MERCOSUR Heads of State Summit
Address to the XII Meeting of the Common Market Council
Asunción, Paraguay, 19 June 1997
Attached is the full text of the address delivered today (19 June 1997) by Mr. Renato
Ruggiero, Director-General of the World Trade Organization, to the XII Meeting of the
Common Market Council at the MERCOSUR Heads of State Summit in Asunción, Paraguay.
Let me first thank you for this invitation to address such a distinguished audience.
Through your leadership, MERCOSUR has emerged as one of the most dynamic and imaginative
initiatives on the world stage today. Surging trade, rising investment, expanding output - every
economic indicator points to MERCOSUR's remarkable achievement in just five years. But
more than this, integration is helping to transform your relations with each other and with
the world as a whole - forging a new sense of shared leadership and shared purpose which
is sending ripples of hope across the continent and beyond. A powerful idea is at work here
- an idea whose success, I believe, is key to managing the opportunities and challenges of
the new era we are entering.
The defining event of this new era - and the new century - is globalization. Globalization
is about more than the liberalization of trade, capital movements, communications or technology.
It is about the gradual convergence of our interests, our goals and aspirations, and our
perceptions of the world. What is most remarkable about this period of world politics is the
way the great divisions of the last century - so destructive and so fruitless - are slowly fading
into history. In their place, we find a new momentum towards a new kind of international
order.
Take the divide between North and South. Not only are the lines between these worlds
somehow blurring, but developing countries like the members of MERCOSUR are poised
to become growth engines of the world economy. A recent OECD study has predicted that
per capita output in the developing world could expand by as much as 270 per cent by the
year 2020 - compared to growth in the industrialized countries of 80 per cent.
Globalization is also bridging the divide between economies at different levels of
development. As telephones, fax machines, and computers weave our world together, they
are also levelling the development playing field - giving countries the technological tools they
need to accelerate growth and to fast-forward their modernization. Whereas the developed
world is the product of over two hundred years of industrialization, billions in the developing
world will reach the same level of progress in a generation.
And the ideological debate over the rôle of the state and market in our economies is
also losing its sharpness. Open trade, free markets, and deregulation - these policies are now
viewed throughout the world, even if with different emphases, as key to growth and
development. A point eloquently made by British Prime Minister Tony Blair when he observed
that he belongs to "a new generation that claims education, skills and technology as the
instruments of economic prosperity and personal fulfilment, not old battles between state and
market economies".
The absence of knowledge or understanding has always been the greatest barrier between
people, and nothing is breaking down this invisible wall more rapidly or irreversibly than the
globalization of information and ideas.
Latin America has been an indispensable player in these sweeping global changes, and
MERCOSUR is in many ways the most striking manifestation of this policy.
What MERCOSUR reflects - and reinforces - is the march of integration in the southern
half of this continent. This is a process which will continue to move beyond more intensive
trade linkages to encompass converging infrastructures, common production and distribution
networks, and an increasingly intricate web of cross-border cooperation. MERCOSUR's trade
has grown by an average of 18 per cent a year since 1991 - while trade within MERCOSUR
itself has increased by some 28 per cent a year. Foreign investment has risen as dramatically
- by an average of 18 per cent a year - reflecting the gravitational pull of a combined market
of some 200 million. This in turn has helped contribute to growth rates of 4 per cent a year
since 1991 - with a projected rise to almost 5 per cent in 1997 and 1998.
As impressive as your progress has been over the last five years, there is room to go
further still. It is encouraging that mechanisms for further liberalization are in place and strict
time-tables have been set. Most importantly, the political will and vision to move forward
is unambiguous. There is every sign that MERCOSUR will remain one of the most successful
and fastest-moving integration processes into the next century.
The main challenge facing MERCOSUR, like all other regional initiatives, is not internal,
but external. However ambitious the scope of regionalism, the reality is that we are moving
towards an economy of global - not regional - dimensions. In this global economy, companies
will need access to world-priced inputs and world-wide markets - access which will increasingly
determine where they produce and invest.
MERCOSUR has already proven itself to be a valuable instrument for managing these
global opportunities and challenges. Regional integration within MERCOSUR must continue
to be an important stepping stone to global integration - sharpening the efficiency and skills
of your industries, building on your comparative advantages, and providing a springboard
into the world economy. MERCOSUR helps to amplify and harmonize your voice in the global
system - a factor which, as your meeting today underlines, will only become more important
as we design the rules of the twenty-first century economy.
As we move towards a world of global trade and global competition, the key challenge
will be to strengthen the global rules and structures embodied in the multilateral system. More
and more MERCOSUR's success will be measured by your ability to help design and build
this new economic order - both in terms of your own interests, and in the interests of the global
economy as a whole.
