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The Andean Community
The headquarters of the Andean Community
of Nations is in Lima and the Indian Embassy in Lima
liases with it. A brief write-up about the organisation
is given below:
The Andean Community of Nations (CAN
as per its initials in Spanish) was formed in May 1969
with the signing of the Cartagena Agreement (then also
known as the Andean Pact). As the name suggests, the
initial group consisted of the five countries of the
Andes viz. Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and Bolivia.
In those days of socialist economic models, the main
objective of the group was to reach greater integration
through import substitution by establishing a customs
union (viz. no internal tariff with a common external
tariff) within 10 years.
However, subsequent regional developments
and changes in economic structures of these countries
led to the embracing of open regionalism and an expansion
of the objectives to include a much larger type of regional
integration. This was also influenced by the success
of the European Union (EU).
Venezuela joined CAN in 1973 while
Chile, following the 1973 coup, opted out of CAN in
1976. The members of the group have remained the same
since then viz. Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia and
Venezuela. While Venezuela is not technically an Andean
country, the common thread among the current five is
the fact that the “Liberator” of each of
these countries was Simon Bolivar. Overall, CAN accounts
for 120 million people, an area of 4.7 million sq km,
and a 2002 GDP of US$ 260 billion.
CAN has gradually expanded its linkages
to create various other institutions (known as the Andean
Integration System) like the Andean Presidential Council
(comprising the Presidents), the Andean Council of Foreign
Ministers, the Court of Justice, the Andean Parliament,
the Andean Commission, the Andean Development Corporation,
the Latin American Reserve Fund, the Business Advisory
Council, the Labour Advisory Council and the Simon Bolivar
University. In 1997, a permanent Secretariat was created
in Lima with a 5-year term for the Secretary General.
The current Secretary General is the former Peruvian
Foreign Minister, Allan Wagner. CAN also has an annual
rotating Presidency.
However, internal differences and regional
developments have ensured that progress towards integration
remained slow and erratic, particularly during the 1980s.
Even now, many of the above institutions are not fully
functional since all member countries have not ratified
them.
In 1993, a partial Free Trade Area
(FTA) finally came into force with Bolivia, Ecuador,
Colombia and Venezuela eliminating their mutual tariffs.
However, due to the 1992 internal crisis, Peru joined
the FTA only in July 1997, and a full CAN FTA is expected
only in 2004 due to the gradual entry regime granted
to Peru.
During the late 1990s, CAN decide to
deepen its integration and declared an ambitious objective
of forming a common market by 2005. This would involve
not only free movement of goods, but also of services,
capital and people. As of now, only limited progress
has been made in these other areas. A recent CAN decision
allows CAN citizen visa free tourist travel to other
CAN countries (Venezuela has not fully implemented this
as yet). Subsequently, CAN also decided to broaden the
scope of integration and to work for integrated cooperation
in areas like common foreign policy, common macroeconomic
policies, a social agenda, sustainable development,
frontier region development, harmonization of laws,
etc. The current objective is to reach a common integrated
Andean region in future.
Unfortunately, internal divisions within
CAN remain strong. While a common external tariff (CET
- to move from an FTA to a customs union) was introduced
for 62% of tariff lines in late 2002, some countries
like Peru have called for renegotiating some of the
tariff lines since Peru’s current tariffs are
lower than the proposed CET. Differences also remain
over issues like agricultural policies, leading to slowdown
in implementation of a common market. Moreover, many
decisions of the Andean Council in areas of tariffs,
etc continue to be violated by most countries due to
domestic lobbies. Intra-CAN trade also remains limited.
Meanwhile, CAN countries have been
reaching out to other countries and groups. CAN –
Brazil and CAN – Argentina PTAs were signed in
1999 and 2000 respectively, and an FTA between CAN and
MERCOSUR is expected by end-2003 (Peru and Bolivia are
already Associate Members of MERCOSUR). As regards the
proposed Free Trade of the Americas (FTAA, ALCA in Spanish),
some CAN countries like Venezuela are interested in
first forming a group with MERCOSUR before negotiating
ALCA, while countries like Colombia would like CAN to
independently negotiate with ALCA.
In terms of other countries or groupings,
CAN has established dialogue mechanisms with Russia,
China and Japan. CAN is also working towards similar
agreements with the US, the EU (towards a FTA), Canada,
South Korea, Cuba and the European Free Trade Association
(EFTA - Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland).
With the US, Canada and the EU, some agreements in trade
and investment already exist. The US and the EU also
accord unilateral trade preferences to some CAN countries
under the ATPDEA and EU GSP respectively. CAN is in
contact with CARICOM, Panama and the Central American
Common Market (CACM - Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras,
Nicaragua, and Costa Rica) for a PTA / FTA at a future
date. CAN also has limited contact with APEC (Peru is
the only CAN country that is an APEC member) and ASEAN.
An
agreement to establish a mechanism of political consultation
and cooperation between India and CAN was
signed during the visit of EAM to Lima in June 2003.
EAM also met with the CAN Secretary General during his
visit. A draft PTA / FTA agreement has been forwarded
to the CAN Secretary General, but action on this may
be delayed due to the various regional free trade agreements
that are being negotiated by CAN countries.
CAN maintains a detailed website
in English, which can be accessed for further
details.

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