{"title":"The European Union, Mercosul and the New World Order","authors":"Jonathan Smart","doi":"10.5860/choice.41-4922","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The European Union, Mercosul and the New World Order Editors: Helio Jaguaribe & Alvaro de Vasconcelos Frank Cass, London, 2003 This volume is edited by two academics, one from Rio de Janeiro and the other from Lisbon. It comprises papers by six South American and five European scholars which focus on trends in the recent history of the European Union and Mercosul. The authors discuss the problems of regional integration, the way in which these two multinational organizations interrelate with other supra-national organizations and what this may portend for the future of the \"World Order.\" In particular they discuss the problems of regional integration, and some touch upon the disparate experiences of these two organizations. The European Union and Mercosul both represent attempts at regional integration that work with raw material that is very different. In South America, Brazil is a giant compared with other member countries. Geographically, Brazil covers more than 8 million square kilometers, and has a population of 172 million (almost as large as the total population of Germany, France and Britain combined), thereby dwarfing the other member states of Mercusol in both territorial size and population. Sao Paulo, with a population of over 18 million, is the third largest city in the world. The next largest member state of Mercosul is Argentina, which has 2.7 million square kilometers, but only 37 million population. Historically, Portuguese-speaking Brazil has an ethnically very diverse population, with the bulk of the lower echelons being descended from African slaves and, to a less extent, American Indians, but with an upper economic strata of primarily white origin. By contrast, Spanish-speaking Argentina lays claim to a more European-oriented origin and culture. Brazil's economy (at $500 billion) is twice that of Argentina, although its GDP per head is much smaller. Both have problems with inflation. While there are only two languages spoken in the Mercosul countries (Spanish and Portuguese), the European Union is made up of countries speaking many different languages, but dominated by the relatively healthy economies of Germany, France and Britain. It hopes to eventually eliminate poverty in the more backward member countries. Slovakia, for example, has a smaller GDP than Malaysia, and has largely eliminated barriers to the movement of capital and people. In short, it is more advanced along the road to economic and political union than the Mercosul countries, which have presently no real plan to unite as a single entity - something that has strong advocates, for better or for worse, in the European Union. With 82 million inhabitants, Germany, although the largest of the European Union member countries, still has less than half the population of Brazil, but its economy is three and a half times that of Brazil, despite the fact that it has few natural resources and a land area of only 357 thousand square kilometers. From an overview of the above, we would have hoped from the title of this book that the authors would have made more specific comparisons between the two systems, but unfortunately that is not the case. In general, the contributors focus on the Mercosul countries, and it is in the discussion of these that the merits of this publication are to be found. …","PeriodicalId":52486,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2004-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5860/choice.41-4922","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 9
Abstract
