European and American regionalism: effects on and options for Asia
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Anderson, Kym
Snape, Richard H.
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Elsevier
Abstract
This paper addresses several questions of concern to economies excluded from
the world's two major trading blocs. First, is there evidence from the past that
suggests that the direct and indirect effects of RIAs on trade and investment have
been income-reducing for economies not included? Many would answer .. yes."
and some cite the increasing regionalization of world trade to support that view.
Section I of the present paper suggests that this conclusion is probably unwarranted.
It is true that the share of world trade that is intraregional has been
increasing. However, it is also true that the proportion of GDP traded has been
increasing sufficiently rapidly for there to be growth, not only in trade with other
regions but also in the share of GDP traded extraregionally. Section 2 then considers
whether enlarging NAFTA and EU membership is likely to contribute to or
slow this past trend for increasing economic integration across regions as well as
within regions. Not all the signs are positive, and the net effect may indeed be negative, but the paper argues that, on balance, the concerns of excluded economies
relating to trade and investment diversion probably are exaggerated. Section
3 focuses on the broader systemic question that is more worrisome for nonincluded
small open economies; namely, will the proliferation of RIAs erode the
GATT rules-based multilateral trading system? It concludes that there is indeed
cause for this systemic concern. The final section of the paper looks at how Asian
and other nonincluded economies might respond to the economic integration
initiatives in North America, Europe, and elsewhere.
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Journal of the Japanese and International Economies