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E12/270
- Intraregional trade in South America, 1913-50. Economic linkages before institutional agreements
- José Peres Cajías, Marc Badia-Miró, Anna Carreras-Marín
- 2012
- the great depression, regional integration, the world wars, international trade, latin american economic history, trade agreements
- N76, N46, F15
- With the exception of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
trade integration is still modest in Latin America, at around 20% of total trade.
Surprisingly, these levels were higher in 1945, when the figure for imports stood at
25.6%. Paradoxically, this result shows that trade integration reached its peak before
trade integration agreements were signed. To understand the reasons for this, we
examine intraregional trade throughout the interwar period (1913-1950). We analyze
five national cases: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile and Peru. As far as we know, this
is the first paper in the literature on intraregional trade during the interwar period. There
are other papers on intraregional trade in Latin America, but they focus on the period
after the 1960s. The analysis of intraregional trade in the interwar period is also useful
to the Latin American industrialization debate. Given the disruption in world trade
flows and the existence of some industrial capacity, the paper looks at any possible
increase in intra-industry trade. There are two main conclusions: a) with the exception
of the World War periods, intraregional trade has been low since 1913; b) in general,
intraregional trade reflects the overall trade specialization: there is a high concentration
of low value added products.
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