Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 7

MERCOSUR:

 Mercosur is an economic and political bloc consisting of Argentina, Brazil,


Paraguay, and Uruguay. Venezuela was suspended indefinitely in 2016.
 Founded in 1991 to create a common market, spur development, and bolster
democracy, Mercosur saw early successes, including a tenfold increase in
trade within the bloc in its first decade.
 While Mercosur has signed trade deals with several countries, bigger deals,
including with the United States, China, and the European Union, remain
elusive.
Introduction
Mercosur, or the Southern Common Market, is an economic and political bloc
originally comprising Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Created during a
period when longtime rivals Argentina and Brazil were seeking to improve
relations, the bloc saw some early successes, including a tenfold increase in trade
within the group in the 1990s.
In recent years, however, Mercosur has struggled to open to other markets. The
implementation of a landmark draft trade deal it signed with the European Union
(EU) in 2019 has been stalled over environmental concerns and European
opposition, but hopes have been revived after the election of Brazil’s President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, known as Lula. Meanwhile, other challenges persist,
including China’s controversial influence in Latin America, concerns over the
bloc’s commitment to democracy, and the ongoing economic repercussions of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Which countries are in Mercosur?
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay—Mercosur’s founding countries—are
full members. Venezuela joined as a full member in 2012, but was suspended
indefinitely in late 2016 for failing to comply with the bloc’s democratic
principles.
In 2021, the founding countries had a combined gross domestic product (GDP) of
roughly $2.2 trillion, according to World Bank data, making Mercosur one of the
world’s largest economic blocs. In comparison, Latin America’s second-largest
trade group, the Pacific Alliance, had a slightly lower combined GDP of about $2.1
trillion. While the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic imposed
considerable economic damage on the bloc’s members, the group experienced
cumulative economic growth of nearly 6 percent in 2021.
Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Suriname are associate
members of Mercosur. They receive tariff reductions when trading with the full
members but do not enjoy full voting rights or free access to members’ markets.
Bolivia was invited to join as a full member in 2012, but its accession has not yet
received authorization from Brazil’s Congress.
MERCOSUR’s Member Countries

Full members Associate Suspended In progress


members

GUYANA Venezuela was Bolivia is in the


BRAZIL VENEZUELA suspended from the process of
ARGENTINA SURINAME
bloc in December becoming a full
URUGUAY FRENCH
PARAGUAY GUIANA 2016. member.
COLOMBIA
ECUADOR
PERU
BOLIVIA
CHILE
Source: Mercosur.

Why was Mercosur created?


