yardstick of Latin America's
prosperity."
"It" is the so-called Pacific
Alliance, a free-trade bloc that was first outlined in the April 2011 Lima Declaration and was officially established in June 2012. Its four members are
Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru — four countries with a long record of
supporting free markets and open commerce. Over the past year, these countries
have abolished tariffs on 90 percent of all goods
they trade with each other, and have also taken many other steps (such as
eliminating visa requirements, merging stock exchanges, and launching a
scholarship program) to integrate their economies. Next week, their presidents
will meet in Colombia to sign yet another multilateral
agreement.
The Pacific Alliance nations account for more than one-third of Latin
America's total GDP, a similar share of its population, and roughly half of its
global trade. They are the highest-ranking Latin American countries in the World
Bank's 2013 Ease of
Doing Business Index, and they are also some of the region's fastest-growing
economies. "Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Peru will grow an average 5 percent
this year," notes John Paul Rathbone of the Financial
Times, citing IMF data, "while Brazil, Argentina, and Venezuela, will grow
an average of 2 percent."
Not surprisingly, many other
nations want to join the Pacific Alliance, and the list of "observer" countries
has grown to include Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Japan, New
Zealand, Panama, Spain, and Uruguay. As that list suggests, the trade bloc has
attracted governments from well beyond Latin America's shores. Indeed, it is
considered a promising vehicle for boosting economic cooperation and integration
between Latin America and Asia. In other words, it is seen as a valuable
complement to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) free-trade deal that is now
being discussed by Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico,
New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam. Colombia is eager
to join the TPP talks, and the Pacific Alliance will help Bogotá make its
case.
Hopefully the trade bloc will
also encourage Brazil to move away from the protectionist policies that are
holding back its economic development. Whereas the Pacific Alliance countries
have become Latin America's biggest champions of free trade — Mexico has
actually signed more free-trade pacts than any other nation on
earth — Brazil remains a stubborn opponent of trade liberalization, and it has
actually become more protectionist under
President Dilma Rousseff, who took office in January 2011. (Two years ago,
Brazilian finance minister Guido Mantega complained that rising imports had left
his country "under
siege.") This divergence in economic policies can be seen, not only in the
World Bank's Ease of Doing Business Index (in which Brazil ranks a lowly 130th),
but also in the Heritage Foundation's Index of
Economic Freedom: The Pacific Alliance countries all rank among the top 50
freest economies worldwide, while Brazil ranks 100th.
That's why it was so disappointing when, on May 8, Brazilian
diplomat Roberto Azevedo was chosen over Mexican economist Herminio Blanco to
be the next director-general of the World Trade Organization. Azevedo has
consistently defended Brazilian protectionism, while Blanco
was an architect of NAFTA. As the Wall
Street Journal pointed out following his selection, "Mr. Azevedo
is by all accounts a charming diplomat who won because of support among
developing nations. Yet he won that support in large part by helping to scuttle
the Doha round of free-trade talks. Mr. Azevedo was Brazil's chief Doha
negotiator, and opposition to freer trade in manufacturing by Brazil, India,
South Africa, and other emerging economic powers made a worthwhile Doha deal
impossible."
The good news is that Chile,
Colombia, Mexico, and Peru are increasingly viewed as the four most successful
large economies in Latin America. In fact, analysts at Nomura, the Japanese
financial giant, have predicted that Mexico could supplant Brazil as the region's biggest economy
by 2022. The combination of strong growth in the Pacific Alliance countries and
sluggish growth in Brazil is helping convince other Latin American governments
that free trade and open markets are better than Brazilian-style protectionism.
(Roberto Setúbal, the CEO of Latin America's largest bank, recently said that Brazil "clearly" had to change its
economic model.)
Unfortunately, the Obama
administration still has not pushed for a hemispheric free-trade zone of the
sort championed by George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Yes, administration
officials are trying to negotiate a TPP deal, but they have depicted TPP as part of their "pivot" or
"rebalancing" to Asia. Apart from belatedly signing the Colombia and Panama
free-trade accords — both of which originated under the Bush administration —
President Obama has done very little to promote greater U.S. trade with Latin
America. Indeed, while the Pacific Alliance countries are busy pursuing economic
integration across the hemisphere, the United States remains a mostly passive
observer.
Ambassador Jaime Daremblum
is a Hudson Institute Senior Fellow and directs the Center for Latin American
Studies.
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