Agriculture vital to driving Latin American economies impacted by pandemic

WITHIN the framework of an already established joint work plan, the Inter-American Institute for Co-operation on Agriculture (IICA) and the Latin American Integration Association (ALADI) prepared a reference document with relevant information for designing, implementing, and financing a project to promote regulatory convergence in the agrifood sector across the countries of Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, supported by both institutions.

The document was prepared by IICA, through Anabel González, former Minister of Foreign Trade of Costa Rica and recently appointed Deputy Director General of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and, in collaboration with ALADI, will identify the next steps to move forward with the initiative.

“Latin America has taken a hit from the pandemic; there are many consequences and the countries in the region will need to find new drivers of growth. Agrifood trade is one of those drivers,” said Anabel González, when presenting the document.

“The potential for the agrifood sector to contribute to the region’s economic reactivation is significant provided that we reduce the regulatory red tape affecting trade and production linkages, which are relatively limited. We believe that regulatory co-operation between Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance could support the expansion of intraregional agrifood trade, food security, the development of value chains, and the participation of small and medium producers and trade companies that are always the most impacted by regulatory divergence, as well as contribute to strengthening exports outside the region,” added the specialist.

Daniel Rodríguez, Manager of IICA’s International Trade and Regional Integration Programme, specified that “identifying criteria that enable us to prioritise actions not only in terms of value chains and products, but also types of measures, is really important. This is a stage-by-stage process and we’ll need to move forward slowly, gradually adding individual sectors and countries.”

To that end, the Montevideo Treaty of 1980 offers a wealth of opportunities for progress in the area of regulatory co-operation across ALADI member countries, based on the principles of progressive convergence and multiplicity in trade instrument negotiations. Its Partial Scope Agreements can cover a number of topics, including agricultural trade, health, technical regulations, etc., and are an appropriate tool for a stage-by-stage process, through the progressive multilateralisation of its results.

At the presentation of the document, it was emphasised that maintaining the high costs of regulatory divergence impacts and harms small and medium-scale producers the most, who find themselves unable to participate in trade insofar as larger scale producers have mechanisms to access information. It is believed that this project could be supported by the private sector, in order to focus on certain areas that require tangible, relevant, and swift results.

REDUCING TRADE BARRIERS
Both IICA, represented by its Director-General, Manuel Otero, and ALADI, represented by its Secretary- General, Sergio Abreu, underscored the important role of international co-operation in helping to reduce existing trade barriers and to unify efforts to promote trade opportunities in the region, generating more trade, knowledge, and regional integration.

To that end, also discussed was the possible contribution of technical co-operation to the process of convergence, including informal information exchanges, international harmonisation and standardisation, mutual recognition agreements, regulatory equivalence determinations, and the promotion of good practices and principles.

One of the objectives of the first phase, indicated González, is to define the co-operation priorities and the trade-related criteria.

The analysis will start by creating a community of regulators to exchange experiences, develop work plans, formalise co-operation, and build regulatory reform networks in the region, based on international good practices.

REDUCTION IN TRADE

According to the analyses presented in the document, the countries of Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance have experienced a reduction in agricultural trade and limited production chains.

While the agricultural sector accounts for an important share of global exports from Mercosur (43 per cent in 2019) the same cannot be said for the Pacific Alliance, for which the agricultural sector represents just nine per cent of global exports.

A study of total trade (exports plus imports) across and within both trade blocs revealed the predominance of industrial products: in 2019, agricultural products represented only 25 per cent of total intra-Mercosur trade, approximately 20 per cent of trade between Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, and 14 per cent of intra-Alliance trade.

Between 2016 and 2019, Mercosur sold an average of six per cent of agricultural exports to other Mercosur countries and about four per cent to the Pacific Alliance. These percentages are even less in the case of the Pacific Alliance: only four per cent were intra-bloc exports and less than two per cent were sold to Mercosur countries. (IICA)

 

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