DOI 10.1007/s10644-008-9059-z
Abstract This paper provides an analysis of the two channels of regional integration: integration via markets and integration via agreements. Given that East
Asia and Latin America are two fertile regions where both forms of integrations
have taken place, we examine the experiences of these two areas to illustrate our
conclusions. There are three related results. First, East Asia has been integrating via
the markets long before formal agreements have been in vogue in the region. Latin
America, on the other hand, has primarily been using formal regional trade treaties
as the main channel of integration. Second, despite the relative lack of formal
regional trade treaties until recently, East Asia is more integrated among itself than
Latin America. Third, from a purely economic and trade standpoint, the proper
sequence of integrations seems to be first integrating via the markets and subsequently via formal regional trade agreements. One interpretation of the relative
success of the East Asian approach is that regional trade agreements often serve
multiple constituents. Integrating via markets first can be helpful because this can
Paper presented at the International Seminar on The New Agenda for International Trade Relations as
the Doha Round Draws to an End, January 2930, Barcelona, Spain. This paper was commissioned by
the World Trade Organization and a somewhat different earlier version was disseminated as World Bank
Policy Research Working Paper #4546, March 2008. The current version of the paper is not identical to
the previous World Bank paper as this version elaborates on results taken from the earlier paper.
N. Aminian (&)
University of Le Havre, Le Havre, France
e-mail: nathalie.aminian@univ-lehavre.fr
K. C. Fung
University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA
e-mail: kcfung@ucsc.edu
F. Ng
Development Research Group, The World Bank, 1818 H street, Washington, DC 20433, USA
e-mail: fng@worldbank.org
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106
give a stronger political bargaining power to the outward-looking economicoriented forces within the country.
Keywords Regionalism Economic integration Regional agreements
Trade policy
JEL Classification
1 Introduction
Conceptually there are two different channels that trade and economic integration
among countries can occur. We call these two mechanisms integration by markets
and integration by agreements. Integration by markets focuses on the notion that
economies can integrate among themselves through the use of the marketplace, i.e.,
allowing the private sector to be the vanguard of trade integration. This can also be
described as regional integration via de facto agreements.
This concept means that the economies in a region trade intensively among
themselves without explicit formal preferential trade agreements (PTAs). To
facilitate intra-regional trade without the help of regional legal trade agreements,
some of the economies may pursue policies of unilateral domestic deregulation
and trade liberalizations, while others may improve their infrastructure (such as
ports and highways), streamline their custom procedures or pursue policies that
may facilitate inward foreign direct investment. Integration via the markets can
entail the adoption of some business-friendly and trade facilitating policies by
individual economies, even though no legal regional trade treaties are signed by
governments.
In contrast, integration by agreements focuses on trade integration via the use of
formal or de jure trade treaties. This channel of integration emphasizes the primacy
of legal instruments to further economic integration among countries. These two
instruments of integration are closely related and indeed ultimately complementary.
Integration via markets without formal regional trade agreements can create
uncertainty among businesses since the legal foundations are not sufficiently clear
and transparent. Integration by agreements can be vacuous if the underlying
economic factors are not favorable for integration. In light of this discussion, it is
important to ask the following questions: which mechanism of integration is more
successful and more fundamental in driving trade integration? Is there a logical
sequence for policy makers to consider when examining these two channels of
integration? In this paper, we will examine these and other questions in details.
Given that East Asia and Latin America are two fertile territories in which various
forms of PTAs proliferate, we will use the experiences of these two regions
extensively as illustrations for our work in this paper.
In the next section, we will examine in details the recent historical integration
experiences in East Asia and in Latin America. In Sect. 3, we provide some further
information of the extent and characteristics of the trade integration in these two
regions. In Sect. 4, we conclude.
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The original 12 members that participated in the first APEC meeting in Canberra I 1989 were Japan,
Korea, six ASEAN countries, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Later its membership
expanded to 21 economies including China, Russia, and Mexico.
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108
There are different geographical definitions of Northeast Asia. The broadest definition would include
China, Japan, North and South Korea, Mongolia, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the Russian Far East, and
Siberia. This paper, concentrates on the three major Northeast Asian economies i.e., China, Japan, and
South Korea.
The New Age Partnership goes beyond a traditional free trade agreement. It focuses on new issues
such as: rules governing foreign investment, e-commerce regulations, trade in services, harmonization
of technical standards, sanitary and phyto-sanitary regulations, and the streamlining of customs
procedures Hertel et al. (2001).
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109
procedures and increasing worker mobility between the two countries. In 2004,
Japan finally agreed on a FTA with Mexico. Japan also concluded FTA negotiations
with the Philippines in 2004. Currently, Japan is undertaking official negotiations on
FTA with Korea and Malaysia. Negotiations for an FTA with Indonesia are also
expected to follow and formal negotiation with ASEAN started in April 2005.
China joined the WTO in 2001 and is in the process of meeting its WTO
obligations. This is why Chinas interest in regional trade agreements is limited.
However, China did take the initiative in an FTA with ASEAN and has made
progress in these negotiations. At a summit meeting held in Phnom Penh in 2002,
the leaders of China and ASEAN countries announced the signing of a framework
agreement with the objective to establish a FTA within 10 years. China, Japan, and
Korea have also been discussing and investing the feasibility of a trilateral FTA.
Separately, Japan and Korea have announced that they will conclude a bilateral FTA
by the end 2005. A China and Korea bilateral FTA may be the next one. China is
hesitant to form a FTA with Japan and competes with Japan in the race for FTAs
with ASEAN. It seems that China is ahead in a FTA with ASEAN as a group, but
with regard to FTAs with individual ASEAN countries, Japan is further along.
China is also seeking FTAs with Chile and New Zealand. Table 1 gives an overview
of the intra-regional and extra-regional arrangements in East Asia.
There is a real willingness in East Asia toward closer regional cooperation. While
ASEAN is often presumed to be the most important economic cooperation in the
region, its impact on promoting intra-regional trade and investment has been
limited. The initiation of FTAs was soon followed by the 1997 financial crisis. Since
then, paradoxically, regional financial proposals are moving faster than any serious
intention of regional economic cooperation.4 Traditionally, trade arrangements are
most prominent regional groupings and, precede any financial integration. The
European Monetary Union started with a customs union, and developed into a single
currency full-fledged economic area. In comparison, the relationship between the
economic and financial components of the East Asian regional process is ill defined.
There now appears to be little or no coordination between economic and financial
initiatives.
It is expected that Northeast Asian economies will play a key role in regional
integration. A change in attitudes of Japan and China is emerging. Both countries
are more resolute about a regional grouping than before. Given the slow progress
within AFTA and the importance of the Northeast Asian countries in terms of size
and weight in Asia, a free trade arrangement between China, Japan, and Korea could
be achieved prior to wider agreements in the style of ASEAN?3. Furthermore,
since it is difficult to expect an East Asia FTA in which at least one of the three
4
The new international environment and the Asian currency crisis have created a strong impetus for
regional financial cooperation and have provided Asian countries with a common interest, which has led
to the Chiang Mai Initiative (CMI) agreement (May 2000) on bilateral swaps and discussions of the
possibility of creating a monetary union among the ASEAN?3 as a long-run objective. More recently, at
the informal ASEAN?3 Finance and Central Bank Deputies Meeting held in Tokyo on November 13,
2002, Korea made a proposal to discuss regional bond market development under the ASEAN?3. In
furtherance of this proposal, Japan presented a comprehensive approach to foster bond markets in Asia,
the Asian Bond Markets Initiative at an ASEAN?3 informal session held in Chiang Mai on December
2002.
