FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
Mark Weisbrot, 202-746-7264
Todd Tucker, 202-302-2817

Thursday, November 13, 2003

Another Lost Decade for Latin America?
FTAA Not Likely to Help Reverse the
Region's 25-year Economic Failure

On the eve of the FTAA Ministerial Meeting in Miami, all sides hope that a
new commercial agreement for the 34 participating countries will help
promote growth in the Americas. However, there has been little notice that
the policy reforms which began in the early 1980's have ushered in a
25-year period of economic failure.

"We now have another half-decade, even including optimistic projections for
next year's growth, of terrible economic failure in Latin America," said
Mark Weisbrot, Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
"This follows a 20-year period of very little growth that was the worst in
more than 100 years, even including the years of the Great Depression."

"And there is no indication that the negotiators are taking into account
the vital need to restore economic growth in Latin America," he added.

CEPR released a new paper today - "Another Lost Decade?: Latin America's
Growth Failure Continues in the 21st Century" -- based on the first four
years of data for the current decade (2000-2003), with the IMF's latest
projections for 2004. Among the findings:

This paper finds that:

·         For the first 5 years of the current decade, 2000-2004, per
capita GDP in Latin America is expected to grow by 0.2 percent annually, or
about 1 percent for the whole period.

·         This continues a long period of economic failure: for the prior
20 years, 1980- 1999, the region grew by only 11 percent (in per capita
terms) over the whole period.


·         By comparison, for the two decades from 1960-1979, Latin America
experienced per capita GDP growth of 80 percent.

·         The current decade will not be a success by any reasonable
measure: to match the performance of the 1960-79 period would require
annual per capita growth of 5.9 percent for the remainder of the decade.
Most economists would view this outcome as nearly impossible. Even to
achieve the slow growth of the 1990s would require annual per capita growth
of 2.6 percent for the second half of the decade.

·         There is reason to believe that growth in the near future,
including 2004, may be worse than anticipated. Among these reasons are
current weaknesses in the U.S. and several of the larger Latin American
economies.

Dr. Weisbrot is available for interviews about the Latin American growth
slowdown and other issues involved in the FTAA negotiations, including
intellectual property and market access.  He will be in Miami from November
14-22, and participating in various forums, including the Americas Trade
and Sustainable Development Forum (ATSDF) on Monday, November 17.  Please
contact Todd Tucker at 202-302-2817 or
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED] for availability. Dr. Weisbrot can
also be reached at 202-746-7264 in both Washington and Miami.

The full paper, "Another Lost Decade?: Latin America's Growth Failure Into
the 21st Century," by Mark Weisbrot and David Rosnick is available at:

<http://www.cepr.net/another_lost_decade.htm>http://www.cepr.net/another_lost_decade.htm.


Or in PDF format at:
<http://www.cepr.net/another_lost_decade.pdf>http://www.cepr.net/another_lost_decade.pdf


The Center for Economic and Policy Research is an independent, nonpartisan
think tank that was established to promote democratic debate on the most
important economic and social issues that affect people's lives.

###


Todd Tucker
International Programs
Center for Economic and Policy Research
1621 Connecticut Ave., NW; Suite 500
Washington, DC 20009
Phone: 202-293-5380, ext. 213
Fax: 202-588-1356
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.cepr.net

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