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Regional integration among developing countries, revisited

Abstract

Economic integration among developing countries became an important policy issue in the 1960s and early 1970s. But although intraregional trade increased in some trading groups, it remained a modest share of total trade. However, dramatic changes in the world economy have affected the environment for regional integration and cooperation. The formation of new, powerful economic and trading blocs, such as the single market of the European Community, the US-Canada free trade area, initiatives in the Pacific basin, and the transition to market economies in Central and perhaps Eastern Europe, seems to have fostered a trend toward new regionalism in the world economy. The virtual failure of the GATT negotiations may speed this up. To minimize economic losses and avoid marginalization, regional groups of developing countries must increasingly work out common positions and join one of the influential groups. Both factors require the gradual yet rapid dismantling of barriers to the free flow of production factors within regional groups. Obviously, intraregional trade cannot become an alternative to trade flows that are basically oriented to the world market. But in the 1990s, intraregional trade and economic relations are likely to grow parallel to, or even at a higher rate than, extraregional contacts.TF054105-DONOR FUNDED OPERATION ADMINISTRATION FEE INCOME AND EXPENSE ACCOUNT,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Trade and Regional Integration,Trade Policy

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