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123
2006
2006
2003
2003
2004
2004
2004
JapanKorea
Thailand-India
ChinaMacao
KoreaChile
2002
2003
SingaporeAustralia
SingaporeNew Zealand
SingaporeJapan
1991
2001
LaosThailand
Bilateral agreements
2003
2004
2003
2002
2002
APTAAccession of China
2003
2000
2000
1976
1992
Year of
in force
Multi-countries agreements
Intra-regional
Partial scope
Partial scope
Partial scope
Partial scope
Partial scope
Type of agreement
Signed
Signed
Signed
Implemented
On-going negotiations
Implemented
Signed
Implemented
Implemented
Signed
Signed
On-going negotiations
Signed
Implemented
Implemented
Proposed
Proposed
Implemented
Implemented
Status
110
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
2005
2006
2006
2006
2006
2006
2006
2006
2006
2007
2007
2007
2007
2007
SingaporeIndia
SingaporeJordan
SingaporeKorea
Singapore-Mexico
SingaporePanama
ChinaChile
JapanCanada
JapanMalaysia
KoreaAustralia
KoreaNew Zealand
KoreaUS
KoreaMexico
JapanChile
MalaysiaUS
PhilippinesUS
Sources: WTO web data and various info from the web
2006
2005
SingaporeChile
2005
2005
ThailandAustralia
2006
2005
JapanMexico
SingaporeCanada
2005
ThailandNew Zealand
2004
Year of
in force
SingaporeUS
Intra-regional
Table 1 continued
Type of agreement
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
Signed
Implemented
On-going negotiations
On-going negotiations
Signed
Status
123
112
major Northeast Asian countries does not participate, a de facto Northeast Asia
cooperation is a necessary condition for an East Asian integration. Thus, a China
JapanKorea cooperation is crucially important for the formal economic integration
of both Northeast Asia and East Asia.
2.2 Origins of the new Asian regionalism
Before 1997, most economists considered East Asian economic cooperation as an
example of a successful de facto regionalism. However, the financial crisis of 1997
1998 demonstrated the weaknesses of informal regional cooperation and gave East
Asians a strong impetus to search for a mechanism that could forestall future crisis.
This search is now gathering momentum and opening the door to significant de jure
integration in East Asia.
The Asian financial crisis and its subsequent contagion to a number of economies
in Northeast and Southeast Asia painfully demonstrated that the East Asian
economies were closely linked and a resolution to the crisis could require a regional
cooperation. A rising sense of East Asian identity has emerged since the crisis. After
the proposal to create an Asian Monetary Fund (AMF) failed, ASEAN leaders
responded by inviting China, Korea, and Japan to join in an effort to seek economic
cooperation in the region. The ASEAN?3 summit in November 1999 released a
Joint Statement on East Asian Cooperation that covers a wide range of possible
areas for regional cooperation. In the early 2000s, other new economic situations
such as the quick recovery and recurring growth in Korea, the emergence of China
as a fast post-crisis growing economy and the continuing stagnant state of Japan
gave rise to a new Asian economic regionalism. FTA proposals are numerous and
proliferating at a startling speed. These include regional agreements as well as
bilateral treaties.5
Although the financial crisis might have been the direct cause, a number of
additional factors contributed to the breakthrough and proliferation of the policy-led
regionalism in East Asia. First, regionalism was the natural result of decades of fast
growth and a number of economic restructurings in East Asia, particularly in
Northeast Asia. These economic developments have created a new economic group
in East Asia that has begun to compete with North America and Europe in terms of
its contribution to world output and world trade. Second, there was a perception of
benign neglect from international organizations such as the IMF in the aftermath
of the Asian crisis (Tran VanHoa 2002). East Asian economic policymakers faulted
the international institutions and the main global trading powers (especially, the US)
for their lack of support for the region. To escape the crisis, countries initially
attempted some kind of go-it-alone strategy (e.g., uncontrolled devaluations,
interruption of payments, etc.). These countries were rapidly called to order by the
IMF in the name of global world interest. The IMF reaction showed to the regional
policymakers not only the inefficiency of the go-it-alone strategy but also the lack
5
Most intra-regional trade agreements of Asian countries are FTAs, the effect of which is to eliminate
trade barriers between members. Following the Japanese, the term Economic Partnership Agreement
(EPA) is also used, which intends to imply that the scope of the agreement is broader than the elimination
of barriers of trade in goods.
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This has been done at the Chinese initiative, with Japan trying to follow. Beijing is increasingly driving
East Asias agenda. Chinas suggestion to extend invitation to India, New Zealand, and Australia, but not
to the USA for the East Asian Summit meeting in November 2005 in Malaysia was accepted by the
members of ASEAN?3, and it reflects Chinas growing influence over East Asias emerging regional
architecture.
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114
Economic Complementation Agreements (ECAs) basically cover trade of goods although they give the
possibilities of future negotiation of other areas.
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115
this way, Mexico and Chile have been converting into hubs of FTAs in Latin
America from mid 1990s.
The third stage of integration started from the end of the 1990s, with a greater
emphasis on inter-regional FTAs. By the end of 1990s, both Mexico and Chile
started to look for establishing FTAs with extra-regional countries. This trend can
be considered as the new trade policy of these countries in order to diversify
economic links with major extra-regional countries like European or Asian
economies. Mexico and Chile are assumed to be hubs that involve not only Latin
America, but also inter-regional FTAs connecting existing or newly establishing
integration schemes in other regions. For instance, Chile formed FTAs with Canada,
the US, and Korea. It signed Association Agreement with EU in 2002. Mexico
formed FTA with EU and Israel by the end of 2000. The two countries showed also
strong interests in forming bilateral framework with Asian countries. For instance,
Chile signed FTA with Korea in 2002 and this is the first FTA between Asia and
Latin America. Japanese government has already started negotiation with Mexican
government about future economic cooperation that covers FTA between the two
countries.
Other negotiations are ongoing, focusing on trade relationship with US. Recently,
some of the regions countries such as Colombia, Costa Rica, Panama, and Peru
centered their trade links and integration with US. The Dominican republicCentral
AmericaUSA FTA has come into effect in all member countries, except in Costa
Rica, where it is in the process of being ratified. The Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela withdrew from the ANDEAN community concluded negotiations for a
FTA with US. Table 2 illustrates effective regional arrangements in Latin America.
2.4 Driving forces of the recent regionalism in Latin America
Latin America regionalism in the 1990s can be explained by several factors (Hosono
and Nishijima 2003). The first factor is the economic liberalization of the 1980s.
