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The South American Community of
Nations:
A great decentralized development
program
Reflections of Andean Community
Secretary General, Allan Wagner
When the
Cusco Presidential Declaration
is signed, the South American
Community of Nations will become
the fifth ranking world power,
with a GDP of one trillion
dollars; and the fourth in
population, with 361 million
inhabitants; and will cover an
area of over 17 million km2.
Beyond its
economic dimension, the South
American Community will
constitute, above all, a great
decentralized development
program for our countries by
creating decentralized regional
economies within the areas of
influence of the major South
American Integration and
Development Hubs.
These
emerging regions will consist
basically of conglomerates of
small and medium-size urban and
rural enterprises that can
extend their influence to
markets within the hemisphere
and toward the two great world
basins.
For all of
these reasons, the South
American Community will be a
socially inclusive integration
process that will improve our
development qualitatively by
providing real backing for our
countries’ decentralization
processes, reinforcing social
cohesion and democratic
governance and giving a
dimension of quality to our
growing trade presence.
The South
American Community will take
shape from the progressive
dovetailing of the CAN and
MERCOSUR, with the addition of
Chile. Guyana and Suriname, also
South American nations, will be
associated with the process.
Regional organizations like the
LAIA, ACTO and SELA will
contribute, as well.
This means
that we will not start from
scratch, but will build on
existing strengths, like the two
subregional integration
processes that, within the South
American sphere, must
progressively harmonize and
resize their legal system and
programs through the joint
efforts of their bodies and
institutions.
The CAN will
contribute approximately one-third
of the South American market,
the greatest energy potential
and major resources stemming
from its biodiversity, and water,
among other things. The CAN has
also attained the highest level
of legal and institutional
development and, as a regional
integration process, has made
considerable progress in the
political, economic and social
areas. Furthermore, together
with Chile, it will serve as the
hinge that articulates the
relationship between the South
American Community and the Asian-Pacific.
As a result,
the CAN’s contribution to the
building of the South American
Community goes far beyond its
existing trade dimension, making
it fundamental for the
materialization and impact of
the new Community.
There are
also extremely important
processes underway that will
provide firm foundations for the
new Community, such as the IIRSA
South American infrastructure
development program and the free
trade agreement between the CAN
and MERCOSUR.
In IIRSA’s
case, the South American
countries have completed the
design and planning stage of the
ten major South American
Integration and Development Hubs.
Thirty-two “anchor projects”
(fundamental for organizing the
main hubs) have been identified
from among the 350 projects that
comprise the program. With a
cost of US$ 4.2 billion, they
will be executed over a five-year
period. This project portfolio
and the agreed program will be
delivered to the Presidents at
the South American Summit for
their approval.
The next
stage of the IIRSA will be the
execution of the cited “anchor
projects.” In order to carry
them out, it is necessary to
develop innovative financial
mechanisms for use together with
CAF and IDB loans. The so-called
“sectoral processes” must also
be launched. These consist of
creating special rules and
regulations, reinforcing
regional institutions and
boosting business initiatives in
the Hubs’ areas of influence in
order to enhance their value.
This is a task in which the CAN
and MERCOSUR can play an
important role.
The
CAN-MERCOSUR and the Peru-MERCOSUR
free trade agreements will
become effective on January 1,
2005, immediately liberalizing
80% of the trade between the two
blocs. Tariffs will be
eliminated on the remaining 20%,
which include sensitive products,
particularly agricultural
products, within a period of 14
years. This will immediately
boost regional trade and it is
important for Chile to complete
its network of free trade
agreements with the Andean
countries as rapidly as possible
so that a South American free
trade area can be created.
As a result
of those agreements, Andean
production chains will have an
opportunity to resize at the
South American level in order to
increase their productivity and
international competitiveness
and to resolve their present
market problems. The service
sector will also find new
dimensions for its growth,
including investments, banking
and tourism.
The 14 Andean
city-regions identified as being
extremely active in the
subregional integration process
are called upon to take the lead
in building the integrated South
American area. Because they
consist mainly of small and
medium-size enterprises, like
the regions that will emerge
over the South American hubs,
they will help reinforce and
improve the quality of our
development and increasing trade
presence.
The South
American Community will begin to
yield tangible results for the
Andean people as of the very
moment of its creation, thanks
to the enlargement of markets
and the socially inclusive
vision of territorial
development.
In 15 years’
time, with a new political
economy, a new demography, a new
position in the world and, we
hope, a fuller and more
participatory democracy in
place, the map of South America
will have changed.
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