Mercado Común del Sur Mercado Comum do Sul Ñemby Ñemuha Southern Common Market.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Bretton-Woods Conference June Founders Harry Dexter White - Chief International Economist at the U.S. Treasury Harry Dexter White - Chief International.
Advertisements

1 INTERNATIONAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS SA TRADE AGREEMENTS DIRECTORATE: INTERNATIONAL TRADE FEBRUARY 2012.
Free Trade of The Americas: Issues and Prospects The Andean Group Jaime Malaga Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics Texas Tech University Free.
South America History and Present Day
International Trade Policy Economic Integration and Regionalism.
Global Marketing Chapter 3
INDEX Presentation of Argentina
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Regional Economic Integration.
Ch.6: International Environment: Regional Political & Economic Integration.
Latin American Countries Map Review. Mexico Nicaragua Panama Colombia Haiti Puerto Rico Jamaica Honduras The Bahamas Cuba United States Belize Guatemala.
Warm-Up November 12, 2013 Which of the following are true about Mayan people? They built their huge structures without beasts of burden. They built their.
Ch. 10-3: Spanish Speaking South America
MERCOSUR Presentation by Marta, Ryan, Simon, Boleslaw and Mariella.
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
International Trade Policy Economic Integration and Regionalism.
South America MIDN 1/C Barrier MIDN 1/C Gentry.
The Cultures of South America
R EGIONALISM AND M ULTILATERALISM. 5 D IFFERENT DEGREES OF INTEGRATION 1. Preferential Trade Agreements : Ex: Caribbean Basin Initiative: US grants less-
Accounting 6570 International Accounting and Business.
Economics in Latin America. Natural Resources Minerals:  gold  iron  copper  silver  nickel.
Slide 4.1 Alan M Rugman and Simon Collinson, International Business, 5 th Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2009 International politics Chapter 4.
1.9 Globalization Chapter 9. What is Globalization? The growing trend towards world-wide markets in products, capital and labor, and unrestricted by barriers.
Lecture 8 WORLD TRADING PATTERNS. International trade is exchange of capital, goods and services across international borders or territories. In most.
Brazil Amber Bishop. Location  Brazil is located in South America.  Borders all the countries of South America except Chile and Ecuador.  The countries.
Regional Economic Integration
MERCOSUR Abdukhamedova Azizakhon. Southern common market.
© The McGraw Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Ch.6: International Environment: Regional Political & Economic Integration.
Brazil Assessment Quiz
1 ECN 406 ECONOMICS OF INTEGRATION
REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN LATIN AMERICA Luis Ángel Madrid April 2010.
Preferential Trade Agreements Or Trade blocs Ch. 12.
2 The Global Economy. Learning Objectives Distinguish among the basic theories of world trade: absolute advantage, comparative advantage, and competitive.
Brazil. Basic Timeline Second Republic and Democratic Interlude ( ) Military Government and State-led Industrialization ( ) New Republic.
MERCOSUR Joaquin Romero Marcelo Moran. Background  Mercado Comun del Sur (Common Market of the South)  Custom Union: Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay,
1 CHAPTER VIII REGIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS.
Los países hispanohablantes The Spanish-speaking countries.
South American Countries Review
South American Countries Review
© 2006 Pearson Education Canada Inc.Chapter Chapter 2 Competing in the Global Economy.
PADI Division of Production, Productivity and Management Unit of Industrial and Technological Development Program for the Analysis of Industrial Dinamics.
Presented By: Tarundeep Singh Vinay Chawla
1 Lecture 4 Multilateralism and Regionalism Hyun-Hoon Lee Professor Kangwon National University.
Dynamics of International Institutions Chapter 4.
1 Regional Integration Regional trade agreements (RTAs) References Hill, C W “International Business” (6th edit., 2007), Chapter 9 Ball, D et al. “International.
Regional Economic Integration. Introduction Regional economic integration refers to agreements between countries in a geographic region to reduce tariff.
Galapagos Islands Caribbean Sea. Where is Argentina?
Levels of Economic Integration
South America By Region North Carolina Geographic Alliance PowerPoint Presentations 2007.
Unit 3 South America Countries of South America. Argentina - A large country in southeastern South America. Atlantic Ocean - The ocean that borders South.
2003 LATIN AMERlCAN AGREEMENT ON PORT STATE CONTROL (VIÑA DEL MAR, 1992)
SAFTA: FTAA Southern Exposure South American Perspective of Agricultural Free Trade Jaime Malaga Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics Texas.
International Marketing Answers by ASIALATINA. Question  The field of “being international” represents the dynamic decision problem within the field.
Brazilian National Regulations: based on OIML International Recommendations. Apply to: Liquid and gas fuel dispensers Nonautomatic weighing instruments.
SPANISH SPEAKING SOUTH AMERICA. HISTORY 1. The Andes Mountains is the cultural hearth for the Incas 2. Pizarro, a Spanish Conquistador conquered the Incan.
Free Trade Agreements NAFTA, CAFTA, Mercosur. Definitions Tariff- tax on imported goods.
Copyright ©2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a International Trade and Investment by John Gionea Slides prepared by John Gionea NAFTA MERCOSUR.
LATIN AMERICAN MARKETS MR. TRAN DUY DONG Deputy Director General of Market Department for the Americas Ministry of Industry and Trade.
WHY INVEST IN PERU? MACROECONOMİC SOUNDNESS. Fast and steady growth of the Peruvian economy in the last decade Real GDP, * (%Variation) Source:
1. MERCOSUR Overview 2. Established MERCOSUR I.Established Background II.Established Process 3. MERCOSUR’s Economic advance 4. Present MERCOSUR I.The.
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Subtitle. TITLE AND CONTENT LAYOUT WITH LIST Add your first bullet point here Add your second bullet point here Add your third bullet.
Final Exam Review Unit 2: International Economics.
International Business Lecture No,40 By Dr.Shahzad Ansar.
Introduction to Global Business
Mexico, NAFTA, and Expansion Toward the European Union
Regional Economic Integration
What is todays lesson about?
Preferential Trade Agreements Or Trade blocs Ch. 12
Ch.6: International Environment: Regional Political & Economic Integration © The McGraw Hill Companies, Inc., 2000.
Chapter 9, Lesson 3.
NS4540 Winter Term 2019 Pacific Alliance
Presentation transcript:

Mercado Común del Sur Mercado Comum do Sul Ñemby Ñemuha Southern Common Market

Mercosur Mercosur or Mercosul (Spanish: Mercado Común del Sur, Portuguese: Mercado Comum do Sul, Guarani: Ñemby Ñemuha, English: Southern Common Market) is an economic and political agreement among Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Venezuela;

Mercosur Its purpose is to promote free trade and the fluid movement of goods, people, and currency. The official languages are Spanish,Portuguese and Guaraní. It has been updated, amended, and changed many times since. It is now a full customs union. Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru and Suriname currently have associate member status.

Merchandise trade Intra-Mercosur merchandise trade (excluding Venezuela) grew from US$10 billion at the inception of the trade bloc in 1991, to US$88 billion in 2010; Brazil and Argentina each accounted for 43% of this total. The trade balance within the bloc has historically been tilted toward Brazil, which recorded an intra-Mercosur balance of over US$5 billion in 2010.

Merchandise trade Trade within Mercosur amounted to only 16% of the four countries' total merchandise trade in 2010, however; trade with the European Union (20%), China (14%), and the United States (11%) was of comparable importance. Exports from the bloc are highly diversified, and include a variety of agricultural, industrial, and energy goods.

Merchandise trade Merchandise trade with the rest of the world in 2010 resulted in a surplus for Mercosur of nearly US$7 billion; trade in services, however, was in deficit by over US$28 billion. The EU and China maintained a nearly balanced merchandise trade with Mercosur in 2010, while the United States reaped a surplus of over US$14 billion; Mercosur, in turn, earned significant surpluses (over US$4 billion each in 2010) in its trade with Chile and Venezuela. The latter became a full member in 2012.