Latin American countries started radical policy reforms in the middle of the 1980s,
leaving behind interventionist policies that were responsible for the 1980s economic
crises. The upshots of these policy reforms were seen mostly in trade and capital
liberalization. Secondly, there is an increased regionalism of the US. US foreign
trade policy had been based on a mix of multilateralism and bilateralism until the
end of the 1980s. From then on, the US showed an inclination towards regionalism
with the formation of NAFTA and APEC. In response to these changes in the US,
Latin American countries adopted different postures. Some countries expressed
strong interest about joining a FTA of the Americas under the US leadership. Other
countries, such as Chile, started a negotiation to join NAFTA. The Southern Cone
countries, such as Brazil and Argentina, formed a sub-regional integration i.e.,
MERCOSUR, to counterbalance against the regionalism of the US. In addition,
Mexico and Chile enhanced their bilateral intra- and extra-regional FTAs. The
ANDEAN community is recently going through a period of adjustment and
redefinition following the withdrawal of Venezuela, the extension of membership to
Chile and the bilateral trade agreements between Colombia and Peru with US.
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123
2002
2003
2003
2003
2004
2006
MexicoMERCOSUR
ChileEuropean Communities
PeruMERCOSUR
MERCOSURIndia
ChileEFTA
ChileArgentina
1991
2001
MexicoCentral America
Bilateral agreements
2001
MexicoEFTA
1997
BoliviaMERCOSUR
1999
1996
ChileMERCOSUR
2000
1995
MexicoEuropean Communities
1994
MERCOSUREuropean Communities
1988
1991/2005
1981
1961
1973/1997
Year of
in force
Multi-countries agreements
Intra-regional
Cooperative Agreement
Customs union
Partial scope
Customs union
Type of agreement
Implemented
Signed
Signed
Signed
Signed
Signed
Signed
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Status
116
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
2002
2002
ChileCosta Rica
ChileEl Salvador
2003
2002
MexicoBrazil
MexicoUruguay
2001
MexicoHonduras
2002
2001
MexicoGuatemala
2003
2001
MexicoEl Salvador
ChileKorea
2001
MexicoCuba
Costa RicaCanada
2000
MexicoIsrael
1997
ChileCanada
1998
1996
MexicoPeru
1998
1995
MexicoCosta Rica
ChilePeru
1995
ChileEcuador
MexicoNicaragua
1994
1993
ChileVenezuela
1994/1995
1993
ChileBolivia
MexicoBolivia
1992/1998
ChileColombia
1991
ChileMexico
Year of
in force
MexicoArgentina
Intra-regional
Table 2 continued
Type of agreement
Signed
Signed
Signed
Implemented
Implemented
Signed
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Implemented
Status
123
123
Sources: WTO web data and various info from the web
2003
2004
ChileUS
Year of
in force
El SalvadorPanama
Intra-regional
Table 2 continued
Type of agreement
Signed
Signed
Status
118
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
119
123
120
Table 3 East Asia and Latin America intra-regional trade in various years
Year Share of intra-regional exports in East
Asia to the world (%)
ASEAN
NE Asia
East Asia
ANDEAN
1985 18.7
23.3
34.2
2.6
1990 19.0
27.8
39.8
4.2
1995 24.9
34.5
48.7
2000 23.0
34.5
2005 25.2
39.2
MERCOSUR
LAIA
NAFTA
LAC
5.5
10.0
42.9
46.1
8.9
10.9
41.3
44.5
12.1
20.5
17.2
46.0
50.5
47.3
9.1
20.9
13.1
55.7
58.8
50.5
8.2
12.9
13.2
55.8
57.2
Notes: ASEAN includes Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam
due to missing data for Brunei, Laos, and Myanmar. Cambodia and Vietnam are missing data in 1985
1995
NE Asia includes China, Hong Kong, Japan, Macao, Korea Rep., and Taiwan
East Asia includes those countries in ASEAN and NE Asia
ANDEAN includes Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela
MERCOSUR includes Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay (Venezuela is excluded due to new
member in 2006)
LAIA includes those countries in ANDEAN and MERCOSUR plus Chile and Mexico
NAFTA includes Canada, Mexico, and US
LAC includes all countries in LAIA and NAFTA
Source: Computations by authors based on UN COMTRADE statistics
Asia integrate, while de jure trade agreements do not seem to lead to more intraregional trade integration in Latin America.
Generally one may surmise that trade integration may tend to occur to a greater
extent for manufactured goods. Furthermore, given the rising importance of trade in
components and parts, it is expected that integration via trade in components and
parts should be even more intense (Yi 2003; Ng and Yeats 2003). Global and
regional production sharing and vertical specialization have become increasingly
important. In the Table 4 we wish to highlight intra-regional trade of manufactured
goods and components and parts within these two regions for various years. Table 4
shows clearly that for both manufactured goods and components and parts, intraregional trade is relatively more pronounced in East Asia than in Latin America.
48.5% of East Asian exports of manufactured goods were shipped to other East
Asian economies in 2005. The corresponding share for Latin America (LAIA) was
only 17.1%. However, if we compare ASEAN to ANDEAN and MERCOSUR
countries, results are different: 25.1% of ASEAN exports of manufactured goods
were shipped to other East Asian economies in 2005; the corresponding share for
ANDEAN countries was 34.3% and 20.2% for MERCOSUR. As for parts and
components, the share of East Asian intra-regional exports of components and parts
amounted to 59.3% in 2005, as compared to 14.00% in Latin America (LAIA). But
if we compare ASEAN to ANDEAN and MARCOSUR countries, results are
different: 29.6% of ASEAN exports of parts and components were shipped to other
East Asian economies in 2005, while the corresponding share for ANDEAN
countries was 39.5% and 22.6% for MERCOSUR.
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Table 4 East Asia and Latin America intra-regional trade of manufactured goods and parts and components in various years
Year
Share of intra-regional exports in East Share of intra-regional exports in Latin America to the
Asia to the world (%)
world (%)
ASEAN
NE Asia
East Asia
ANDEAN
MERCOSUR
LAIA
NAFTA
LAC
1985 22.1
19.0
25.7
13.5
7.8
18.4
46.7
50.9
1990 19.9
25.5
35.4
14.6
10.5
17.0
43.1
47.0
1995 26.3
32.3
46.0
39.3
26.5
19.6
47.8
53.7
2000 23.3
33.0
44.9
33.2
27.0
13.0
55.5
59.8
2005 25.1
38.3
48.5
34.3
20.2
17.1
54.3
58.9
1985 22.8
23.2
31.2
9.5
8.0
17.3
41.3
46.1
1990 27.0
32.1
44.4
12.8
12.4
16.8
45.3
49.3
1995 32.1
34.3
51.9
40.1
34.2
17.5
45.9
51.3
2000 29.0
38.0
54.3
39.4
30.2
10.0
53.0
57.5
2005 29.6
45.8
59.3
39.5
22.6
14.0
53.0
58.0
Manufactured goods
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123
Cambodia
China
Exporting country
25
10
17
42
83
682
765
593
1,410
2,798
Korea Rep.
