A trade bloc is a type of intergovernmental agreement, often part of a regional intergovernmental organization, where barriers to trade (tariffs and others) are reduced or eliminated among the participating states.

Trade blocs can be stand-alone agreements between several states (such as the USMCA) or part of a regional organization (such as the European Union). Depending on the level of economic integration, trade blocs can be classified as preferential trading areas, free-trade areas, customs unions, common markets, or economic and monetary unions.

Use

Stages of economic integration around the world (each country colored according to the most integrated multilateral agreement that it participates in): Economic and monetary union (ECCU/XCD, Eurozone/EUR, Switzerland–Liechtenstein/CHF) Economic union (CSME, EAEU, EU, GCC, Mercosur, SICA) Common market (European single market) Customs and monetary union (CEMAC/XAF, UEMOA/XOF) Customs union (CAN, EAC, EUCU, SACU) Multilateral free-trade area (AANZFTA, ASEAN, CEFTA, CISFTA, COMESA, CPTPP, EFTA, GAFTA, PAFTA, RCEP, SADCFTA, SAFTA, USMCA) vte

Historic trading blocs include the Hanseatic League, a Northern European economic alliance between the 12th and 17th centuries, and the German Customs Union, formed on the basis of the German Confederation and subsequently the German Empire from 1871. Surges of trade bloc formation occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, as well as in the 1990s after the collapse of Communism. By 1997, more than 50% of all world commerce was conducted within regional trade blocs. Economist Jeffrey J. Schott of the Peterson Institute for International Economics notes that members of successful trade blocs usually share four common traits: similar levels of per capita GNI, geographic proximity, similar or compatible trading regimes, and political commitment to regional organization.

Some advocates of global free trade are opposed to trading blocs. Trade blocs are seen by them to encourage regional free trade at the expense of global free trade. Those who advocate for it claim that global free trade is in the interest of every country, as it would create more opportunities to turn local resources into goods and services that are both currently in demand and will be in demand in the future by consumers. However, scholars and economists continue to debate whether regional trade blocs fragment the global economy or encourage the extension of the existing global multilateral trading system.

Terminology

A common market is seen as a stage of economic integration towards an economic union or possibly towards the goal of a unified market.

A single market is a type of trade bloc in which most trade barriers have been removed (for goods) with some common policies on product regulation, and freedom of movement of the factors of production (capital and labour) and of enterprise and services.

Statistics

Selection of GDP PPP data (top 10 countries and blocs) in no particular order
This list is based on the data obtained from  United Nations .
Trade blocPopulationGross domestic product(USD)Members
20062007growthper capita
Economic and monetary unions
EMU324,879,19510,685,946,928,31012,225,304,229,68614.41%37,63017 AustriaBelgiumCyprusEstoniaFinlandFranceGermanyGreeceIrelandItalyLuxembourgMaltaNetherlandsPortugalSlovakiaSloveniaSpain
OECS (sovereign states)593,9053,752,679,5623,998,281,7316.54%6,7326 Antigua and BarbudaDominicaGrenadaSaint Kitts and NevisSaint LuciaSaint Vincent and the Grenadines
OII504,47612,264,278,32914,165,953,20015.51%28,0813 French PolynesiaNew CaledoniaWallis and Futuna
CCCM6,418,41739,616,485,62343,967,600,76510.98%6,85012 6 OECS membersBarbadosBelizeGuyanaJamaicaSurinameTrinidad and Tobago
Customs and monetary unions
CEMAC39,278,64551,265,460,68558,519,380,75514.15%1,4906 CameroonCentral African RepublicChadRepublic of the CongoEquatorial GuineaGabon
UEMOA90,299,94550,395,629,49458,453,871,28315.99%6478 BeninBurkina FasoIvory CoastGuinea-BissauMaliNigerSenegalTogo
Customs unions
CAN96,924,486281,269,141,372334,172,968,64818.81%3,4484 BoliviaColombiaEcuadorPeru
EAC127,107,83849,882,030,44361,345,180,04122.98%4835 BurundiKenyaRwandaTanzaniaUganda
EUCU574,602,74515,331,827,900,20217,679,376,474,71915.31%30,76833 30 EEA membersAndorraSan MarinoTurkey
GCC36,154,528724,460,151,595802,641,302,47710.79%22,2006 BahrainKuwaitOmanQatarSaudi ArabiaUnited Arab Emirates
MERCOSUR271,304,9461,517,510,000,0001,886,817,000,00012.44%9,7575 ArgentinaBrazilParaguayUruguay
SACU58,000,0001,499,811,549,1871,848,337,158,28123.24%6,8855 BotswanaLesothoNamibiaSouth AfricaEswatini
Preferential trade areas and Free trade areas
AANZFTA-ASEAN+32,085,858,84110,216,029,899,76411,323,947,181,80410.84%5,42915 10 ASEAN membersAustraliaChina(Hong Kong)(Macau)JapanNew ZealandSouth Korea
ALADI499,807,6622,823,198,095,1313,292,088,771,48016.61%6,58712 4 CAN members5 MERCOSUL membersChileCubaMexico
AFTZ553,915,405643,541,709,413739,927,625,27314.98%1,33626 5 EAC members5 SACU membersAngolaComorosDemocratic Republic of the CongoDjiboutiEgyptEritreaEthiopiaLibyaMadagascarMalawiMauritiusMozambiqueSeychellesSudanZambiaZimbabwe
APTA2,714,464,0274,868,614,302,7445,828,692,637,76419.72%2,1476 BangladeshChina(Hong Kong)(Macau)IndiaLaosSri LankaSouth Korea
CARIFORUM-EUCU-OCTs592,083,95015,437,771,092,52217,798,283,524,96115.29%30,06067 12 CCCM members33 EUCU members3 OII membersAnguillaArubaBahamasBritish Antarctic TerritoryBritish Indian Ocean TerritoryBritish Virgin IslandsCayman IslandsDominican RepublicFalkland IslandsFrench Southern and Antarctic LandsGreenlandMayotteMontserratNetherlands AntillesPitcairn IslandsSaint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da CunhaSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSaint Pierre and MiquelonTurks and Caicos Islands
CACM37,388,06387,209,524,88997,718,800,79412.05%2,6145 Costa RicaEl SalvadorGuatemalaHondurasNicaragua
CEFTA27,968,711110,263,802,023135,404,501,03122.80%4,8418 AlbaniaBosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaKosovoNorth MacedoniaMoldovaMontenegroSerbia
CISFTA272,897,8341,271,909,586,0181,661,429,920,72130.62%6,08811 6 EAEC membersArmeniaAzerbaijanGeorgiaUkraineMoldova
DR-CAFTA-US356,964,47713,345,469,865,03714,008,686,684,0894.97%39,2447 5 CACM membersDominican RepublicUnited States(Puerto Rico)
ECOWAS283,096,250215,999,071,943255,784,634,12818.42%90415 8 UEMOA membersCape VerdeGambiaGhanaGuineaLiberiaNigeriaSierra Leone
EEA (EU + EFTA)499,620,52114,924,076,504,59217,186,876,431,70915.16%34,40030 27 EU membersIcelandLiechtensteinNorway
EFTA-SACU68,199,9911,021,509,931,9181,139,385,636,88811.54%16,7079 4 EFTA members5 SACU members
EAEC207,033,9901,125,634,333,1171,465,256,182,49830.17%7,0776 BelarusKazakhstanKyrgyzstanRussiaTajikistanUzbekistan
USMCA449,227,67215,337,094,304,21816,189,097,801,3185.56%36,0383 CanadaMexicoUnited States(Puerto Rico)
TPP25,639,622401,810,366,865468,101,167,29416.50%18,2574 BruneiChileNew ZealandSingapore
SAARC1,567,187,3731,162,684,650,5441,428,392,756,31222.85%9118 AfghanistanBangladeshBhutanIndiaMaldivesNepalPakistanSri Lanka
SPARTECA35,079,659918,557,785,0311,102,745,750,17220.05%31,43521 3 OII members12 PICTA membersAustraliaMarshall IslandsNew ZealandPalauTimor-LesteTokelau
Pacific Alliance218,649,1151,371,197,216,1401,525,825,175,04511.28%6,9784 ColombiaChilePeruMexico