Mercosur was created in 1991 when Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay
signed the Treaty of Asunción, an accord calling for the “free movement of goods,
services, and factors of production between countries.” The four countries agreed
to eliminate customs duties, implement a common external tariff (CET) of 35
percent on certain imports from outside the bloc, and adopt a common trade policy
toward outside countries and blocs. The charter members hoped to form a common
market, similar to that of the EU, to increase business and investment opportunities
for regional industries and encourage local development. Some members of the
bloc have even proposed adopting a common currency to reduce dependence on
the U.S. dollar, but some skeptics say member countries’ economies are too
different to share a single monetary policy.
The Mercosur stamp is emblazoned on member countries’ passports and license
plates display the Mercosur symbol. Residents of the bloc are authorized to live
and work anywhere within it. In 1994, the group signed the Protocol of Ouro Preto,
formalizing its status as a customs union.
Mercosur was created in large part to cement a understanding between Argentina
and Brazil, whose relationship had long been defined by rivalry. Together, the two
countries account for nearly 95 percent of the bloc’s GDP and 96 percent of its
population. Some critics say Argentina and Brazil wanted Mercosur simply as a
trade shield. The bloc often “is less about opening up but actually about protecting
Brazilian and Argentine industries from global competition,” says Oliver Stuenkel,
an associate professor at the Getulio Vargas Foundation in São Paulo.
How does Mercosur work?
The bloc’s highest decision-making body, the Common Market Council, provides
a high-level forum for coordinating foreign and economic policy. The group
consists of the foreign and economic ministers of each member state, or their
equivalent, and decisions are made by consensus. The group’s presidency rotates
every six months among its full members, following alphabetical order; Argentina
currently occupies the position. Other bodies include the Common Market Group,
which coordinates macroeconomic policies; a trade commission; a parliament,
known as Parlasur, which serves an advisory role; and the Structural Convergence
Fund (FOCEM), which coordinates regional infrastructure projects.
FOCEM projects, such as building highways and bridges and developing
waterways, are funded by member-country contributions determined by a formula
that accounts for each country’s GDP. Brazil, with a GDP of $1.6 trillion,
contributes 60 percent, Argentina 30 percent, and Paraguay and Uruguay 5 percent
each. More than $1 billion in nonrefundable loans has been disbursed since the
fund was created in 2004.
Has Mercosur spurred economic development?
Internal trade has grown rapidly, jumping from $4 billion in 1990 to more than $41
billion by 2010. It has since fluctuated, dropping to a low of $29 billion in 2020
amid the COVID-19 pandemic before rising to nearly $41 billion in 2021, a 42
percent increase. Over the last decade, intra-Mercosur trade has averaged almost
$39 billion. In October 2021, Argentina and Brazil agreed to a 10 percent
reduction in the bloc’s tariff to help bolster further economic growth among
member countries. The following September, the bloc modified the tariff to reduce
import duties for some products by an additional 10 percent.
However, trade relations with the rest of the world have been uneven. In its first
decade, Mercosur inked economic cooperation agreements with Bolivia, Chile,
Israel, and Peru, and in 2004, it signed a preferential trade agreement with India.
But bigger deals have proved elusive. While its most recent free trade agreement
(FTA), with Egypt, took effect in 2017, negotiations with Canada and South Korea
remain underway, and a deal with the EU has hit roadblocks. The bloc is also
reportedly considering an FTA with Singapore, which could open up access to the
Asia-Pacific region.
There are currently no trade deals between the United States and any Mercosur
countries or the bloc itself, and relations have at times been strained. In 1994, U.S.
President Bill Clinton proposed the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA),
which would have eliminated or reduced trade barriers among the countries in the
Western Hemisphere, excluding Cuba. The FTAA was to be completed by 2005,
but by 2004, negotiations had stalled as several Latin American nations, including
Mercosur members Argentina and Brazil, opposed the deal, and it was never
finalized. In 2019, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed steel and aluminum
tariffs on Argentina and Brazil, though he signed a limited trade deal with Brazil
the following year. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro later expressed a desire for a
broad FTA with the United States following U.S. President Joe Biden’s
inauguration, but some experts say such an agreement is unlikely to happen under
Lula.
Mercosur reached a comprehensive trade deal with the EU in 2019 after twenty
years of on-and-off negotiations. The deal would eliminate tariffs on roughly 90
percent of Mercosur’s exports to the EU and allow companies in both blocs to bid
for government contracts. But its ratification has been thrown into doubt by
opposition from several EU members, who fear that wood exported from Brazil to
the EU could be a result of illegal logging in the Amazon Rainforest. European
farmers have also decried a predicted influx of cheap Argentinian and Brazilian
beef exports. However, Lula’s vows to combat deforestation of Brazil’s Amazon
Rainforest have spurred some optimism, and European Commission Vice President
Frans Timmermans has said the EU hopes to sign the deal in 2023.
Within the bloc, regional integration began to slow following Brazil’s currency
devaluation in 1999 and Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001, and since then, trade
disputes and other tensions have flared between the two countries. Recent efforts
by Uruguay to establish an FTA with China and join the Trans-Pacific
Partnership have also been a source of tension between bloc members. While
Brazil supports pursuing an FTA with China, Argentina has publicly opposed it,
citing concerns that a trade deal could lead to an influx of cheap Chinese imports to
the region.

Has Mercosur promoted democracy?