Malaysia
Philippines
Singapore
Taiwan,
China
Thailand
Vietnam
ASEAN
NE Asia
East Asia
(12)
EU (27)
LAC (13)
World
536
761,953
192,173
145,613
314,393
260,117
54,276
5,644
7,819
16,550
16,632
4,688
10,606
35,108
83,986
8,350
124,473
292,119
53,088
42,942
176,209
159,039
17,170
1,308
3,001
6,769
6,046
2,635
2,419
6,540
15,304
1,265
130,426
497
Hong
Kong
85,660
11,478
10,347
51,470
35,764
15,706
678
2,246
2,475
7,837
1,419
3,431
7,086
18,049
1,492
6,662
94
Indonesia
0.0
Cambodia
China
15.0
35.7
13.9
1.8
2.6
25
Hong Kong,
China
Japan
616
China
Indonesia
13
Cambodia
Partner
(Importer)
21.9
2.2
594,941
158,201
87,819
281,602
206,243
75,359
3,592
22,451
43,578
18,436
9,057
12,531
46,630
9,214
35,960
80,074
78
Japan
16.9
4.0
284,418
54,543
44,354
139,573
112,336
27,237
3,432
3,381
10,863
7,407
3,220
4,608
24,027
5,046
15,531
61,915
144
Korea
2.5
3.1
140,963
29,879
16,614
75,542
39,380
36,162
1,160
7,586
3,912
22,009
1,974
4,739
13,184
3,322
8,242
9,302
109
Malaysia
1.1
0.2
41,255
7,961
7,014
25,034
17,903
7,131
312
1,169
1,888
2,707
2,459
1,391
7,206
476
3,341
4,077
Philippines
5.4
8.5
229,652
26,411
27,907
141,637
70,839
70,798
4,421
9,402
8,976
4,184
30,385
8,052
12,532
22,103
21,522
19,757
303
Singapore
11.2
9.3
189,393
33,272
22,124
118,127
91,655
26,472
4,057
3,718
7,656
4,220
4,154
5,575
14,481
2,336
30,721
40,879
331
Taiwan
2.5
25.6
110,110
19,702
15,019
57,662
35,235
22,426
2,357
2,694
7,459
2,050
5,685
2,250
15,029
3,960
6,128
9,134
915
Thailand
0.9
15.6
32,447
6,601
5,547
15,200
9,538
5,662
863
935
1,917
829
1,028
664
4,340
469
353
3,246
556
Vietnam
14.3
55.6
642,885
103,442
83,041
367,310
209,343
157,968
8,971
21,284
20,884
41,939
10,459
42,998
24,207
70,366
30,332
41,694
52,192
1,985
ASEAN
85.7
44.4
2,122,824
491,277
342,851
1,029,904
829,390
200,514
18,032
40,370
77,760
56,177
23,820
34,319
93,852
137,798
26,211
206,685
313,294
1,586
NE Asia
100.0
100.0
2,765,709
594,719
425,892
1,397,214
1,038,733
358,482
27,003
61,654
98,644
98,116
34,279
77,316
118,060
208,164
56,543
248,379
365,486
3,571
East
Asia-(12)
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Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.2
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.2
0.1
Philippines
Singapore
Taiwan,
China
Thailand
Vietnam
ASEAN
NE Asia
East Asia
(12)
EU (27)
LAC (13)
World
27.6
32.3
34.2
22.5
25.0
15.1
20.9
12.7
16.8
17.0
13.7
13.7
29.7
40.3
14.8
50.1
China
206
-77
Hong Kong,
China
Indonesia
-328
Cambodia
China
-87
112,248
509
0.0
0.0
0.0
Japan
Malaysia
0.0
Indonesia
Korea Rep.
0.2
Cambodia
Exporting country
Hong Kong,
China
Partner
(Importer)
Table 5 continued
-659
-4,540
1,201
819
93
3.1
10.6
488
1.9
2.4
3.7
3.4
4.4
2.5
3.6
2.5
8.0
4.1
4.4
6.0
8.7
0.6
Indonesia
8.9
10.1
12.6
15.3
4.8
4.8
4.9
6.9
6.2
7.7
3.1
5.5
7.4
2.2
Hong
Kong
-11,603
34,389
-28,403
-27
21.5
26.6
20.6
20.2
19.9
21.0
13.3
36.4
44.2
18.8
26.4
16.2
39.5
16.3
14.5
Japan
-3,139
13,488
23,267
138
10.3
9.2
10.4
10.0
10.8
7.6
12.7
5.5
11.0
7.5
9.4
6.0
11.5
8.9
6.3
Korea
-1,052
5,390
-3,871
101
5.1
5.0
3.9
5.4
3.8
10.1
4.3
12.3
4.0
22.4
5.8
4.0
6.3
5.9
3.3
Malaysia
-616
1,319
943
1.5
1.3
1.6
1.8
1.7
2.0
1.2
1.9
1.9
2.8
3.2
1.2
3.5
0.8
1.3
Philippines
11,656
17,314
-759
203
8.3
4.4
6.6
10.1
6.8
19.7
16.4
15.3
9.1
12.2
39.3
6.8
6.0
39.1
8.7
Singapore
-2,202
28,834
20,951
326
6.8
5.6
5.2
8.5
8.8
7.4
15.0
6.0
7.8
12.3
5.4
4.7
7.0
4.1
12.4
Taiwan
832
4,626
-2,024
883
4.0
3.3
3.5
4.1
3.4
6.3
8.7
2.7
7.6
6.0
7.4
1.9
7.2
7.0
2.5
Thailand
-231
-882
-2,653
395
1.2
1.1
1.3
1.1
0.9
1.6
1.4
0.9
2.0
2.4
1.3
0.6
2.1
0.8
0.1
Vietnam
10,510
29,175
-7,873
1,682
23.2
17.4
19.5
26.3
20.2
44.1
33.2
34.5
21.2
42.7
30.5
55.6
20.5
33.8
53.6
16.8
ASEAN
-17,689
188,960
11,275
1,434
76.8
82.6
80.5
73.7
79.8
55.9
66.8
65.5
78.8
57.3
69.5
44.4
79.5
66.2
46.4
83.2
NE Asia
-7,179
218,134
3,402
3,115
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
East
Asia-(12)
123
123
-4,016
735
LAC (13)
World
102,001
110,889
71,641
-79,390
27,959
-8,042
0.1
0.2
0.4
0.3
Korea Rep.
Malaysia
Hong Kong,
China
Japan
7.1
China
Indonesia
0.1
Cambodia
1.8
1.3
2.3
2.7
1.5
5.3
4.3
0.8
1.1
1.3
0.6
8.2
3.8
4.1
5.1
0.6
1.4
2.8
5,809
4,488
18,102
18,514
-122
239
-1,201
1,134
-1,634
1,097
1,283
4,217
11,143
Indonesia
34,689
20,169
-65,096
-43,869
-21,227
809
-3,049
-14,874
-11,374
-2,506
-4,935
-6,723
-17,732
Hong
Kong
492
1,384
EU (27)
-495
-1,114
NE Asia
East Asia
(12)
-20,211
-620
ASEAN
-6,173
3,091
-214
-126
-58,131
118
Thailand
-239
Taiwan,
China
Vietnam
-132
Singapore
-8,182
-9,487
-68
-2
Malaysia
-16,421
-41,713
-59
-74
Japan
Korea Rep.