Comparison between regional trade blocs

Activities
Regional blocFree Trade AreaEconomic and monetary unionFree TravelPolitical pactDefence pactOther
Customs unionSingle marketCurrency unionVisa-freeBorder-less
EUin forcein force7in force2in force1in forcein force (Schengen1, 7, NPU and CTA1)in forcein force (CFSP/ESDP1)ESA1, 7
EFTAin forcein force2, 7in forcein force1, 7in force1, 7ESA1, 7
CARICOMin forcein forcein force 1in force1 and proposed commonin force1proposedproposedNWFZ
AUECOWASin force1, 3in force1proposedin force1 and proposed for 20121 and proposed commonin force1proposedproposedin forceNWFZ1
ECCASin force1African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA)1in force1proposedin force1in forcein forceNWFZ1
EACin forcein forceproposed for 2020sproposed for 2024proposed?proposed for 2023NWFZ1
SADCin force1in force1proposed for 2015de facto in force1 and proposed common for 2016proposedNWFZ1
COMESAin force1proposed for 2010?proposed for 2018NWFZ1
Commonin force1proposed for 2019proposed for 2023proposed for 2028proposed for 2028NWFZ1
Pacific Alliancein forcein forceNWFZ
USANMERCOSURin forcein forceproposed for 2015in forceproposed for 2014NWFZ
CANin forcein force1proposed1in forceNWFZ
Commonproposed for 20144proposed for not after 2019proposed for 2019proposed for 2019in forceproposed for 2019proposedin forceNWFZ
EEUin forcein force1in forceproposedin forcein force1
ALGCCin forcein forceproposedproposed1in forcein force
Commonin force1proposed for 2015proposed for 2020proposedproposed
ASEANin force5proposed for 2015proposed8in forceproposed for 2015proposed for 2020NWFZ
CAISin force1proposed?in force1in force1proposedNWFZ
CEFTAin forceRCC7
USMCAin forcein force1, 7
SAARCin force1, 6proposedproposedin force9
PIFproposed for 20211NWFZ1

5 least developed members to join from 2012 6 least developed members to join from 2017 7 Additionally some non member states also participate (the European Union, EFTA have overlapping membership and various common initiatives regarding the European integration). 8 Additionally some non member states also participate (ASEAN Plus Three) 9 Limited to "entitled persons" and duration of one year.

Lists of trade blocs

See also

Bibliography

  • Mansfield, Edward D. and Helen V. Milner, "The New Wave of Regionalism" in Diehl, Paul F. (2005). The Politics of Global Governance: International Organizations in an Interdependent World. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers. ISBN 978-1-55587-654-8.
  • Milner, Helen V., "International Trade" in Carlsnaes, Walter; Thomas Risse; Beth A. Simmons (2002). Handbook of International Relations. London: SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-6304-2.
  • O'Loughlin, John; Luc Anselin (1996). "Geo-Economic Competition and Trade Bloc Formation: United States, German, and Japanese Exports, 1968–1992". Economic Geography. 72 (2): 131–160. doi:. JSTOR .
  • Schott, Jeffrey J. (1991). "Trading blocs and the world trading system". World Economy. 14 (1): 1–17. doi:.