The World Bank said Tuesday that a deeper economic integration among Latin American and Caribbean countries will make the region more competitive in international markets and boost long-term growth.
In a new report titled “Better Neighbours: Toward a Renewal of Economic Integration in Latin America”, the Washington-based financial institution argues that a renewed integration strategy that takes advantage of the complementaries between regional and global economic integration can contribute to growth with stability.
It said that this is particularly relevant for a region that is just coming out of two years of recession.
“In today’s world, regional economic integration offers a way forward to reactivate the economic growth needed for reducing poverty and boosting shared prosperity,” said Jorge Familiar, World Bank Vice- President for Latin America and the Caribbean.
“A more robust intraregional integration will make us more competitive in the global arena. Effective integration will require investment in infrastructure, connectivity and logistics, which will offer an additional boost in economic growth.”
Since the 1960s, the region has been pursuing regional integration, with efforts intensifying since the mid-1990s.
But the World Bank noted that still, intraregional exports in Latin America remain at a persistent 20 per cent of total exports, much less than the 60 and 50 per cent intraregional exports in the European Union and East Asia Pacific, respectively.
Therefore, the report proposes an “open regionalism” that reaps unexploited synergies between regional and global economic integration, on the premise that pro-growth integration with the world cannot be achieved without first strengthening the region’s own neighbourhood.
To do so, the report lays out a five-pronged interdependent strategy including the further reduction of the external tariffs.
“This can stimulate local economic activity, attract foreign investment, enable knowledge-sharing among regional neighbours, and ultimately facilitate collective entry into global export markets.”
The report also called for deepening the economic integration between South America, Central America, the Caribbean, and Mexico, noting that through new preferential trade agreements (PTAs), these subregions can better benefit from their complementaries and obtain additional gains from trade.
It said this will be particularly relevant for small economies when integrating with larger ones.
The report also called for a harmonisation of the rules and procedures, noting that “allowing firms to use materials from other countries without losing preferential access, as it tends to happen with rules established by existing PTAs, can help the region attain higher gains from these agreements. Harmonising regulatory standards can also help the region fully capitalise on the already significant progress toward an integrated energy grid, it said, urging also that there be efforts to reduce high trade costs.
“Lack of quality infrastructure and challenging topography make distance much costlier to Latin America’s trade. The share of unpaved roads in the region is around 70 per cent, causing land transport to drive up trade costs. Low port efficiency also makes the region’s connectivity to global maritime and air transport networks comparatively weaker and more costly.”
The report is also calling for an integration of labour and capital markets.
“There is room for improving regional efficiencies through freer migration and capital flows in Latin America. Labour market integration across borders can help countries become more productive and boost growth through cross-border knowledge transfers,” it said.