Title: GEOG 3404 Economic Geography
1GEOG 3404Economic Geography
LECTURE 8 Regions and Economic Integration
- Dr. Zachary Klaas
- Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
- Carleton University
2Reading in the Dicken text
- For this lecture, Chapter 6 is the obvious
reference point in the Dicken text. The main
themes of this lecture are covered there in great
detail the involvement of the state in the
regulation of the economy, the creation of
regional trading blocs and the creation of
world-level bodies that govern and promote
economic exchange between nations. - When you read through the chapter, focus on
themes relating to the character of the
regulatory role played by the state, and the
effectiveness of regional economic integration as
opposed to full-blown globalisation.
3Economies and states
- Todays lecture deals in large measure with
state policies regarding economic integration.
If one believes generally the perspective put
forward by the globalisation paradigm, then
states have little choice where such policies are
concerned. A state either accepts the need to
integrate fully with the world economy or it
begins to fail economically. - This view suggests that states are epiphenomenal
with respect to the global economy they do not
direct policy, but rather are moved by economic
forces to accept policies. - To put this another way, states may be
superstructures built upon their economic base,
and thus, choices made by states are determined
by economic necessity.
4The autonomous state?
- Not everyone in economic geography agrees that
states are controlled by wider economic realities
in this fashion. An alternate view, that states
possess autonomous powers and have the capacity
to regulate in some fashion a part of the world
economy through its actions, is often expressed. - Peter Dicken, for example, takes this position
in his book. His view is that states possess
sufficient agency both to regulate the economy
and, indeed, to compete for developmental
advantages within it. - A Marxist-inspired theoretical perspective in
economic geography, the regulationist school,
concedes this kind of autonomy can emerge under
certain conditions, though modes of regulation
can be temporary and give way to more powerful
economic forces at some point.
5Regional economic integration
- There may not be, perhaps, a complete death of
distance in modern economic geography, but one
argument for a lessened impact of distance with
respect to the modern economy is certainly the
increasing appearance of regional trading blocs,
which nations join according to their perception
of national interests. - The regional trading bloc is a development which
accepts the logic of globalisation provisionally,
expanding relationships of free trade outward,
while at the same time not accepting complete
integration at the world scale and permitting
some room for protectionism, albeit with respect
to areas exterior to the bloc. - In many cases, regional trading blocs have
become the basis for supranational government, a
level of government with powers delegated to it
by national member states.
6Some examples of trading blocs and economically
integrative international organisations
- NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)?
- CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement)
now includes Dominican Republic and is called
DR-CAFTA - EU (European Union), and also EFTA (European
Free Trade Association) - CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States former
Soviet Union also the EurAsEC (Eurasian
Economic Community)) - AU (African Union also the AEC (African
Economic Community)) - Arab League
- Unasur (Union of South American Nations soon to
be uniting Mercosur (South American Common
Market) and Andean Community of Nations) - OPEC (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting
Countries) largely regionalised to Middle East,
but with South American and African members as
well - APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation)?
- ASEAN (Association of South-East Asian Nations)?
7Supranationalism
- Economic integration has been a primary catalyst
in the development of political integration
across national borders. The rise of
supranationalism is closely linked with economic
and trading agendas. - What we now call the European Union was
initially formed via the Treaty of Paris (1951)
as the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC),
and via the Treaty of Rome (1957) as the European
Economic Community (EEC). France, West Germany,
Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg
were the initial 6 member states in the community
the main industrial nations of west-central
continental Europe. - The EEC only became the European Union in 1992
with the adoption of the Maastricht Treaty, which
added two areas of political jurisdiction
(foreign policy and criminal enforcement) to the
existing economic policy mandate of the
organisation.
