The EU-Mercosur deal will require âsacrificesâ from Argentina, experts warn
The free trade agreement between the European Union (EU) and Mercosur is one of the largest and most ambitious in the world, according to diplomats from the EU, Spain and Catalonia. But for it to be fully implemented, the economies of both blocs will have to adapt to competition and new trade rules.
Although its signing â after more than 20 years of negotiations â marks a historic milestone and promises a sharp rise in Argentine exports and investment over the coming decades, that outcome canât be reached without some âsacrifices.â
The warning came from Spainâs ambassador to Argentina, JoaquĂn MarĂa de ArĂstegui Laborde, at the Catalonia-Southern Cone Economic Forum held at the Argentine Chamber of Commerce.
ArĂstegui warned that ânothing is magic or free â itâs going to demand sacrifice.â He stressed that the free trade agreement âis a bet on shared prosperityâ between the two blocs, but that it will inevitably require âlegal and commercial changes,â among other adjustments.
âDo you really think that when Spain joined the EU it didnât sacrifice anything?â, the Spanish diplomat said, noting that since joining the European bloc, the Spanish economy is now the one that âhas contributed the most growth and the most jobsâ to the EU in recent years.
Along similar lines, the Catalan governmentâs delegate for the Southern Cone, Josep Vives i Portell, recalled that in the run-up to Spainâs entry into the EU âthere was a lot of skepticism,â but pointed to its positive impact, especially in major Spanish cities like Madrid, Barcelona and Bilbao.
âThis is going to be very complicated, but itâs going to be exciting,â Vives said, adding that âwhen we look at this thicket of regulationsâ â a reference to the 4,000 pages that make up the agreement â âwe shouldnât be scared; on the contrary, it should spur us on.â
The impact on the Argentine industry
At another point in his remarks, ArĂstegui acknowledged that âweâll have to see what impact it has on the provinceâs industryâ â referring to Buenos Aires Province.
He added that âthe success of this agreement will depend on ordinary citizens noticing it, not just honey producers,â a reference to the first shipment of Argentine honey under the agreement.
Buenos Aires Province is Argentinaâs industrial heartland â 50% of its manufacturing is produced there â and also the region hit hardest by trade liberalization and falling consumption under Javier Mileiâs government.
Eric Hoeg, the EUâs ambassador to Argentina, said the two blocsâ economies are complementary, noting that together they create âthe largest free trade area in the world, with 700 million people, accounting for 35% of global trade.â
âThe EU has a competitive edge in machinery, vehicles, pharmaceuticals and chemicals. Mercosur exports food, energy, raw materials and certain industrial goods, and it also has a lot of potential in services,â he said.
According to Hoeg, âthe province plays a fundamental roleâ in the future, since âcompanies are going to have new opportunitiesâ thanks to the opening of a high-purchasing-power market with tariff predictability.
âFor small and medium-sized companies in Mendoza, CĂłrdoba, Santa Cruz or Greater Buenos Aires, that means being able to plan an export,â he said. He added that this predictability âis perhaps the most valuable asset of the agreement, and the one that determines investment 10, 20, 30 years out.â
Winners, losers and reinvention
Mining stood out as one of the most talked-about sectors among the speakers. Hoeg, for instance, said âthe European energy transition needs lithium and copper,â of which Argentina âhas world-class reserves.â
âThe European investor isnât looking to extract and leave, but to join the local value chain, transfer technology and respect the highest environmental standards,â he added.
JosĂ© Antonio ArdavĂn, head of the Latin America and Caribbean Division at the OECD, reached a similar conclusion.
âLatin America and the Caribbean holds a strategic position in this global supply of critical materials: the region accounts for 40% of lithium reserves and 32% of copper reserves,â he said.
Not every sector of the economy shares the same fate, however. Romain Zivy, director of the office of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) in Argentina, explained that alongside mining, the energy and agribusiness sectors would be the big winners in Mercosur.
On the other side would be manufacturing, along with dairy and wine production â the latter two hurt by the trade barriers the EU imposed to protect its own output.
âThe agreement is an opportunity for the bloc to narrow competitiveness gaps, not just in production,â Zivy said, stressing the need to âfoster the development of local suppliers built on the activities with comparative advantages that benefit from the agreement.â
In the same vein, ArdavĂn noted that the region has experience exporting commodities, âbut the challenge is much more than exporting.â
âIt means looking at how we can move forward to turn that mineral wealth into productive capacity, innovation and even processing and sustainable industrial development,â he said.
The automotive industry
Zivy, from ECLAC, stressed that trade among Mercosur members has fallen from 28% in the 1990s to 12% today.
âIt runs counter to the trends in other blocs around the world, and it strikes us as a warning sign,â he cautioned.
On that point, he noted that 25% of intra-bloc trade is in the automotive sector, considered âthe main driver of integrationâ in the region. But it now âfaces the challenge of the growing demand for Chinese electric cars.â
ArdavĂn added that âMercosur â and Argentina and Brazil in particular â has a very solid auto industry, with a tradition of exporting.â
For that reason, he raised the possibility âthat the industry could be retooled to focus on this type of [electric] vehicle,â while also drawing on the regionâs critical-mineral deposits.
âGiven the circumstances weâre living in, with the geopolitics weâre experiencing, integration and the building of value chains in the region become essential,â he concluded.
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