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style="font-size: larger; margin-left: inherit;" | Mercado Común del Sur
Mercado Comum do Sul
Membership 5 member states
5 associate members
Official Languages Portuguese and Spanish
Seat of Secretariat Montevideo
Official website http://www.mercosur.int/
Mercosur or Mercosul (Spanish: Mercado Común del Sur, Portuguese: Mercado Comum do Sul, English: Southern Common Market) is a customs union between Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and Venezuela, founded in 1991 by the Treaty of Asunción, which was later amended and updated by the 1994 Treaty of Ouro Preto. Its purpose is to promote free trade and the fluid movement of goods, peoples, and currency.

Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru have associate member status. On 30 December 2005 it was announced that Bolivia would be invited to join as an associate member. Venezuela signed its membership agreement on 17 June 2006, and became a full member on 4 July of the same year. The organization has a South and Central America integration vocation.

Role and potential


Some South Americans see Mercosur as giving the capability to combine resources to balance the activities of other global economic powers, perhaps especially the United States and the European Union. The organization could also potentially pre-empt the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), however, over half of the current Mercosur member countries rejected the FTAA proposal at the IV Cumbre de las Américas (IV Summit of the Americas) in Argentina in 2005.

The development of Mercosur was arguably weakened by the collapse of the Argentine economy in 2002 and it has still seen internal conflicts over trade policy, between Brazil and Argentina, for example.

In December 2004 it signed a cooperation agreement with the Andean Community trade bloc (CAN) and they published a joint letter of intention for a future negotiations towards integrating all of South America. The prospect of increased political integration within the organization, as per the European Union and advocated by some, is still uncertain.

There are more than 220 million people in this region and the combined Gross Domestic Product of the member nations is more than one trillion dollars a year.

FTA with third parties


Recently, with the new cooperation agreement with Mercosur, the Andean Community gained four new associate members: Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. These four Mercosur members were granted associate membership by the Andean Council of Foreign Ministers meeting in an enlarged session with the Commission (of the Andean Community) on 7 July 2005. This move reciprocates the actions of Mercosur which granted associate membership to all the Andean Community nations by virtue of the Economic Complementarity Agreements (Free Trade agreements) signed between the CAN and individual Mercosur members. *

On 30 December 2005 Colombian president Álvaro Uribe signed a law that ratifies an FTA with Mercosur and gives Colombian products preferential access to a market of 230 million people. Colombian entrepreneurs will also be able to import materials and capital goods from Mercosur at lower costs due to reduced tariffs resulting from the agreement.

The agreement's asymmetry clauses favor Colombia because it allows the gradual and progressive reduction of tariffs and likewise gives Colombia the opportunity to gradually reform its production system to adapt it to the requirements of the future negotiations within the scheme of Mercosur and the South American Community of Nations.

See also


External links


South America | Trade blocs | International organizations | Foreign relations of Argentina

Mercosur | Mercosur | Mercosur | Merkosudo | Mercosur | Mercosur - Mercosul | 메르코수르 | Mercosur | Mercosur | 南米共同市場 | Mercosur | Mercosur | Mercosul | Mercosur | Меркосур | Mercosur | MERCOSUR | Меркосур

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Mercosur".

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