8- Economic ties seem to be a prerequisite for
these kinds of supranational ties. The former
republics of the Soviet Union have only
re-established themselves as an economic
community since the year 2000 (with the advent of
the Eurasian Economic Community), and the
inter-state organisation which preceded it, the
Commonwealth of Independent States, is only a
very loose federation of nations, rather than a
supranational organisation with a coherent
mandate like the EU. - Attempts to make the CIS more supranational have
thus far not been very successful. The proposed
Union of Russia and Belarus, for example, would
create a clear supranational authority, but the
terms of this proposed union remain unclear and
not generally accepted. Other nations have
expressed interest in joining this proposed union
as well, but things have not gotten much beyond
the talking stages at this point. - Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan are now proposing
a formal customs union, which others of the
CIS/EurAsEC group may join later.
9- The African Union foresees the implementation of
an African Economic Community in the coming
decades which will implement a free-trade area in
Africa and potentially create an Africa-wide
currency on the model of the Euro. Like the EU,
the African Union has a Parliament which oversees
the actions of the body. However, since the AEC
has not been implemented yet, this Parliament
does not appear to have the relevance that the EU
Parliament has acquired over the years, and based
upon the economic strength of the underlying EEC. - In Central America, economic integration and
political integration seem to be proceeding down
two separate paths, with economic integration
being accomplished by the DR-CAFTA initiative,
and political integration largely wrapped up in
the Central American Parliament project. The
Central American Parliament, because it is not
linked to DR-CAFTA in a meaningful way, also
suffers from apparent political irrelevance.
10- Talks between the three parties to the NAFTA
agreement have taken place, most recently in
Montebello, QC, regarding harmonisation of
security policies as well as deepening economic
ties. These talks, referred to as the Security
and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), have been seen
by critics as possibly aiming at political
integration or supranationalism. - One potential disadvantage to political
integration in the North American context is the
potential power imbalance between the United
States on the one hand and Canada and Mexico on
the other. At present, none of the three nations
have made any move in favour of supranational
integration. - The Independent Task Force On North America,
chaired by Canada's John Manley and reflecting
American and Mexican participation, however, does
promote the establishment of a North American
Economic and Security Community not unlike the
old EEC in its scope and purpose perhaps a
precursor to North American supranationalism?
11World-level economic integration
- In many respects, the regionalisation of
economies indicates how far globalisation has
gone compared with how much further it would have
to go. Organisations that see the world economy
as a coherent whole do exist and are not
negligible forces to be reckoned with. Regional
blocs, to some extent, may represent a bulwark
against the totalised integration into the fully
free-market system which these organisations
promote. - The principal of these world-level integrative
organisations are the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
the World Bank. - These three organisations have their roots in a
conference held in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire
in 1944, which had ambitious goals for the
regulation of the world economy. The British
economist John Maynard Keynes played a leading
role at this conference.
12The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
and the creation of the World Trade Organisation
(WTO)
- Free trade has been expanded across national
borders by means of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which was first
established in 1948 in the wake of the Bretton
Woods conference. This agreement had as its goal
the promotion of tariff reductions. - GATT negotiations were entered into voluntarily
by those participating in the agreement no
enforcement mechanism was implied in its
functioning. - In 1995, however, during the Uruguay Round of
GATT negotiations, an international organisation
was created, called the World Trade Organisation
(WTO), which took on the additional
responsibility of enforcement and implementation
of trade agreements arrived at under the GATT
framework.
13- The importance of this difference in orientation
should not be underestimated. The new WTO has
punitive powers that the old GATT structure did
not entail. These powers flow from the presumed
benefits of globalisation that member states of
the WTO believe will flow from the free trade
agenda the organisation promotes. - Submission to the WTO's dispute resolution
process is, in other words, encouraged by the
belief that there is no alternative to the free
trade agenda which was not as present of a
belief in the days when GATT was the primary
mechanism for trade negotiations. - The WTO has thus come under fire as an
organisation which seeks to direct economic
decisions from outside national boundaries,
rather than simply provide a forum for the
resolution of trading conflicts.
14The International Monetary Fund
- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) was
originally created as a means of managing the
exchange rate system established at the Bretton
Woods conference. - From 1944-1973, the IMF presided over the
management of an exchange rate system which was
based on gold as a standard of exchange and which
used the U.S. dollar and, to a lesser extent, the
British pound sterling, as a medium of liquidity.
