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GDP of Countries in North and South America. Source: IMF 2010. C. Periphery Countries falling behind in development. Several Latin American countries are dominated peripheries Some benefit from price explosions in raw materials Trinidad & Tobago – petroleum
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GDP of Countries in North and South America Source: IMF 2010
C. Periphery Countries falling behind in development • Several Latin American countries are dominated peripheries • Some benefit from price explosions in raw materials • Trinidad & Tobago – petroleum • Majority suffer from weak economies with no added value • Tropical fruit, aquaculture in Ecuador and Central America • Single export countries – e.g. Bauxite from Surinam
2. Major gap separating countryside from the city • Agriculture unequally competitive & often for self-consumption • Previously flourishing in Cuba, severely affected by fall of USSR & US embargo • Coca crops for cocaine trafficking both an alternative and a blight
3. The Poorest Populations and States excluded from the globalized economy • Haiti one of least developed countries • Indigenous populations (60% in Bolivia & Guatemala) first people struck by poverty • Corruption slows down development • Natural disasters add to the vulnerable situation (cyclones, earthquakes in Haiti & Honduras)
II. An increasingly integrated Continent • Key Question: How do exchanges and cooperation reinforce continental integration?
A. Reinforcement of Regional Integration • Integration of the Americas based on regional economic agreements and free exchange • MERCOSUR and NAFTA are the 2 motors of integration on the continent • Aim to eliminate customs barriers and facilitate cross-border exchanges of goods and services • Level of integration remains far inferior to the EU
Inside DealsExports* within Free Trade Areas as % of total exports *Merchandise Trade Source: WTO
2. Less powerful alternatives to MERCOSUR & NAFTA • Andean community (CAN) • Pacific Alliance (right-wing/free-trade policies) • Central American Integration System (SICA) • Caribbean Community (CARICOM) • Bolivian alliance for peoples of the Americas (ALBA) Bear testimony to the desire of small States to not depend exclusively on large regional powers
3. Organization of American States (OAS) • Unifies all States of the Western Hemisphere • Political and security objective more than economic • Promotion of democracy • Defense of human rights • Fighting drug trafficking and corruption • 2 major issues not addressed • Environmental protection • Risk management
B. Intensification of Flows • Regional economic groups favor commercial exchanges • Values within MERCOSUR increased by 10 in 20 years • Exchanges very unequal & dominated by Brazil • NAFTA exchanges similarly dominated by US supremacy
2. Many exchanges occur outside of regional groups • 50% of migrants entering the US come from the continent Origins of immigrants to US • Money earned in US represents 30% of Haiti’s and Guyana’s GDP and 15% of Honduras’ and Jamaica’s • Mexicans living in US transferred record sum of $24 B towards their country of origin in 2007
3. The Dynamics of Integration destabilize territories • Energy (hydrocarbons) and transportation networks expanding rapidly • Twin cities have emerged on most active borders due to the complementarities between States (Brazil-Uruguay; US-Mexico) • Intensification of mobility in Tri-border area of Brazil, Argentina & Paraguay • New language emerging: mix between Spanish & Portuguese
C. Limits of Integration • Continent remains divided between liberal economic model and anti-imperialist tendencies • Rise to power of politicians with anti-capitalist positions demonstrates defiance of the populations towards free trade • Bilateral agreements with the U.S. numerous (Dominican Republic, Chile, Mexico, Columbia)
2. Free Trade Area of the Americas (US initiative)on hold • Several countries have blocked the process and created the Union of South American Nations in 2008 UNASUR • Joins the 12 countries of South America and aims primarily the energy integration of the region
3. Certain social groups remain particularly excluded from integration • On the national scale, indigenous populations remain economically & politically marginalized (even when they represent the majority, e.g. Guatemala) • On the continental scale, obstacles to the free circulation of people are common, e.g. US-Mexican border
III. The Americas: Between Tensions and Appeasement Key Question: How have tensions recently evolved on the American continent?
A. The Rejection of US Domination • US Hegemony of Latin America is long-lived • US foreign policy, legacy of the Monroe Doctrine 1823 accompanied by the support of military regimes and banana republics (named after the supported of the US firm – The United Fruit Company) during the Cold War
2. US Military Presence • Major US influence in the Caribbean basin • Guantanamo Bay military base • embargo against Cuba since 1961 • Numerous Military interventions in last 50 years • Panama, Grenada, Nicaragua, etc… • US army active in the struggle against drug trafficking
3. Anti-American Attitudes persist in several South American countries • Impact of the world crisis on economies highly dependent on US consumer markets reinforced anti-imperialist axis embodied by Hugo Chavez • Stability of American democracy continues to serve as a model and a powerful pole of attraction
B. Sources of tension: drugs and access to resources • The Americas are confronted with major social inequalities which lead to violence • Highest rates of homicide in the world • El Salvador, Honduras & Venezuela • Armed gangs (maras) seminate violence from LA to Central America • Property and access to land – major factors of dispute and violence in Bolivia & Paraguay
Maras: Violence common to many countries Source: Clare RibandoSeelke, Gangs in America, Congressional Research Service, 2011
2. Drug Trafficking – source of violence • Impotence of Mexico to control drug cartels (criminal organizations) explains high crime rate in cities along the US Mexican border • Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana And in Central America • Guatemala, El Salvador busting bad - The Daily Show
3. Control of resources generates some conflict • Oil is cause of tensions between US and Canada (Arctic) and between Venezuela and Guyana • Bolivia demands access to the sea from Chile • Argentina continues to demand its rights over the Falkland Islands from the UK – fishing waters
C. National and International Tensions towards appeasement • In 1980’s democratization swept away many Latin American dictatorships supported by the U.S. • Peace treaties put an end to civil wars (El Salvador, Guatemala) • Columbia remains only country confronted with an internal armed conflict (FARC) • Return to democracy favored the rise to power of former guerilla soldiers (Nicaragua, Uruguay) or indigenous peoples (Bolivia, Peru)
2. International tensions on the continent are rare • Last conflict took place in 1995 on the contested militarized border between Peru and Ecuador • 2008 Columbian incursion in Ecuador during an offensive against the FARC led to diplomatic relations being cut off between the 2 countries
3. In contrast with the U.S., Latin America is the region which spends the least on national defense • Latin American States are tied by no military alliance • Armies in Chile, Brazil, Argentina & Uruguay have worked together in maintaining the peace missions (e.g. Haiti) where political instability remains strong