Regional Integration Flashcards
Regional Economic Integration
best be defined as an agreement between groups of countries in a geographic region, to reduce and ultimately remove tariff and non-tariff barriers to the free flow of goods, services, and factors of production between each other.
Advantages Of Economic Integration
Trade Creation:
Greater Consensus:
Political Cooperation:
Employment Opportunities:
Trade Creation:
§ Member countries have
□ (a) wider selection of goods and services not previously available;
□ (b) acquire goods and services at a lower cost after trade barriers due to lowered tariffs or removal of tariffs
□ (c) encourage more trade between member countries the balance of money spend from cheaper goods and services, can be used to buy more products and services
Greater Consensus:
§ Unlike WTO with high membership (147 countries), easier to gain consensus amongst small memberships in regional integration
○ Political Cooperation:
§ A group of nation can have significantly greater political influence than each nation would have individually.
§ This integration is an essential strategy to address the effects of conflicts and political instability that may affect the region.
§ Useful tool to handle the social and economic challenges associated with globalization
Employment Opportunities:
§ As economic integration encourage trade liberation and lead to
□ market expansion,
□ more investment into the country and
□ greater diffusion of technology,
□ it create more employment opportunities for people to move from one country to another to find jobs or to earn higher pay.
§ For example, industries requiring mostly unskilled labor tends to shift production to low wage countries within a regional cooperation
Disadvantages Of Economic Integration
Creation Of Trading Blocs:
Trade Diversion:
National Sovereignty:
Creation Of Trading Blocs
It can also increase trade barriers against non-member countries
Trade Diversion:
§ Because of trade barriers, trade is diverted from a non-member country to a member country despite the inefficiency in cost.
§ For example, a country has to stop trading with a low cost manufacture in a non-member country and trade with a manufacturer in a member country which has a higher cost.
○ National Sovereignty:
§ Requires member countries to give up some degree of control over key policies like trade, monetary and fiscal policies.
§ The higher the level of integration, the greater the degree of controls that needs to be given up particularly in the case of a political union economic integration which requires nations to give up a high degree of sovereignty.
Optimal currency areas
- Micro-economic:
- Transaction costs, risk
* Price comparability => single market
Optimal currency areas
Macro-economic:
○ Common reserve ○ Impossible trilogy (see failure of Exchange Rate Mechanism 1992): § Free capital mobility § Fixed exchange rate § Independent monetary policy
Optimal currency areas
Political:
○ France: multilateralism instead of German impositions
○ Spill-overs towards ‘ever closer union’
Monetarist discipline over undisciplined countries
Optimal currency areas
Mundell-McKinnon-Kenen criteria of ‘optimal currency area’ not met
○ Mobility of factors of production (esp. labour)
○ Similarly diversified economies
○ Mutual trade
Optimal currency areas
Macro-economic counterarguments
• Financial policy and exchange rate policy have different functions and are
BOTH necessary to each country (Fleming-Corden)
Keynesian argument: common currency needs common fiscal policy