Latin American Integration Association
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2012) |
Latin American Integration Association Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración Associação Latino-Americana de Integração | |
---|---|
Flag | |
![]() | |
Administrative center | Montevideo, Uruguay |
Working languages | |
Type | Trade bloc |
Membership | |
Leaders | |
• Secretary General | Sergio Abreu |
Establishment | |
• Treaty of Montevideo | 12 August 1980 |
Website http://www.aladi.org/ |
The Latin American Integration Association / Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración / Associação Latino-Americana de Integração (LAIA / ALADI) is an international and regional scope organization. It was created on 12 August 1980 by the 1980 Montevideo Treaty,[1][2] replacing the Latin American Free Trade Association (LAFTA/ALALC). Currently, it has 13 member countries, and any of the Latin American States may apply for accession.
Objectives
The development of the integration process developed within the framework of the ALADI aims at promoting the harmonious and balanced socio-economic development of the region, and its long-term objective is the gradual and progressive establishment of a Latin-American single market.
Basic functions
- Promotion and regulation of reciprocal trade
- Economic complementation
- Development of economic cooperation actions contributing to the markets extension.
General principles
- Pluralism in political and economic matters;
- Progressive convergence of partial actions for the establishment of a Latin-American Common Market;
- Flexibility;
- Differential treatments based on the development level of the member countries; and
- Multiple forms of trade agreements.
Integration mechanisms
The ALADI promotes the establishment of an area of economic preferences within the region, in order to create a Latin-American common market, through three mechanisms:
- A Regional Tariff Preference applied to goods from the member countries compared to tariffs in-force for third countries.
- Regional Scope Agreements, those in which all member countries participate.
- Partial Scope Agreements, those wherein two or more countries of the area participate.
The Relatively Less Economically Developed Countries of the region (Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay) benefit from a preferential system, through the lists of markets opening offered by the countries in favor of the Relatively Less Economically Developed Countries; special programs of cooperation (business rounds, pre-investment, financing, technological support); and countervailing measures in favor of the land-locked countries, the full participation of such countries in the integration process is sought. The ALADI includes in its legal structure the strongest sub-regional, plurilateral and bilateral integration agreements arising in growing numbers in the continent. As a result, the ALADI – as an institutional and legal framework or “umbrella” of the regional integration- develops actions in order to support and foster these efforts for the progressive establishment of a common economic space.
Member states
State Members | Join Date | Population | Land Surface | Exclusive Economic Zone | Platform | Capital City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Founder | 40,117,096 | 2,780,400 km2 | 1,084,386 km2 | 856,346 km2 | Buenos Aires |
![]() |
Founder | 10,426,160 | 1,098,581 km2 | Landlocked | Sucre & La Paz | |
![]() |
Founder | 190,732,694 | 8,514,877 km2 | 3,660,955 km2 | 774,563 km2 | Brasília |
![]() |
Founder | 17,094,275 | 756,096.3 km2 | 3,681,989 km2 | 252,947 km2 | Santiago de Chile |
![]() |
Founder | 45,656,937 | 1,141,748 km2 | 817,816 km2 | 53,691 km2 | Bogotá |
![]() |
1999 | 11,242,621 | 110,860 km2 | 350,751 km2 | 61,525 km2 | Havana |
![]() |
Founder | 14,306,876 | 283,561 km2 | 1,072,533 km2 | 41,034 km2 | Quito |
![]() |
Founder | 112,322,757 | 1,972,550 km2 | 3,177,593 km2 | 419,102 km2 | Mexico City |
![]() |
Founder | 7,030,917 | 406,752 km2 | Landlocked | Asunción | |
![]() |
2011 | 3,405,813 | 78,200 km2 | 335,646 km2 | 53,404 km2 | Panama City |
![]() |
Founder | 29,885,340 | 1,285,215.6 km2 | 906,454 km2 | 82,000 km2 | Lima |
![]() |
Founder | 3,424,595 | 176,215 km2 | 142,166 km2 | 75,327 km2 | Montevideo |
![]() |
Founder | 30,102,382 | 916,445 km2 | 860,000 km2 | 98,500 km2 | Caracas |
Total: | 521,213,563 | 19,651,873 km2 | 16,214,170 km2 | 2,839,313 km2 |
Accession of other Latin American countries
<imagemap> File:Supranational_American_Bodies.svg|thumb|400px|right|A clickable Euler diagram showing the relationships between various multinational organizations in the Americasv • d • e rect 270 1116 330 1166 Antigua and Barbuda rect 575 297 635 347 Argentina rect 1207 867 1267 917 Bahamas rect 967 977 1027 1027 Barbados rect 1061 807 1121 857 Belize rect 852 582 912 632 Bolivia rect 575 367 635 417 Brazil rect 967 27 1027 77 Canada rect 707 227 767 277 Chile rect 782 367 842 417 Colombia rect 1132 342 1192 392 Costa Rica rect 163 657 223 707 Cuba rect 335 1066 395 1116 Dominica rect 1207 662 1267 712 Dominican Republic rect 782 507 842 557 Ecuador rect 1132 727 1192 777 El Salvador rect 335 977 395 1027 Grenada rect 1132 592 1192 642 Guatemala rect 500 817 560 867 Guyana rect 1207 917 1267 967 Haiti rect 1132 662 1192 712 Honduras rect 967 897 1027 947 Jamaica rect 852 152 912 202 Mexico rect 335 1264 395 1314 Montserrat rect 967 727 1027 777 Nicaragua rect 967 437 1027 487 Panama rect 500 297 560 347 Paraguay rect 707 437 767 487 Peru rect 270 1066 330 1116 Saint Kitts and Nevis rect 270 1166 330 1216 Saint Lucia rect 335 1116 395 1166 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines rect 575 817 635 867 Suriname rect 1132 977 1192 1027 Trinidad and Tobago rect 1132 27 1192 77 United States rect 425 297 485 347 Uruguay rect 425 657 485 707 Venezuela
rect 1214 10 1275 73 Inter-American_Treaty_of_Reciprocal_Assistance rect 20 98 124 122 Community of Latin American and Caribbean States rect 140 98 221 122 Latin American Economic System rect 787 922 919 946 Union of South American Nations rect 430 358 517 382 Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization rect 707 598 770 622 Andean Community rect 500 253 632 277 Mercosur rect 1128 1287 1275 1311 Caribbean Community rect 657 148 768 204 Pacific Alliance rect 140 584 222 607 ALBA rect 1202 343 1275 367 Central American Integration System rect 1110 403 1275 427 Central American Parliament rect 270 930 358 954 Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States rect 140 144 230 167 Latin American Integration Association rect 962 593 1032 617 Central America-4 Border Control Agreement rect 852 28 965 52 United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement rect 702 880 836 904 Forum for the Progress and Integration of South America rect 1211 138 1275 162 Association of Caribbean States rect 254 13 318 37 Organization of American States rect 670 658 830 682 Petrocaribe rect 1095 1187 1184 1211 CARICOM Single Market and Economy </imagemap>
The 1980 Montevideo Treaty is open to the accession of any Latin-American country. On 26 August 1999, the first accession to the 1980 Montevideo Treaty was executed, with the incorporation of the Republic of Cuba as a member country of the ALADI. On 10 May 2012, the Republic of Panama became the thirteenth member country of the ALADI. Likewise, the accession of the Republic of Nicaragua was accepted in the Sixteenth Meeting of the Council of Ministers (Resolution 75 (XVI)), held on 11 August 2011.
Currently, Nicaragua moves towards the fulfillment of conditions for becoming a member country of the ALADI.
The ALADI opens its field of actions for the rest of Latin America through multilateral links or partial agreements with other countries and integration areas of the continent (Article 25). The Latin-American Integration Association also contemplates the horizontal cooperation with other integration movements in the world and partial actions with third developing countries or their respective integration areas (Article 27).
Institutional structure

- Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs
The Council of Ministers is the supreme body of the ALADI, and adopts the decisions for the superior political management of the integration process. It is constituted by the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the member countries. Notwithstanding, when one of such member countries assigns the competence of the integration affairs to a different Minister or Secretary of State, the member countries may be represented, with full powers, by the respective Minister or Secretary. It is convened by the Committee of Representatives, meets and makes decisions with the presence of all the member countries.
- Evaluation and Convergence Conference
It is in charge, among others, of analyzing the functioning of the integration process in all its aspects, promoting the convergence of the partial scope agreements seeking their progressive multilateralization, and promoting greater scope actions as regards economic integration. It is made up of Plenipotentiaries of the member countries.
- Committee of Representatives
It is the permanent political body and negotiating forum of the ALADI, where all the initiatives for the fulfillment of the objectives established by the 1980 Montevideo Treaty are analyzed and agreed on. It is composed of a Permanent Representative of each member country with right to one vote and an Alternate Representative. It meets regularly every 15 days and its Resolutions are adopted by the affirmative vote of two thirds of the member countries.
- General Secretariat
It is the technical body of the ALADI, and it may propose, evaluate, study and manage for the fulfillment of the objectives of the ALADI. It is composed of technical and administrative personnel, and directed by a Secretary-General, who has the support of two Undersecretaries, elected for a three-year period, renewable for the same term.

Secretaries general
- 1980–1984
Julio César Schupp (Paraguay)
- 1984–1987
Juan José Real (Uruguay)
- 1987–1990
Norberto Bertaina (Argentina)
- 1990–1993
Jorge Luis Ordóñez (Colombia)
- 1993–1999
Antônio José de Cerqueira Antunes (Brasil)
- 2000–2005
Juan Francisco Rojas Penso (Venezuela) [3]
- 2005–2008
Didier Opertti (Uruguay) [4]
- 2008–2009
Bernardino Hugo Saguier-Caballero (Paraguay)
- 2009–2011
José Félix Fernández Estigarribia (Paraguay) [5]
- 2011–2017
Carlos Álvarez (Argentina)
- 2017–
Alejandro de la Peña Navarrete (Mexico)
See also
External links
References

- ^ 1980 Montevideo Treaty (in English)
- ^ 1980 Montevideo Treaty Archived 2019-01-09 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
- ^ "20th Anniversary of the Treaty of Montevideo" (in español). ALADI. 2000-08-07.
- ^ "25th Anniversary of the Treaty of Montevideo" (in español). ALADI. 2005-08-11.
- ^ "30th Anniversary of the Treaty of Montevideo" (in español). ALADI. 2010-08-19.
- Webarchive template wayback links
- Articles with Spanish-language sources (es)
- CS1 español-language sources (es)
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- All articles needing additional references
- Commons category link is defined as the pagename
- Latin America
- Trade blocs
- United Nations General Assembly observers
- Organizations based in Montevideo
- Organizations established in 1980
- Palermo, Montevideo
- International organizations based in the Americas