Philippines
China
Exporting country
Cambodia
Partner
(Importer)
Table 5 continued
2.0
3.9
2.1
2.0
2.5
0.3
79,074
69,776
28,976
58,986
53,715
5,271
-952
6,893
25,514
11,741
1,357
-2,138
22,215
Japan
1.5
2.1
2.4
1.8
4.0
1.3
23,183
14,849
16,940
17,211
15,193
2,018
2,738
692
2,813
2,089
904
-1,403
-24,376
Korea
1.7
2.3
3.2
1.9
1.2
2.0
26,379
13,045
3,260
1,768
-5,296
8,080
139
1,544
-2,419
8,594
-1,246
-946
-3,450
Malaysia
-510
5.6
1.7
4.3
1.6
2.6
1.8
0.5
-8,233
-2,280
3,121
-3,936
-1,744
-2,192
-523
12.5
1.7
1.3
13.1
3.0
1.6
3.4
29,602
552
4,612
23,896
4,959
18,937
2,604
1,888
-4,347
-1,158
-1,754
-464
3,050
-548
-6,702
Singapore
608
-995
-1,258
Philippines
2.1
1.5
1.9
1.7
5.3
3.9
4.5
7,801
7,622
4,599
16,151
10,697
5,454
3,368
851
2,716
1,435
-1,039
-7,629
-31,460
Taiwan
4.9
1.0
3.3
4.9
1.8
1.5
21.2
-8,054
8,528
4,211
-10,195
-11,848
3,022
1,464
-1,808
2,078
168
-2,404
-1,622
-11,020
Thailand
3.0
1.0
3.3
2.0
0.4
1.8
43.8
-4,314
5,082
2,950
-13,090
-9,569
-3,521
-1,511
-3,369
-2,565
619
-228
-2,930
266
Vietnam
6.3
1.9
2.7
6.4
2.1
1.5
7.9
64,074
32,121
1.5
2.2
1.6
1.7
3.2
2.7
1.9
204,017
237,825
142,325
-52,138
23,135
31,720
15,431
-28,695
9,053
-786
-44,677
5,289
-6,992
-19,003
-33,849
-89,988
NE Asia
-5,479
23,584
3,798
-3
-12,802
5,183
172
2,242
-2,899
-11,079
ASEAN
2.6
2.1
1.8
2.8
2.9
2.4
3.3
268,092
269,946
165,460
-36,707
26,241
-5,111
12,851
-790
-57,479
10,473
-6,820
-16,761
-36,748
-101,068
East
Asia-(12)
124
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
0.9
3.9
3.2
1.7
4.4
ASEAN
NE Asia
East Asia
(12)
EU (27)
LAC (13)
2.2
1.6
4.8
5.5
2.1
2.2
1.1
0.8
1.4
1.2
China
1.6
1.2
7.0
8.8
1.7
1.3
1.1
0.8
1.3
1.8
Hong
Kong
1.2
1.0
7.0
6.7
5.4
2.4
2.9
1.0
5.8
3.4
Indonesia
2.3
1.2
5.5
5.6
3.7
1.8
4.2
2.6
2.0
3.1
Japan
1.7
1.3
5.7
6.4
2.8
3.6
1.3
1.4
1.6
2.3
Korea
1.8
1.0
6.2
4.5
7.5
2.4
6.0
1.0
9.9
2.8
Malaysia
1.7
1.4
7.1
7.0
5.1
2.2
3.2
1.6
4.1
Philippines
Notes: EU(27) includes European Union 25 members plus new members of Bulgaria and Romania
0.7
4.5
0.0
Taiwan,
China
Vietnam
0.2
Thailand
0.2
Singapore
Cambodia
Exporting country
Philippines
Partner
(Importer)
Table 5 continued
1.0
1.0
7.2
5.0
9.1
5.7
4.6
1.4
3.7
Singapore
1.5
1.0
7.3
7.8
4.1
6.4
2.2
2.6
4.5
Taiwan
1.5
1.1
6.1
5.2
6.0
6.4
0.9
4.3
3.8
Thailand
1.8
1.4
5.5
4.7
5.1
3.0
1.0
3.7
5.2
Vietnam
1.4
1.1
6.6
5.3
7.2
4.1
3.7
1.2
4.1
3.3
ASEAN
2.0
1.3
5.6
6.3
2.8
2.5
2.1
1.3
1.7
2.3
NE
Asia
1.9
1.3
5.9
6.1
3.8
2.9
2.5
1.3
2.2
2.5
East
Asia-(12)
123
126
highlight their trade relationship, we also provide the overall trade matrix for the
region. The overall East Asia-East Asia trade index is 5.9, as compared to the Latin
American (LAIA) trade index of 3.6 (Table 6). For an in-depth analysis, we
compare ASEAN index to ANDEAN and MERCOSUR countries. The ASEAN
index is 7.2 while the indices for ANDEAN and MERCOSUR are respectively 13.5
and 12.6. These results show that trade integration is higher among Latin American
countries participating to regional agreements. However, the regional point of view
highlights a more pronounced integration in East Asia (5.9), with more recent and
less regional trade agreements, compared to Latin America, including US and
Canada (5.0).
Yet another way to examine the characteristics of recent regional trade
agreements is to note that one of the important motives of the so-called New
Regionalism, particularly for smaller economies, is to design rules to attract more
foreign direct investment and to strengthen institutions in order to participate in
global and regional production sharing (Ethier 1998, Salazar-Xirinachs and Jose
2005). Thus one way to evaluate the performance of FTAs of East Asian and Latin
American countries is to examine the competitiveness of East Asian and Latin
American countries in items such as components and parts, using the revealed comparative advantage (RCA) index. The index is defined as RCAjk = (Xjk/Xk)/(Xwj/Xw),
where j indicates the product value and k home country. Xjk and Xwk represent the
product value of j exported by country k and the world; Xk and Xw are total exports
of j by country k and the world. If the index has a value greater than one, country k
has a comparative advantage in the production of product j. If the index has a value
smaller than one, the industry of the country has a comparative disadvantage.
Suppose we go further and differentiate the RCA index for exports from that for
imports. When the RCA index is greater than 1 for exports of components and
parts,8 we can reasonably argue that the economy has a comparative advantage in
processing. When the RCA index is greater than one for imports, we say that the
economy has comparative advantage in assembly. The RCA indices for East
Asian and Latin American imports and exports of parts and components for various
years are shown in Tables 7 and 8.
From Table 7, it is clear that East Asian revealed comparative advantage in
processed exports of components and parts has been gaining over the years, starting
way back from 1985. The percentage of products that the East Asian economies
have comparative advantage in assembly has declined over time. The results for
Latin America are given in Table 8.