The European Union, Mercosul and the New World Order Editors: Helio Jaguaribe & Alvaro de Vasconcelos Frank Cass, London, 2003 This volume is edited by two academics, one from Rio de Janeiro and the other from Lisbon. It comprises papers by six South American and five European scholars which focus on trends in the recent history of the European Union and Mercosul. The authors discuss the problems of regional integration, the way in which these two multinational organizations interrelate with other supra-national organizations and what this may portend for the future of the "World Order." In particular they discuss the problems of regional integration, and some touch upon the disparate experiences of these two organizations. The European Union and Mercosul both represent attempts at regional integration that work with raw material that is very different. In South America, Brazil is a giant compared with other member countries. Geographically, Brazil covers more than 8 million square kilometers, and has a population of 172 million (almost as large as the total population of Germany, France and Britain combined), thereby dwarfing the other member states of Mercusol in both territorial size and population. Sao Paulo, with a population of over 18 million, is the third largest city in the world. The next largest member state of Mercosul is Argentina, which has 2.7 million square kilometers, but only 37 million population. Historically, Portuguese-speaking Brazil has an ethnically very diverse population, with the bulk of the lower echelons being descended from African slaves and, to a less extent, American Indians, but with an upper economic strata of primarily white origin. By contrast, Spanish-speaking Argentina lays claim to a more European-oriented origin and culture. Brazil's economy (at $500 billion) is twice that of Argentina, although its GDP per head is much smaller. Both have problems with inflation. While there are only two languages spoken in the Mercosul countries (Spanish and Portuguese), the European Union is made up of countries speaking many different languages, but dominated by the relatively healthy economies of Germany, France and Britain. It hopes to eventually eliminate poverty in the more backward member countries. Slovakia, for example, has a smaller GDP than Malaysia, and has largely eliminated barriers to the movement of capital and people. In short, it is more advanced along the road to economic and political union than the Mercosul countries, which have presently no real plan to unite as a single entity - something that has strong advocates, for better or for worse, in the European Union. With 82 million inhabitants, Germany, although the largest of the European Union member countries, still has less than half the population of Brazil, but its economy is three and a half times that of Brazil, despite the fact that it has few natural resources and a land area of only 357 thousand square kilometers. From an overview of the above, we would have hoped from the title of this book that the authors would have made more specific comparisons between the two systems, but unfortunately that is not the case. In general, the contributors focus on the Mercosul countries, and it is in the discussion of these that the merits of this publication are to be found. …
《欧盟、南方共同市场与世界新秩序》编辑:Helio Jaguaribe & Alvaro de Vasconcelos Frank Cass,伦敦,2003年本卷由两位学者编辑,一位来自里约热内卢,另一位来自里斯本。它包括6位南美和5位欧洲学者的论文,重点关注欧洲联盟和南方共同市场近期历史的趋势。作者讨论了区域一体化的问题,这两个跨国组织与其他超国家组织相互联系的方式,以及这可能预示着“世界秩序”的未来。他们特别讨论了区域一体化的问题,有些还谈到了这两个组织的不同经验。欧洲联盟和南方共同市场都代表着区域一体化的尝试,它们使用的是非常不同的原材料。在南美洲,与其他成员国相比,巴西是一个巨人。从地理上看,巴西的国土面积超过800万平方公里,人口为1.72亿(几乎相当于德国、法国和英国人口的总和),在领土面积和人口数量上都使Mercusol的其他成员国相形见绌。圣保罗人口超过1800万,是世界第三大城市。南方共同市场的第二大成员国是阿根廷,面积270万平方公里,但人口只有3700万。从历史上看,讲葡萄牙语的巴西拥有一个种族非常多样化的人口,下层社会的大部分是非洲奴隶的后裔,在较小程度上是美洲印第安人的后裔,但上层经济阶层主要是白人血统。相比之下,讲西班牙语的阿根廷则声称自己有着更欧洲化的起源和文化。巴西的经济规模(5000亿美元)是阿根廷的两倍,尽管其人均GDP要小得多。两国都存在通胀问题。虽然南方共同市场国家只有两种语言(西班牙语和葡萄牙语),但欧盟由讲许多不同语言的国家组成,但由德国、法国和英国等相对健康的经济主导。它希望最终在较落后的成员国消除贫困。例如,斯洛伐克的GDP低于马来西亚,并且在很大程度上消除了资本和人员流动的障碍。简而言之,在经济和政治联盟的道路上,它比南方共同市场国家更先进,后者目前还没有真正的计划联合成一个单一的实体——无论好坏,在欧盟内部都有强有力的倡导者。拥有8200万人口的德国,虽然是欧盟成员国中人口最多的国家,但人口还不到巴西的一半,尽管自然资源很少,国土面积只有35.7万平方公里,但其经济总量却是巴西的3.5倍。从上面的概述来看,我们本希望从本书的标题中,作者能够对这两个系统进行更具体的比较,但不幸的是,情况并非如此。一般来说,撰稿人的重点是南方共同市场国家,正是在对这些国家的讨论中,才能发现本出版物的优点。…
期刊介绍:
The quarterly Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies (ISSN 0193-5941), which has been published regularly since 1976, is a peer-reviewed academic journal devoted to scholarly papers which present in depth information on contemporary issues of primarily international interest. The emphasis is on factual information rather than purely theoretical or historical papers, although it welcomes an historical approach to contemporary situations where this serves to clarify the causal background to present day problems.