The fourth Workshop of the Regional Integration Network (RIN) will be held in Montevideo, Uruguay, December 15-17, 2004. This Workshop is sponsored by LACEA and is organized by CERES (Center for the Study of Economic and Social Affairs).
The Workshop is a unique event that brings together top researchers and
policymakers from the North and the South to discuss recent theoretical and
empirical advances in the economics and politics of Regional Integration
Agreements (RIAs). The goal of these meetings is to use the findings of research in
order to gain a better understanding of the problems, opportunities and policy
challenges faced by Latin American countries in the process of integration and also
to encourage further research on the subject.
The Workshop will begin on the morning of December 15 th and adjourn after lunch
on December 17 th . The program will consist of ten brainstorming sessions that
will be divided into two invited sessions and eight regular sessions. The papers
for the regular sessions will be selected among the submitted papers. Each paper of
both invited and regular sessions will be briefly commented by a discussant leaving
ample time for general discussion.
A Program Committee formed by Robert Devlin, Antoni Estevadeordal, Marcelo
Olarreaga, Ernesto Stein, Pablo Sanguinetti, Maurice Schiff and Marcel
Vaillant will be in charge of selecting the eight papers and discussants for the
regular sessions as well as the participants in invited sessions.
Previous meetings of the Regional Integration Network attracted many very good
papers and an extremely qualified attendance from around the world resulting in a
very fruitful exchange of ideas. Past participants included Edward Leamer, Arvind
Panagariya, Raymond Robertson, John Romalis, Anthony Venables and Jeffrey
Williamson, among others.
We welcome theoretical and empirical research relevant for understanding the
economics and politics of RIAs (for convenience, a list of suggested topics is
included in this Call for Papers which although not exhaustive will serve as a guide
for Workshop participants). Both theoretical and policy oriented papers are
welcomed. A special emphasis will be placed on attracting young scholars.
In order to participate in the Workshop it will be necessary to submit a
paper or research project testifying to the author’s research commitment
to this field. Those invited to participate, however, will not necessarily be asked to
present a paper. Actually, we anticipate that there will be more participants than
the ten papers and ten discussants that we will be able to accommodate during the
Workshop. Thus, a basic requirement is your willingness to be an active participant
during those three days.
For academic participants, we expect to be able to offer hotel accommodations and
a round-trip economy class (most direct) airfare. We urge you to find other sources
of funds to cover other transportation costs, as we are running this on a very
limited budget.
Academics and researchers currently occupying policy-making positions are
welcome to participate in the Workshop without presenting a paper. However, these
participants will have to procure the financing to participate in the Workshop from
their own institutions.
Please, send us an email indicating your willingness to participate in the Workshop
to RIN2004@ceres-uy.org no later than September 3 rd, together with the paper
title and an abstract. The submission deadline for papers and research projects is
October 4 th . Papers (preliminary drafts are acceptable) must be submitted in PDF
format. For additional information please visit http://www.ceres-uy.
org/RIN2004.
In this year’s Workshop we hope to replicate and improve upon the success of
previous editions. As an additional incentive, please note that Montevideo is only
140 km (about 90 miles) away from Punta del Este, which is one of the most
beautiful seaside resorts in the world, and 25 minutes by plane from Buenos Aires’s
downtown airport.
Sincerely,
Mariano Tommasi
LACEA’s President
Chairman of the Department of Economics at Universidad de San Andres
tommasi@udesa.edu.ar
Ernesto Talvi
Executive Director
CERES
Montevideo, Uruguay
etalvi@ceres-uy.org
Regional Integration Network: Suggested List of Topics
I. The Economics and Politics of Regional Integration Agreements
(RIAs)
- Economic and Political Determinants of RIAs
- Political Economy dimensions of RIAs (e.g. should Mercosur or the
Andean Community negotiate FTAA as a bloc or individually? Should RIAs
be used as a trade liberalization strategy?)
- Dispute Settlement Mechanisms within RIAs
II. Trade Integration
- International Trade Rules, WTO, and Regional Trade Arrangements
- Effects of Trading Blocks on Global Liberalization
III. Monetary and Financial Integration
- Currency Unions
- Exchange Rate Harmonization
- Macroeconomic coordination
IV. Integration Beyond Trade
- Product Standards
- Labor Standards
- Environmental Standards
- Intellectual Property Rights
- Government Procurement
- Competition Policy
- Capital Markets Integration (insurance, banking, supervision)
- Tax Harmonization
- Investment Agreements
V. The Economic and Social Impact of Integration
(as defined in II, III and IV)
- Trade Patterns
- Production Patterns
- Growth
- Technology Diffusion and Productivity
- Industrial Location and Spatial Agglomeration
- FDI
- Income Distribution
- Migration
- Employment |