Except for Mexico and, to a lesser extent, Brazil, that show a rising comparative
advantage in processing, other Latin American economies have not shown
significant increases in the percentage of components and parts that they have
comparative advantage. Our result from this section is as follows: East Asia has
more intense integration with itself compared to the case of Latin America. East
Asia also has a growing comparative advantage in the processing of exports of
components and parts. Not withstanding the recent regionalism in East Asia and the
8
The list of products that are classified as components and parts is available upon request. The list is
compiled from the UN COMTRADE statistics by the authors.
123
Argentina
Exporting country
361
265
1,158
509
599
862
510
4,865
2,114
7,699
15,467
6,023
20,333
40,106
Colombia
Ecuador
Mexico
Paraguay
Peru
Uruguay
Venezuela
USA?Canada
ANDEAN
MERCOSUR
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
World
2,797
2,260
448
1,832
1,305
466
428
159
126
22
20
179
41
1,016
264
Bolivia
22.6
22.7
Argentina
Bolivia
Brazil
3.6
1.6
6,328
4,497
Chile
Bolivia
Brazil
380
Argentina
Partner (Importer)
34.4
61.0
116,129
49,823
28,719
25,166
11,720
5,773
24,657
2,214
848
932
960
4,062
644
1,405
3,611
579
9,912
Brazil
6.2
12.5
3.9
38,596
13,349
8,899
6,032
2,467
1,983
7,317
359
72
725
40
1,582
341
347
1,729
211
626
Chile
0.5
3.0
0.3
21,190
14,436
9,761
5,286
197
4,182
9,150
2,098
710
611
1,324
296
141
50
47
Colombia
0.3
0.5
0.3
9,869
6,965
5,059
1,964
135
1,470
5,001
122
869
58
471
301
89
42
Ecuador
3.2
2.2
4.1
214,207
193,910
188,072
5,838
1,642
3,528
188,072
1,289
66
345
14
309
1,548
668
890
37
672
Mexico
1.1
1.3
0.6
1,626
1,018
63
960
865
60
58
451
20
30
312
22
102
Paraguay
1.6
9.2
0.3
17,114
9,349
6,611
3,070
514
1,095
6,279
299
332
295
347
1,129
453
155
54
Peru
123
123
8.5
32.0
3.6
0.6
5.3
15.6
6.5
0.7
2.0
2.2
Peru
Uruguay
Venezuela
USA?Canada
ANDEAN
MERCOSUR
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
World
304
202
419
Colombia
Ecuador
Mexico
-4,297
3,825
Brazil
Chile
80
Argentina
Bolivia
0.9
20.3
4.7
Ecuador
Paraguay
3.1
Mexico
27.6
Colombia
Argentina
Exporting country
Chile
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
-31
-9
121
-122
503
-127
0.2
0.2
0.0
0.8
2.6
1.2
0.1
1.1
0.1
1.8
0.9
0.0
0.1
1.6
0.3
Bolivia
3,185
548
1,253
1,838
-593
3,324
6.5
4.9
3.1
10.6
23.8
14.5
3.1
15.7
31.5
13.3
38.2
3.1
11.5
12.2
22.2
Brazil
820
70
-2,069
173
-4,178
2.2
1.3
1.0
2.5
5.0
5.0
0.9
2.5
2.7
10.3
1.6
1.2
6.1
3.0
Chile
-1,146
795
-81
-1,242
-142
-364
1.2
1.4
1.1
2.2
0.4
10.5
1.2
14.9
0.3
10.1
0.1
0.5
23.6
1.8
Colombia
-245
-912
-109
-596
-304
0.6
0.7
0.6
0.8
0.3
3.7
0.6
0.9
0.1
12.4
0.0
0.0
4.1
1.8
Ecuador
203
873
-1,086
-4,324
-631
12.0
19.0
20.5
2.5
3.3
8.9
24.0
9.2
2.4
4.9
0.6
5.5
13.5
4.1
Mexico
-12
-1
-9
-547
12
-560
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.4
1.8
0.2
0.0
0.1
16.8
0.3
0.0
0.1
0.0
0.2
Paraguay
-32
-619
-426
514
-575
47
-671
1.0
0.9
0.7
1.3
1.0
2.7
0.8
2.1
0.2
0.0
0.3
5.3
3.0
6.9
Peru
128
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
666
2,157
11,418
NAFTA
LAC (13)
World
50.8
6.1
Venezuela
Paraguay
Uruguay
Mexico
14.4
1.6
38.1
Ecuador
Peru
4.8
7.7
Colombia
22.4
41.0
Chile
46.2
Bolivia
Brazil
Argentina
-3,940
1,910
MERCOSUR
1,605
ANDEAN
LAIA (11)
247
USA?Canada
27.0
1.4
43.3
23.8
0.4
1.3
34.2
5.3
51.6
9.1
17.3
7.7
24.8
2.0
6.5
6.5
11.4
24.3
33.4
39,693
454
37.0
23,037
13,316
12,905
4,293
3,589
10,131
1,925
338
456
631
Brazil
511
56
425
372
205
87
120
-4
303
474
Uruguay
Venezuela
-1
-26
54
545
Bolivia
Paraguay
Argentina
Exporting country
Peru
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
4.4
4.4
18.0
3.1
2.3
10.4
4.8
6.4
26.6
6.4
8,738
-3,243
3,023
-5,446
-6,353
86
2,203
223
-29
-382
-77
Chile
47.2
0.8
32.2
0.3
1.6
73.4
5.1
0.9
11.5
0.9
-14
1,756
1,581
-971
-1,636
1,892
2,727
878
-21
360
-9
Colombia
5.9
0.8
84.6
0.2
0.3
25.6
11.2
1.3
4.0
1.7
261
1,002
2,795
-2,038
-954
-731
3,041
-328
-49
504
-4
Ecuador
2.9
0.7
1.5
0.2
1.7
3.9
1.1
0.6
0.8
1.2
-7,612
58,185
62,930
-4,745
-5,147
1,488
62,930
505
-197
-100
Mexico
2.7
656.0
11.7
0.2
5.1
0.5
6.6
27.3
67.3
24.5
-1,472
-762
-71
-703
-719
37
-58
388
19
Paraguay
8.3
0.9
0.1
1.1
20.3
10.8
24.1
3.8
44.2
1.2
4,612
1,735
3,817
-2,114
-1,367
-1,229
3,849
-230
-40
-82
Peru
123
123
18.5
10.4
1.3
4.4
MERCOSUR
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
33
876
USA?Canada
139
Mexico
Venezuela
10
Ecuador
Uruguay
14
Colombia
56
83
Chile
37
458
Brazil
Peru
Bolivia
Paraguay
267
Argentina
Uruguay
7.0
1.4
17.7
45.1
27.5
1.2
Bolivia
24,645
151
470
296
1,013
103
187
18
Venezuela
Exporting country
8.7
Partner (Importer)
0.9
ANDEAN
Argentina
Exporting country
USA?Canada
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
302,204
567
20
218
2,690
132
369
340
912
13
144
Canada
3.7
2.1
5.9
9.7
8.2
1.6
Brazil
211,417
6,408
