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AFTER THE COLD WAR: FROM GEOPOLITICS TO GEOECONOMICS NAFTA and the Gospel of Free Trade
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REQUIRED READING Smith, Talons, chs. 7-9 Course Reader #3, Blecker and Esquivel, “NAFTA, Trade, and Development”
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AFTER THE COLD WAR: THE GLOBAL ARENA 1.Collapse of the Soviet Union 2.U.S. military primacy: the “unipolar moment” 3.Economic multipolarity: Europe, Japan, others? 4.Transnationalization and non-state actors 5.A “third wave” of democratization?
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DIMENSIONS OF UNCERTAINTY Distributions of power: the “layer cake” model Military = unipolar Economic = tripolar Interdependence = diffusion Absence of “rules of the game” Hesitancy in the United States
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ON “GLOBALIZATION” Factors: –End of Cold War=reduction of political barriers –Communication technologies –Transnational enterprises: production chains and consumer markets –Movement of people and goods, legal and illegal Features: –Inexorability, inevitability –Politics the result of economics –Inclusion vs. exclusion? –Claim: no ideology
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THE 1990s: GEOECONOMICS AND “INTERMESTIC” ISSUES Ideological consensus (or “end of history”?) Implausibility of revolution Fragmentation of “Third World” The rise of “intermestic” issues: –Free trade –Drugs and drug “wars” –Immigration
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THE GOSPEL OF FREE TRADE The Lost Decade (1980s) and Its Legacies Dynamics of the debt crisis The Washington Consensus: The role of the state Liberalization of trade Privatization, the private sector, and foreign investment
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North American Free Trade (NAFTA)? Why? Why Then? Global Scenario: Economic multipolarity and rivalry (Japan, EU) Geopolitical uncertainty Emphasis on “geoeconomics” U.S. Perspectives: Supplement to FTA with Canada Support for neoliberal reforms in Mexico Growing Mexican-American population within U.S. Mexican Perspectives: Exhaustion of alternatives Need to stimulate growth Perpetuation of Salinista policies
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NAFTA: What Is It? A “free trade” area: Not a customs union Nor a common market Characteristics: Uneven levels of development Cultural and political variation Hub-and-spoke arrangements (with U.S. at center) Absence of supranational authority (preservation of sovereignty)
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Assessing Results: The Problem of Cause- and-Effect NAFTA in comparison with: Initial expectations (and political rhetoric) Liberalization (mid-1980s) Global and/or U.S. economic conditions Long-term economic and social trends Short-term shocks (e.g., Mexican peso crisis of 1994-95)
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Economic Performance: Expansion of Trade General effects: More efficiency (in production and consumption) Greater market size (thus higher returns) Tougher competition Questions: 1.Who takes part in the trade? (55 % large firms, 40% maquiladoras, > 5% small firms (~ 2.1 million firms) 2.What about trade diversion?
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Mexican Exports, 1985-2005 (billions USD $$) 1985 = 27 bn, 1994 = 61 bn, 2205 = 214 bn
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Expansion of Trade, 1993-2005 (millions USD $$)
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U.S. Trade with Mexico and Latin America, 1993-2005 (millions USD $$)
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U.S. Imports: Key Trading Partners, 1993-2005 (millions USD $$)
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Foreign Direct Investment in Mexico, 1980-2004
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GDP Growth in Mexico 1945-1980 ~ 6.5% 1995 -7.0 % 1996 5.1 1997 6.8 1998 4.9 1999 3.8 2000 6.6 2001 -0.2 2002 0.7 2003 1.5 2004 4.6 2005 2.8 2006 5.0 2007 3.2 2008 1.3 2009 -6.8 Note: Growth does not necessarily reduce poverty, and often increases inequality.
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Unforeseen Shocks: Mexican peso crisis of 1994-95 September 11, 2001 Drug-related violence, 2008-09 Current Challenges: Expansion of the development gap Infrastructure (including roads) Migration Energy Security problems
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Key Points of Disputation: Environmental protection Labor rights Overall development strategy Dependence on United States Development gap Consolidation of U.S. hegemony
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Blecker-Esquivel “NAFTA has basically failed to fulfill the promise of closing the Mexico- U.S. development gap…” Zero economic convergence (GDP per capita), no reduction in incentives for Mexicans to migrate Modest impact on employment (500,000 in both countries) Lag 2000-08: –Emergence of China –Increased value of peso Reasons for lack of convergence: –Badly implemented reforms –Reform paralysis –Lack of a domestic engine Future prospects: –U.S.-Mexico trade a two-way street –Convergence could reduce migration –Health and elder care
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The Public Assertion: Free Trade = Democracy The Silent Bargain: International Dimensions Political stability and social peace Access to petroleum Leverage vis-à-vis economic rivals Compliance on foreign policy POLITICAL EFFECTS
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Political Consequences (1)
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Political Consequences (2)
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Now What? Hemispheric Integration? 1.Expansion of NAFTA (through new memberships) 2.FTAA negotiating process 3.Bilaterals and minilaterals: U.S.-Chile U.S.-Central America U.S.-Peru U.S.-Colombia (?)
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