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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_879554592
    ISBN: 9213214979
    Series Statement: Serie Temas de Coyuntura 3
    Content: Resumen Las relaciones entre América Latina y la Unión Europea (UE) se estrecharon en los últimos quince años, en un contexto de importantes transformaciones estructurales er ambas regiones. Por un lado, las economías latinoamericanas se ajustaron a las nuevas condiciones de liquidez internacional, ingresaron en un proceso de reformas económicas caracterizado por la apertura de sus mercados, la privatización y la desreglamentación, y definieron una estrategia de inserción internacional conocida como 'regionalismo abierto'. Por su lado, los países europeos profundizaron su proceso de integración, primero, a través de la formación del mercado único, y posteriormente, por la creación gradual de la Unión Económica y Monetaria Europea. Además, esa profundización de la integración europea avanza junto a un complejo proceso de ampliación hacia los países de Europa Central, Oriental y Meridional. Este documento examina la posición de los países latinoamericanos en el comercio de bienes y servicios y en la inversión extranjera directa de la Unión Europea. También describe, en forma resumida: i) la estrategia de la UE para los países de América Latina, definida en documentos de la Comisión de las Comunidades Europeas, y ii) algunos cambios en la cooperación para el desarrollo de la Unión Europea hacia los países latinoamericanos y en el Sistema Generalizado de Preferencias (SGP) de la UE. Además, expone las obligaciones creadas por la ampliación de la UE hacia los países de menor desarrollo de Europa Central y Oriental, que determinaron cambios en la política agrícola común, sin que se eliminaran los efectos de ésta sobre el acceso de terceros países a los mercados. Finalmente, se propone un paralelismo entre el argumento de la 'multifuncionalidad' de la agricultura para los europeos y la 'multifuncionalidad' de los sectores de bienes y servicios más intensivos en tecnología para las economías latinoamericanas.
    Note: Incluye Bibliografía
    Language: Spanish
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_87952443X
    Series Statement: Serie Comercio Internacional 9
    Content: Abstract This document provides an overview of trade relations between Asia and the Pacific and Latin America and explores the possibilities for expanding the modalities of economic relations between the two regions. The analysis covers 12 countries in Asia and Oceania and 11 members of the Latin American Integration Association (LAIA). Interregional cooperation in trade and investment has been on the agendas of countries in both regions for some time. It is often expressed that the present economic relations between the two regions do not reflect the potential for interregional trade and investment that exists in an increasingly globalized world. Given the current low level of economic interaction and in the aftermath of the economic crises experienced in each region in recent years, the governments of both regions have increasingly recognized the need to institutionalize the mechanism of consultation and to possibly implement joint actions in order to strengthen bi-regional economic relations. The document will analyze the present level of, and future potential for, interregional trade and investment flows, and make some recommendations that may contribute to a visualization of several actions plans on interregional cooperation. Chapter I begins with a short analysis of LAIa's trade performance in the 1990s and its relations with major trade partners outside the region. This is followed by a brief examination of the dynamics of trade flows between Latin America and Asia-Pacific, considering the effects of the Asian financial crisis on Latin American trade. The chapter ends with a review of market-access problems and the on-going process of liberalization in Latin America.Chapter II analyzes the same trade relations from the viewpoint of Asian and Paci f i c countries. Chapter III presents some general data on the importance of intra-industrial trade in Asia-Pacific and LAIa's trade, with a view to suggesting a possible route for future relations between the two regions. Chapter IV provides a brief survey of the linkages between trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) and a description on the recent evolution of foreign direct investment in Latin America, indicating some options for increasing the presence of Asia-Pacific in the region.The last chapter, Conclusions and Recommendations, emphasizes broad opportunities that lie in the development of interregional economic linkages. Recommendations are made in five areas: 1) mechanisms for per manent or periodic consultation on issues related to trade and investment; 2) information creation and exchange (e.g., information centers, market access, business facilitation, policy dialogueue on WTO); 3) guidelines for trade facilitation action plan and investment promotion action plan; 4); business community participation; and 5) economic and technical cooperation (food security, technological upgrading, transport infrastructure, environment protection).
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_879523999
    ISBN: 9211212561
    Series Statement: Serie Comercio Internacional 5
    Content: SummaryThe relationship between trade and economic growth is nuclear to the literature of economic development. Due to the importance of the external sector to developing countries, most development models have trade regimes and the related system of incentives as central determinants of economic performance. Also, there exists an extensive empirical literature on exports and growth with mixed results. Many studies find evidence of association between exports or exports growth and economic growth although the direction of the causality has not yet been clearly established. Moreover, other studies qualified those results since linkages between exports and economic growth depended on threshold variables. In other words, economic growth tended to be affected by export performance after countries have achieved some minimum level of development.(1); On the other hand, recent empirical studies that have attempted to relate trade orientation and economic performance have been criticized for the misspecification of some variables and the ambiguity of the results, in spite of the sophistication of the empirical models employed (Rodríguez, 1999);In this paper, following the ECLAC tradition, we consider the composition of exports as a crucial determinant of the relationship between exports and growth although our purpose is basically descriptive(2);.We examine the trade performance of 16 Latin American countries over the past 20 years using a modified Pavit-Guerrieri classification to group trade data according to the technological content of the production functions of individual goods. Simple indicators of revealed comparative advantage of net contribution to trade balance of those groups of products are used to describe changes in trade patterns that followed trade reforms in the most advanced economies in the region. We discuss some of the difficulties in classifying goods according to their production functions when production sharing prevails in international trade. Hence, the presence of a given product in the export list of a country does not mean that the country master the whole production process of that particular good. Only the labour-intensive segments may be domestically produced in the country.The following section is a brief review of the literature on trade composition and growth. Section II discusses the classification employed in the empirical part and its limitations. Section III describes the indicators used to describe trade patterns in Latin American countries and Section IV presents the results for 16 Latin American countries, with special emphasis on major countries such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico. Trade reforms seem to have affected trade patterns of those advanced developing countries by strengthening comparative advantages based on natural resources endowments, and also by replacing imported inputs for domestically produced inputs. Section V presents some concluding remarks and areas for further research. ****(1); For a review of the literature, see Greenaway, Morgan and Wright (1999, pp. 41-51);. (2); This paper was presented at the IV Meeting of the Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association (LACEA);, Santiago de Chille, 23 october 1999.
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_879678194
    Note: Incluye Bibliografía
    Language: Spanish
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_879678208
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_879773529
    Note: Incluye Bibliografía
    Language: Spanish
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_879780339
    Note: Incluye Bibliografía
    Language: Spanish
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_879780428
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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