354
2,289
896
120,048
1,979
5,415
5,198
15,345
218
4,100
USA
3.0
2.0
4.2
6.2
8.5
1.5
Chile
45,503
2,677
20
1,856
29
1,491
1,919
2,010
1,871
1,887
218
425
ANDEAN
5.9
4.0
6.8
0.9
32.6
3.3
Colombia
30,457
2,767
2,161
1,588
1,525
5,363
926
1,780
8,221
7,099
985
10,281
MERCOSUR
6.1
4.4
5.4
1.3
24.6
3.9
Ecuador
271,350
7,091
2,318
4,514
1,609
8,436
3,495
5,686
10,759
11,605
1,451
12,004
LAIA(11)
7.8
7.6
0.7
0.7
2.7
6.8
Mexico
701,693
8,264
439
2,853
918
122,738
2,420
7,333
6,206
17,147
268
4,916
NAFTA
5.4
0.3
16.0
51.4
6.1
0.3
Paraguay
784,971
14,066
2,692
7,021
2,512
131,174
5,606
11,470
16,297
27,862
1,683
16,248
LAC(13)
4.7
3.3
4.9
2.9
10.6
2.8
Peru
130
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
781
1,103
1,015
1,979
3,405
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
World
55,487
26,894
25,115
2,249
211
1,466
Venezuela
360,136
307,618
304,894
5,414
1,084
1,300
Canada
0.1
0.2
0.1
2.2
0.5
0.2
0.1
0.2
Colombia
Ecuador
Mexico
Paraguay
Peru
Uruguay
Venezuela
USA?Canada
ANDEAN
1.6
0.5
Chile
0.5
1.6
Brazil
LAIA (11)
0.3
Bolivia
MERCOSUR
1.6
Argentina
1.0
0.4
3.7
3.1
0.1
2.2
0.2
0.4
5.3
8.8
0.6
0.7
0.3
0.1
2.3
2.2
3.3
38.5
4.0
0.7
3.1
0.3
2.1
2.4
3.2
2.1
3.3
0.8
0.9
99
MERCOSUR
Uruguay
Exporting country
ANDEAN
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
68.6
42.0
40.9
26.9
45.6
13.1
32.6
35.6
91.5
35.3
47.2
31.9
55.1
13.0
25.2
904,339
373,667
331,465
162,250
20,695
16,310
USA
6.1
4.8
21.8
5.8
19.0
0.7
26.4
1.2
1.1
34.2
17.5
11.5
6.8
13.0
2.6
106,459
59,905
46,994
14,402
2,361
8,680
ANDEAN
18.0
42.7
20.2
3.9
19.7
80.3
22.6
60.7
4.1
16.5
15.5
50.4
25.5
58.6
63.3
161,265
73,153
35,820
42,696
21,066
8,046
MERCOSUR
29.1
55.8
55.8
34.6
50.4
86.1
64.3
64.0
6.4
62.3
49.6
66.0
41.7
86.2
73.9
520,527
340,317
279,786
68,967
27,536
22,237
LAIA(11)
73.3
47.5
53.0
89.4
58.8
16.3
40.6
36.5
93.6
43.2
63.9
38.1
61.5
16.0
30.3
1,478,683
875,196
824,431
173,503
23,421
21,138
NAFTA
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
1,785,002
1,021,602
916,145
236,632
49,314
39,847
LAC(13)
123
123
0.2
0.2
World
-226
-905
682
-311
-474
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
World
-1,556
-157
-850
17,509
-211
594
Venezuela
USA?Canada
ANDEAN
-108
-45
32
Peru
Uruguay
MERCOSUR
-31
36
Paraguay
141
33,639
12,383
16,435
-5,126
-2,269
-1,074
89
Ecuador
-1,384
Mexico
14
12
Chile
Colombia
-366
Bolivia
Brazil
-205
-1,808
-519
-386
3.1
2.6
2.7
Venezuela
Argentina
0.1
LAC (13)
Uruguay
Exporting country
NAFTA
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
45,700
107,282
112,250
-14,324
-2,007
-1,928
121,607
-943
-88
-903
-4
-9,357
37
-112
-1,033
-1,685
-7
-230
20.2
30.1
33.3
Canada
-766,390
-174,758
-126,521
-98,383
-9,097
-37,673
-76,375
-27,556
-378
-2,831
844
-50,146
-3,780
-3,431
-1,467
-9,091
-75
-472
50.7
36.6
36.2
USA
38,952
17,387
24,684
-9,825
-5,854
-1,418
27,212
440
-158
730
-126
-2,528
308
-2,601
-24
-3,718
-295
-1,852
6.0
5.9
5.1
ANDEAN
49,165
24,121
14,594
13,207
-1,216
5,074
10,914
2,188
1,030
1,051
720
3,681
764
1,568
5,668
-5,211
-497
2,245
9.0
7.2
3.9
MERCOSUR
89,244
96,450
105,231
-6,808
-18,570
5,231
103,258
3,356
645
1,299
523
1,973
1,346
-157
4,558
-15,321
-612
-4,416
29.2
33.3
30.5
LAIA(11)
-728,301
-9,291
48,659
-117,453
-16,251
-38,112
108,161
-27,994
-664
-3,835
845
-59,502
-3,539
-2,669
-3,587
-15,100
-75
-1,332
82.8
85.7
90.0
NAFTA
-631,446
28,973
90,960
-119,516
-29,674
-34,370
148,490
-25,143
179
-2,436
1,363
-57,530
-2,397
-3,700
2,058
-26,097
-695
-5,118
100.0
100.0
100.0
LAC(13)
132
Econ Change Restruct (2009) 42:105137
Uruguay
Venezuela
Exporting country
4.7
2.0
4.8
22.2
8.8
2.6
5.0
USA?Canada
ANDEAN
MERCOSUR
LAIA (11)
NAFTA
LAC (13)
4.2
3.9
1.1
0.4
4.4
3.4
0.1
2.6
0.2
0.5
6.3
9.8
0.7
0.5
0.5
0.1
2.3
Mexico
Venezuela
3.6
Ecuador
Uruguay
2.1
Colombia
49.3
8.9
Chile
10.5
19.1
Brazil
Peru
6.6
Bolivia
Paraguay
30.7
Argentina
Partner (Importer)
Table 6 continued
7.4
7.3
0.4
0.3
0.6
6.5
0.8
0.1
0.6
0.1
0.4
0.4
0.5
0.3
0.4
0.2
0.2
Canada
3.6
3.2
4.9
2.2
3.0
1.8
3.4
0.9
2.4
3.0
7.5
2.6
3.2
2.1
2.4
1.2
1.8
USA
4.9
3.8
3.7
2.1
13.5
3.3
12.0
0.4
16.8
0.8
0.8
21.2
10.1
6.4
2.5
10.0
1.6
ANDEAN
3.9
1.9
7.2
12.6
8.2
1.5
8.2
31.7
9.5
28.4
1.9
6.7
5.9
18.6
6.2
29.8
25.0
MERCOSUR
5.7
4.6
3.6
5.1
7.0
4.0
6.5
10.5
8.3
9.3
0.9
7.9
5.8
7.6
3.2
13.6
9.0
LAIA(11)
5.1
4.8
3.2
1.5
2.4
3.7
2.7
0.7
1.9
1.9
4.7
1.9
2.7
1.5
1.6
0.9
1.3
NAFTA
5.0
4.4
3.6
2.7
3.7
3.4
3.8
3.6
3.8
4.2
4.1
3.7
3.4
3.3
2.2
4.6
3.6
LAC(13)
123
134
Table 7 The percentage of parts and components products with comparative advantage in East Asian
countries
Country
Cambodia
Exportsproduction operations
(% of products with RCA [ 1)
Importsassembly operations
(% of products with RCA [ 1)
1985
1985
1995
2005
1995
2005
2.7
6.7
China
12.0
20.0
30.7
40.0
44.0
34.7
25.3
22.7
33.3
41.3
44.0
36.0
0.0
8.0
9.3
58.7
50.7
42.7
Japan
40.0
46.7
42.7
6.7
8.0
16.0
Korea Rep.