One of Mercosur’s early aims was to cement the region’s return to democracy
since all of its founding members had emerged from dictatorships in the 1980s. In
1998, the group signed the Ushuaia Protocol on Democratic Commitment,
affirming that democratic institutions are essential to the integration of Mercosur
states and that a “rupture in democratic order” would be cause for a member’s
suspension.
Mercosur members invoked the protocol for the first time in 2012 to suspend
Paraguay, claiming that President Fernando Lugo had been unfairly removed from
power after his domestic opponents accused him of mishandling a deadly clash
between farmers and law enforcement. Some experts say Paraguay’s suspension,
which was lifted in 2013, was politically motivated, since Brazil’s then left-wing
government was seeking Venezuela’s admission to the bloc and Paraguay’s new,
center-right government opposed it.
Why was Venezuela suspended?
Venezuela joined the bloc in 2012, with Brazil arguing that including the oil-rich
country would make Mercosur a “global energy power.” But falling oil prices,
economic mismanagement, and an increasingly authoritarian government have
pushed Venezuela into an economic, political, and humanitarian crisis. As a result,
more than seven million Venezuelans have fled to neighboring countries and
beyond since 2014.
Mercosur suspended Venezuela in late 2016, citing violations of human rights and
the bloc’s trade rules by President Nicolas Maduro’s government. In August 2017,
the group made Venezuela’s suspension indefinite (there are no provisions for
permanent expulsion). And in 2019, Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay called on
Maduro to cede power to the Venezuelan opposition.
“A reformist desire to deepen trade within the bloc, as well as genuine horror at
Venezuela’s descent into an economically dysfunctional dictatorship, has helped
galvanize the four original members’ willingness to slowly inch Venezuela out of
the bloc,” says American University’s Matthew M. Taylor, an expert on Latin
America’s political economy.
What other challenges is Mercosur facing?
In recent years, Mercosur countries have experienced political and economic
turmoil. Corruption probes launched in Brazil in 2014 have spread, implicating
hundreds of the region’s political and business elites. At the same time, falling
commodity prices and what critics describe as economic mismanagement have
contributed to recessions in the region. In 2020, Latin America’s GDP fell by 7
percent, the worst of any region in the world. Return to growth has been slow,
partially due to rising global interest rates.
Meanwhile, Mercosur continues to face internal division. Like his predecessor
Bolsonaro, Lula has expressed a desire to “modernize” the bloc, including by
allowing for bilateral deals with third-party countries, which Argentine President
Alberto Fernández has previously opposed. Uruguay’s ongoing efforts to ink an
FTA with China have likewise created tension. Meanwhile, experts say the
bloc’s protectionist policies and reluctance toward creating value-added supply
chains or regional production hubs are stifling integration.
Managing the trade relationship with a rising China will also continue to test the
bloc’s unity. While there is no FTA between China and Mercosur, China has said it
intends to increase bilateral trade with South America by $500 billion by 2025, and
Lula has said he supports eventually pursuing such a deal. Additionally, Argentina
and Uruguay are participants in China’s Belt and Road Initiative, the world’s
largest infrastructure program.
Adding to the bloc’s challenges are the repercussions of the COVID-19 pandemic,
which have brought further economic hardship to Mercosur countries. The onset of
the pandemic triggered the largest recession the countries have seen since 1930 and
sharply increased poverty rates and inequality. In early 2020, Mercosur allocated
$16 million through FOCEM to a project aimed at improving the bloc’s COVID-
19 testing capacity. But disagreement among members about the severity of the
pandemic hindered cooperation, including the sharing of information and medical
equipment. Bolsonaro, for instance, faced criticism for downplaying the threat of
the virus after Brazil became a pandemic hotspot, and Lula likened Bolsonaro’s
stance to genocide.
Experts broadly agree, however, that Mercosur’s future will hinge on decisions
made in Buenos Aires and Brasília. “Brazil and Argentina are two of each other’s
most important trading partners. But both countries—especially because they’re
going through a difficult economic time—would benefit from opening their
markets more generally,” says O’Neil. “The challenge is whether they can do it
together.”

You might also like