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Encyclopedia > Latin American Integration Association

The Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración (the Latin American Integration Association; known as ALADI or, occasionally, by the English acronym LAIA) is a Latin American trade integration association, based in Montevideo. Its main objective is the establishment of a common market, in pursuit of the economic and social development of the region


Its members are Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.


The 1980 Montevideo Treaty, signed on August 12, 1980, is the global legal framework that establishes and governs ALADI. It sets the following general principles: pluralism, convergence, flexibility, differential treatment and multiplicity.


The ALADI promotes the creation of an area of economic preferences in the region, aiming at a Latin American common market, through three mechanisms:

  • Regional tariff preference granted to products originating in the member countries, based on the tariffs in foce for third countries
  • Regional scope agreement, among member countries
  • Partial scope agreements, between two or more countries of the area

Either regional or partial scope agreements may cover tariff relief and trade promotion; economic complementation; agricultural trade; financial, fiscal, customs and health cooperation; environmental conservation; scientific and technological cooperation; tourism promotion; technical standards and many other fields.


As the Montevideo Treaty is a "framework treaty", by subscribing to it, the governments of the member countries authorize their representatives to legislate through agreements on the economic issues of greatest importance to each country.


A system of preferences, which consists of market opening lists, special cooperation programs (business rounds, preinvestment, financing, technological support) and countervailing measures on behalf of the landlocked countries, has been granted to the countries deemed to be relatively less developed (Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay), to favour their full participation in the integration process.


Any Latin-American country can join the 1980 Montevideo Treaty. The Republic of Cuba was the last country to accede, becoming full member country on August 26, 1999. In addition, ALADI is also open to all Latin American countries through agreements with other countries and integration areas of the continent, as well as to other developing countries or their respective integration areas outside Latin America.


As the institutional and normative "umbrella" of regional integration that shelters these agreements as well as the subregional ones (Andean Community, MERCOSUR, G-3 Free Trade Agreement, etc.) it is the aim of the Association to support and favour every effort in order to create a common economic area.


External link

  • ALADI web site (http://www.aladi.org/NSFALADI/SITIO.NSF/INICIO)

  Results from FactBites:
 
ALADI (955 words)
The possibility of incorporating flexibility into the principle of multilateral action arose when new provisions were added to the GATT agreement, including one that recognizes nonreciprocity in trade relations among developing countries as a principle compatible with the world organization's rules.
The convergence of macroeconomic policies combined with the process of opening of markets and the need to expand exports began to spur new integration agreements in the region starting in the second half of the 1980s, but this time designed on bases that were substantially different from the earlier ones.
Integration was no longer viewed as an expansion of strongly protected markets against third countries, but was instead seen as part of the process of gradually opening up to international trade.
Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (423 words)
The Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración (the Latin American Integration Association; known as ALADI or, occasionally, by the English acronym LAIA) is a Latin American trade integration association, based in Montevideo.
In addition, ALADI is also open to all Latin American countries through agreements with other countries and integration areas of the continent, as well as to other developing countries or their respective integration areas outside Latin America.
As the institutional and normative "umbrella" of regional integration that shelters these agreements as well as the subregional ones (Andean Community, MERCOSUR, G-3 Free Trade Agreement, etc.) it is the aim of the Association to support and favour every effort in order to create a common economic area.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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