10.7
16.0
26.7
28.0
37.3
21.3
Malaysia
8.0
13.3
20.0
52.0
36.0
37.3
Philippines
5.3
4.0
17.3
34.7
36.0
25.3
Singapore
18.7
20.0
34.7
36.0
41.3
41.3
Taiwan, China
34.7
22.7
34.7
40.0
44.0
21.3
Thailand
10.7
20.0
24.0
33.3
41.3
29.3
Vietnam
1.3
12.0
4.0
25.3
Indonesia
Average ASEAN
8.5
11.1
17.1
42.9
34.9
29.7
Average NE Asia
24.5
25.6
33.6
31.2
35.5
25.9
16.5
17.7
24.0
37.1
35.2
28.1
14.8
22.3
40.4
37.9
29.2
53.3
17.3
20.0
24.0
76.0
52.0
US
61.3
64.0
54.7
37.3
38.7
33.3
Germany
70.7
65.3
62.7
45.3
36.0
50.7
Mexico
12.0
22.7
29.3
66.7
41.3
38.7
Notes: Percentages based on the 75 products of parts and components from textiles and clothing and
machinery and equipment at SITC 4/5-digit level in revision 2
Due to the missing data, the 1995 data for Vietnam is replaced by 1997
Source: Computations based on UN COMTRADE statistics
absence of regional trade arrangement for the whole region, intra-regional trade
has expanded rapidly and has been deeper compared to Latin America.
To save space, we will not provide here the analysis of why integrating via the
markets first and engaging in formal trade agreements later may seem to be the
better economic and trade policy sequence.9 We will just state our conjecture
here: this sequence of integration strategy makes sense because it can enhance the
internal bargaining power of the outward-looking trade interests first, which then
tilt the implementation of the formal regional trade agreement to be more marketfriendly.
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135
Table 8 The percentage of parts and components products with comparative advantage in Latin
American countries
Country
Exportsproduction
Importsassembly operations
operations (% of products with (% of products with RCA [ 1)
RCA [ 1)
1985
1995
2005
1985
1995
2005
Argentina
1.3
9.3
10.7
32.0
36.0
38.7
Bolivia
0.0
0.0
2.7
44.0
22.7
24.0
Brazil
6.7
14.7
18.7
28.0
34.7
49.3
Chile
1.3
0.0
0.0
40.0
33.3
26.7
Colombia
4.0
4.0
4.0
30.7
34.7
32.0
Ecuador
0.0
1.3
0.0
45.3
34.7
25.3
Mexico
17.3
22.7
29.3
62.7
41.3
38.7
Paraguay
0.0
0.0
1.3
29.3
17.3
13.3
Peru
2.7
1.3
1.3
48.0
34.7
33.3
Uruguay
4.0
4.0
5.3
14.7
26.7
22.7
Venezuela
0.0
0.0
0.0
57.3
37.3
36.0
US
61.3
64.0
54.7
37.3
38.7
33.3
Canada
17.3
20.0
24.0
76.0
52.0
53.3
Average ANDEAN
1.3
1.3
1.6
45.1
32.8
30.1
Average MERCOSUR
3.0
7.0
9.0
26.0
28.7
31.0
3.4
5.2
6.7
39.3
32.1
30.9
2.0
3.5
4.4
36.9
31.2
30.1
32.0
35.6
36.0
58.7
44.0
41.8
8.9
10.9
11.7
41.9
34.2
32.8
China
12.0
20.0
30.7
40.0
44.0
34.7
Korea Rep.
10.7
16.0
26.7
28.0
37.3
21.3
8.0
13.3
20.0
52.0
36.0
37.3
16.5
17.7
24.0
37.1
35.2
28.1
Average NAFTA
Average above all countries (LAC)
Memo items: comparators
Malaysia
East Asia (12) average
Notes: Percentages based on the 75 products of parts and components from textiles and clothing and
machinery and equipment at SITC 4/5-digit level in revision 2
Due to the missing data, the 1985 data for Mexico is used 1986
Source: Computations based on UN COMTRADE statistics
4 Conclusion
In this paper, we examine the two channels of regional integration: integration via
markets versus integration by agreements. Since East Asia and Latin America are
two regions where PTAs have proliferated in recent years, we utilize the
experiences of these two areas to illustrate our results. We have three related
results in this paper. First, East Asia started their integration by primarily using
the markets, then by the 1990s, the region started to turn to more formal
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136
agreements. Complementary policies in the drive for integration via the markets
include business-friendly, trade-facilitating, FDI-friendly policies as well as
domestic policies such as an improvement of the infrastructure. Latin America, on
the other hand, has relied mainly on formal, de jure regional agreements for
integration. Second, using a variety of indicators, it seems that at least in terms of
the extent of intra-regional integrations and in terms of advancing comparative
advantage in the processing of components and parts, East and Southeast Asia has
been more intensely integrated. One major difference between the East Asian and
Latin American integration history and pattern is due to the structural differences
in trade and production between the two blocs. East Asian exports are
characterized by a large amount of manufactured products with increasingly a
growing share of exports of components and parts. Intrinsically trade of
manufactured goods have a high degree of two-way trade. Global production
sharing leads components and parts to be traded several times across national
boundaries. Market forces are the fundamental driving force behind such forms of
trade. Unlike East Asia, there is a large amount of Latin American trade that
involves agricultural products and natural resources. These items are often traded
in a conventional manner, from say, Venezuela to China. Regional trade
agreements can help, but only marginally. This leads us to the third and final
result of our paper. If the main objective is regional trade integration, then the
proper sequencing of the two forms of integration is first to develop integration
via the markets before engaging in more formal agreements. An argument in favor
of this sequence is that by developing the lobbying clout of the outward-looking
economic and trade interests first, this will enhance the internal bargaining power
of the outward-oriented constituency in the internal bargaining of trade policy,
thereby tilting the implementation of the regional trade agreement to be more in
line with the market signal.
Acknowledgments We are grateful to Patrick Low, Roberta Benini, and the participants of the
international seminar, particularly Ramon Torrent, Roberto Bouzas, and Pierre Sauve for very useful
comments. All findings in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessary reflect the views of the
World Trade Organization or The World Bank Group, its Executive Directors, or its staff.
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