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  Mentions légales

 

 

  Conference
Third CEPII-IDB Conference
New Regionalism: Progress, Setbacks and Challenges
 

The Centre d’Etudes Prospectives et d’Informations Internationales (CEPII) in Paris and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) are co-organizing a series of conferences on issues in the field of integration and trade. The First IDB/CEPII Conference took place in Washington D.C. on November 5-6, 2001 (“Impacts of Trade Liberalization Agreements on Latin America and the Caribbean”) and the Second Conference was also held in Washington D.C. on October 6-7, 2003 (“Economic Implications of the Doha Development Agenda for Latin America and the Caribbean”).

The Third IDB/CEPII Conference that will take place on February 9-10, 2006, at the Inter-American Development Bank headquarters in Washington, D.C. This event will focus on the New Regionalism: Progress, Setbacks and Challenges. The Conference is organized by CEPII and the IDB's Integration and Regional Programs Department (through the Institute for the Integration of Latin America and the Caribbean in Buenos Aires) and the Bank’s Special Office in Europe.

The objective of the conference is to take stock of the progress in the process of regional integration of the South-South as well as North-South type in different parts of the world since the 1990s, and on a comparative basis look into the achievements as well as challenges that the various integration groupings are facing today.

The two-day conference will cover a broad range of technical and policy issues with regard to the design and functioning of regional integration initiatives.

Preliminary agenda

Session 1: Asymmetric Integration Within and/or Between Countries
Asymmetries in size and wealth among – and also within – integration partners, as well as differential impacts of policies, can lead to disparities in economic performance and gains, and cause tensions. What are the policy options for addressing them?

Session 2: Assessing Trade Impacts of Regional Integration: Border Effects, Trade Patterns
How does regional integration alter border effects within the region and vis-à-vis third countries? How will patterns of specialization be affected?

Session 3: From Free Trade Areas to Fuller Cooperation
Regional integration agreements may – or may not – go beyond free trade areas. Is it possible to identify any sequencing patterns between trade and non-trade cooperation, and are trade agreements the basis for major cooperation in other areas? These as well as the institutional modalities will be analyzed with regard to the major N-S initiatives (such as the EU Association and Partnership Agreements and the European Neighborhood Policy, FTAA, APEC etc), as well as S-S initiatives (such as Mercosur, ASEAN, SADC, etc).

Session 4: Implementation Issues
What is the extent of actual integration vs. the objectives of formal integration agreements? What are the causes, impacts and consequences of incomplete implementation of regional integration agreements? What are the policy responses and institutions needed for fuller implementation of agreed goals?

Session 5: Multinational Enterprises’ Reactions to Regional Integration
How are foreign direct investment (FDI) strategies by multinational enterprises (MNEs) affected by the nature, design and content (e.g. rules of origin, investment provisions, exceptions, etc.) of different integration schemes?

Session 6: Institutional Patterns in Regional Integration
What are the emerging patterns in sequencing of institutional development ? How relevant is the EU experience to regional initiatives in developing countries? What are the alternative patterns and design?
February 9-10, 2006
Washington D.C.

Papers