I cannot over-emphasize the scope and ambition of the agenda that lies before us in
the WTO even if every step forward has to face significant difficulties.
This year alone we have concluded an agreement to liberalize global telecommunications
services and to launch free trade in information technology products - initiatives which, in
terms of trade coverage, are the equivalent of global trade in agriculture, autos and textiles
combined. Moreover the value of these initiatives cannot be measured in trade figures alone.
In a global economy driven by information, telecommunications and information technology
are two of the essential building blocks. Liberalization in these sectors will provide a necessary
foundation for economic growth throughout the developing and developed world, dramatically
reducing costs for business and consumers, while at the same time dramatically improving efficiency. It therefore makes a major contribution to blurring the divide between North and
South.
The third key initiative this year is financial services - and clearly the successful
conclusion of current negotiations in this sector is of the highest priority over the coming
months. With the globalization of financial markets, the advent of 24 hour trading, and
innovations in financial technology, financial services cannot - and should not - be constrained
within borders. The global economy is only as strong as the global financial system which
underpins it.
The MERCOSUR countries have made significant steps forward in financial
liberalization, and made important commitments under the WTO. Your efforts to liberalize
services trade under the MERCOSUR agreement itself are moving forward. I urge you to
continue to participate actively in the Geneva negotiations knowing that your countries stand
to benefit substantially from an efficient and competitive financial sector.
The WTO's growing rôle in the global economy is reflected in the movement to widen
its coverage as well as to deepen it. Of the 28 countries currently negotiating accession
- including China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the Baltic states, and Vietnam - all are developing
countries or economies in transition. This, perhaps more than any other feature of the WTO's
future agenda, is a positive referendum on the value of the multilateral trading system. With
these countries inside the system - and I have every reason to think they will be - the multilateral
system will be truly universal for the first time in its fifty-year history.
"Widening" also means helping those countries still on the margins of the global economy
to participate fully in the system and benefit from it. Among the highest priorities for the
WTO's programme for this year is a high level conference to combat the marginalization of
countries in the global economy. Working together with UNCTAD and the ITC, as well as
the World Bank, the UNDP and the International Monetary Fund and other major financing
institutions, we aim to establish an integrated strategy to help the poorest countries in the world
- a strategy that extends from improving technical cooperation through new technologies, to
improving market access and the capacity to make use of it.
Let me conclude with the observation that rule-based global integration will not be
a smooth or painless process. The walls between us stood as buffers as well as barriers; and
as these walls come down, some will only see our differences and disparities, not our common
interests.
Nor can we afford to underestimate the social changes that are following in the wake
of the most significant economic transformation since the Industrial Revolution. In Latin
America, as elsewhere, open trade and technological change have gone hand-in-hand with
massive pressure for adjustment and restructuring, placing strains on employment and social
security in all countries, rich and poor alike.
But these challenges are eclipsed by the immense opportunities that globalization offers.
Throughout history we have dreamed of a global community of nations based, not on might
or domination, but on the rule of law and reason. This is what is at stake in our efforts to
complete the creation of an open, universal, rule-based, multilateral trade system. Today this system is within our reach. Once we have agreed to free trade in MERCOSUR, in the Asia-Pacific region, in North America and in Europe, it is difficult to see our ultimate goal as
anything other than a single world market - global free trade.
Managing a world of converging economies, peoples and civilizations, each one
preserving its own identity and culture, represents the great challenge and the great promise
of our age. We are only on the threshold of this new era and the future is still unclear. But
if there is one certainty today it is that the universal rule-based multilateral trading system
is rapidly becoming a central pillar of the new international order; a key link between North
and South - developed and developing - an indispensable foundation for our ever more
interdependent world. Assuring social cohesion and addressing questions of distribution is
the responsibility of national governments around the world - but the powerful engine of growth
that is the multilateral system helps provide them with the resources to do so more effectively.
The alternative would be a world divided into trading blocs, whose relations would
be mainly established on power and not laws, influenced by economic and political nationalism.
In brief, a world moving towards repeating the well-known tragedies of our history. This
is what makes the future of the multilateral trading system such a key political issue.
Next year we have an opportunity to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the multilateral
system. This should be an occasion to look back on the unique contribution of this system
to the modern age, and to send out a clear message about the opportunities of the global system
we have helped to foster. But it should also be an occasion to look towards the future evolution
of the WTO and the global economy - an opportunity to start building the next 50 years of
prosperity and peace. Each of you - and all of you - in MERCOSUR share in the responsibility
for constructing this architecture of the future.