Emerging Trade Politics: The Continuous Pendulum from Multilateralism to Asymmetric Trade Negotiations

Published in Estudos Internacionais Revista de Relações Internacionais da PUC Minas 2(1)
Authors

Saguier, M. and Tussie, D.

Publication year 2014
DOI N/A
Affiliations
  • Investigador Principal, Área de Relaciones Internacionales, FLACSO/ Argentina. Investigador Asistente, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET)
  • Coordinadora, Área de Relaciones Internacionales, FLACSO/Argentina. Investigadora Principal, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET). País Argentina

 

IAI Program

CRN3

IAI Project CRN3101
Keywords

Abstract

In this essay we analyze the challenges of asymmetric trade agreements at a time when Mercosur and Ecuador are opening negotiations with the European Union. How can developing countries manage the terms of integration into the global economy? How do different sets of external pressures place constraints on national development strategies? What offsetting mechanisms have emerged? We discuss the dynamics of trade negotiation processes in multilateral and bilateral fora to show to what extent they reflect and reproduce entrenched power asymmetries. Moreover, we explore the opportunities and constraints available for developing country governments to offset the unequal power structure that characterise international trade negotiation processes. It is argued that while changes in the contemporary international political economy do not override historically entrenched asymmetries, they nonetheless open up opportunities to develop new approaches of engagement in trade negotiations that can mitigate and at times even overcome power asymmetries.