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Transport Costs and “Natural” Integration in Mercosur

L. Winters and Azita Amjadi
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Azita Amjadi: The World Bank, Postal: The World Bank

Journal of Economic Integration, 1999, vol. 14, 497-521

Abstract:

The paper explores the argument that trade between the Mercosur countries should be stimulated by preferential policies because of their geographic proximi - ty. That is, that the Mercosur countries are candidates for “natural” integration. The paper finds that, on average, transportation margins on trade within Merco - sur and between Mercosur and Chile are about 6 percentage points lower than on trade with the rest of the world. That is a significant margin, and one that was reflected in the countries’ trade patterns even before regional trade agree - ments reduced the policy-based barriers to mutual trade. But it is probably not large enough, in and of itself (without other benefits), to make the introduction of trade preferences desirable. The paper also explores the argument that absolutely high transportation costs between Mercosur and the rest of the world (that is, not relative to intra-Mercosur costs) justify regional trade preferences. For this to apply the introduction of trade preferences must cause the Mercosur countries to cease importing some goods from the rest of the world completely. While Mer - cosur--- rest-of-the-world transport costs certainly are high, trade patterns sug - gest that very few goods will cease to be imported from the rest of the world.

Keywords: economic integration; transport costs; regional trade preferences (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F15 R40 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1999
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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Working Paper: Transport costs and"natural"integration in Mercosur (1997) Downloads
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