Essentially, during this time, the currencies of
the world under the Bretton Woods system were
"pegged" to gold. - The Bretton Woods system ended up being
abandoned by the U.S. and Britain, essentially
because other nations would not join them in
providing their gold as a standard of exchange,
and thus nations wishing to convert their
currency into gold drew disproportionately on
U.S. and British gold holdings.
15- After 1973, the Bretton Woods system was
scrapped in favour of a system of free-floating
currency exchange. The U.S. and Britain were
thus free of the role of providing its gold
reserves and national currencies as the basis of
an international currency system. The IMF, for
its part, also had its mandate reduced. - Currently, the IMF's role is limited to managing
"balance of payment" issues on international
debt, either through the offering of loans to
assuage short-term radical fluctuations in
balances of payments (such as after the OPEC
shocks of the 1970s, for example) or the
provision of management services. - Given the debt load of many poorer countries,
the role has tended largely to the second of
these aims, and the IMF is mostly known nowadays
for its "Structural Adjustment Policy" advice on
how to restructure national economies in order
that indebted nations may better pay off their
existing debts.
16The World Bank
- The World Bank is an institution which
originally was conceived as a source of long-term
loans for economic development in lesser
developed countries. - The World Bank was also a creation of the 1944
Bretton Woods accord. However, it has always had
a different mandate from the IMF in that its role
with regard to the provision of loans is not
short-term. The World Bank has the specific
mandate of making long-term loans to developing
nations with the objective of reducing poverty.
There are 185 member countries and funds for
loans made by the World Bank are raised through
the selling of bonds. - Decisions on lending are made by shareholders,
who come disproportionately from Western and
industrialised nations. It is, for example,
taken as normal that the president of the World
Bank will be an American, given the large
ownership of bank shares by American interests.
17The Argentine crisis and the movement for South
American disindebtedness from the IMF
- In the years 1999-2002, the nation of Argentina
faced a severe economic crisis, related to the
impending defaults on development loans from the
IMF and other sources. - In addition to other loans, the IMF and private
lenders had underwritten loans to support
Argentina's pegging of its currency, the peso,
to the American dollar, which had in the past
reduced inflation, but by this point had made the
peso dramatically overvalued. - In order to pay these external creditors for the
loans, Argentina would either have to make deep
cuts to social programs, exacerbating poverty in
a nation already deeply affected by it, or
negotiate to pay only a portion of those loans to
their creditors.
18- Instead of fully repaying all the creditors, the
new president of Argentina, Néstor Kirchner,
worked out a deal with private creditors holding
around 76 of the total debt owed by Argentina to
pay back roughly a third of the debt owed to
those lenders. - However, Kirchner believed that the IMF must be
paid in full rather than at a percentage of the
amount owed. His rationale for this was that a
break between the IMF and Argentina must be
effected, and this could only be done through a
policy of disindebtedness - the payment in full
of what was owed, followed by disengagement. - Notably, the country of Venezuela financed this
repayment through the purchase of Argentinian
bonds. - At present, several other countries in South
America have instituted similar policies of
disindebtedness with respect to the Bretton
Woods lending institutions of the IMF and the
World Bank. A rival institution, called the
Bank of the South, and controlled by interests
local to South America, is now planned to fill
this lending role.
19The rise of the Latin American Left
- A trend over the last decade has seen the rise
to power of a number of left-wing leaders in
Latin America Néstor Kirchner and Cristina
Fernández de Kirchner in Argentina, Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva in Brazil, Ricardo Lagos and
Michelle Bachelet in Chile, Evo Morales in
Bolivia, Alan Garcia in Peru, Rafael Correa in
Ecuador and Hugo Chávez in Venezuela. - The regional economic integration organisations
known as the Andean Group and Mercosur are now
merging into a group with aspirations towards
supranationalism called the Union of South
American Nations (or Unasur) and at a time when
the majority of South Americas governments range
between moderately social democratic and
assertively socialist. - This suggests that there may be potential for
the new regional bloc to be politicised as a
left-wing force in world politics.