![Trade bloc](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8wLzA0L0Vjb25vbWljX2ludGVncmF0aW9uLnN2Zy8xNjAwcHgtRWNvbm9taWNfaW50ZWdyYXRpb24uc3ZnLnBuZw==.png )
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
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHdMekEwTDBWamIyNXZiV2xqWDJsdWRHVm5jbUYwYVc5dUxuTjJaeTh5TmpCd2VDMUZZMjl1YjIxcFkxOXBiblJsWjNKaGRHbHZiaTV6ZG1jdWNHNW4ucG5n.png)
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 GNP, 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
This article needs to be updated. The reason given is: newer GDP numbers needed.(January 2023) |
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlkxTDBkRVVGOVFVRkJmTWpBeU1WOVRaV3hsWTNScGIyNHVjM1puTHpJM01IQjRMVWRFVUY5UVVGQmZNakF5TVY5VFpXeGxZM1JwYjI0dWMzWm5MbkJ1Wnc9PS5wbmc=.png)
Trade bloc | Population | Gross domestic product (USD) | Members | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | 2007 | growth | per capita | |||
Economic and monetary unions | ||||||
EMU | 324,879,195 | 10,685,946,928,310 | 12,225,304,229,686 | 14.41% | 37,630 | |
OECS (sovereign states) | 593,905 | 3,752,679,562 | 3,998,281,731 | 6.54% | 6,732 | 6
|
OII | 504,476 | 12,264,278,329 | 14,165,953,200 | 15.51% | 28,081 | 3
|
CCCM | 6,418,417 | 39,616,485,623 | 43,967,600,765 | 10.98% | 6,850 | 12
|
Customs and monetary unions | ||||||
CEMAC | 39,278,645 | 51,265,460,685 | 58,519,380,755 | 14.15% | 1,490 | 6
|
UEMOA | 90,299,945 | 50,395,629,494 | 58,453,871,283 | 15.99% | 647 | 8
|
Customs unions | ||||||
CAN | 96,924,486 | 281,269,141,372 | 334,172,968,648 | 18.81% | 3,448 | 4
|
EAC | 127,107,838 | 49,882,030,443 | 61,345,180,041 | 22.98% | 483 | 5
|
EUCU | 574,602,745 | 15,331,827,900,202 | 17,679,376,474,719 | 15.31% | 30,768 | |
GCC | 36,154,528 | 724,460,151,595 | 802,641,302,477 | 10.79% | 22,200 | 6
|
MERCOSUR | 271,304,946 | 1,517,510,000,000 | 1,886,817,000,000 | 12.44% | 9,757 | |
SACU | 58,000,000 | 1,499,811,549,187 | 1,848,337,158,281 | 23.24% | 6,885 | 5
|
Preferential trade areas and Free trade areas | ||||||
AANZFTA-ASEAN+3 | 2,085,858,841 | 10,216,029,899,764 | 11,323,947,181,804 | 10.84% | 5,429 | 15
|
ALADI | 499,807,662 | 2,823,198,095,131 | 3,292,088,771,480 | 16.61% | 6,587 | 12
|
AFTZ | 553,915,405 | 643,541,709,413 | 739,927,625,273 | 14.98% | 1,336 | 26
|
APTA | 2,714,464,027 | 4,868,614,302,744 | 5,828,692,637,764 | 19.72% | 2,147 | 6
|
CARIFORUM-EUCU-OCTs | 592,083,950 | 15,437,771,092,522 | 17,798,283,524,961 | 15.29% | 30,060 | 67
|
CACM | 37,388,063 | 87,209,524,889 | 97,718,800,794 | 12.05% | 2,614 | 5
|
CEFTA | 27,968,711 | 110,263,802,023 | 135,404,501,031 | 22.80% | 4,841 | 8
|
CISFTA | 272,897,834 | 1,271,909,586,018 | 1,661,429,920,721 | 30.62% | 6,088 | |
DR-CAFTA-US | 356,964,477 | 13,345,469,865,037 | 14,008,686,684,089 | 4.97% | 39,244 | 7
|
ECOWAS | 283,096,250 | 215,999,071,943 | 255,784,634,128 | 18.42% | 904 | 15
|
EEA (EU + EFTA) | 499,620,521 | 14,924,076,504,592 | 17,186,876,431,709 | 15.16% | 34,400 | 30
|
EFTA-SACU | 68,199,991 | 1,021,509,931,918 | 1,139,385,636,888 | 11.54% | 16,707 | 9
|
EAEC | 207,033,990 | 1,125,634,333,117 | 1,465,256,182,498 | 30.17% | 7,077 | 6
|
USMCA | 449,227,672 | 15,337,094,304,218 | 16,189,097,801,318 | 5.56% | 36,038 | |
TPP | 25,639,622 | 401,810,366,865 | 468,101,167,294 | 16.50% | 18,257 | 4
|
SAARC | 1,567,187,373 | 1,162,684,650,544 | 1,428,392,756,312 | 22.85% | 911 | 8
|
SPARTECA | 35,079,659 | 918,557,785,031 | 1,102,745,750,172 | 20.05% | 31,435 | 21
|
Pacific Alliance | 218,649,115 | 1,371,197,216,140 | 1,525,825,175,045 | 11.28% | 6,978 | 4
|
Comparison between regional trade blocs
Activities | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regional bloc | Free Trade Area | Economic and monetary union | Free Travel | Political pact | Defence pact | Other | ||||
Customs union | Single market | Currency union | Visa-free | Border-less | ||||||
EU | in force | in force7 | in force2 | in force 1 | in force | in force (Schengen 1, 7, NPU and CTA 1) | in force | in force (CFSP/ESDP 1) | ESA 1, 7 | |
EFTA | in force | in force2, 7 | in force | in force 1, 7 | in force 1, 7 | ESA 1, 7 | ||||
CARICOM | in force | in force | in force 1 | in force 1 and proposed common | in force 1 | proposed | proposed | NWFZ | ||
AU | ECOWAS | in force 1, 3 | in force 1 | proposed | in force 1 and proposed for 2012 1 and proposed common | in force 1 | proposed | proposed | in force | NWFZ1 |
ECCAS | in force1 | 1 | in force1 | proposed | in force1 | in force | in force | NWFZ1 | ||
EAC | in force | in force | proposed for 2020s | proposed for 2024 | proposed | ? | proposed for 2023 | NWFZ1 | ||
SADC | in force1 | in force1 | proposed for 2015 | de facto in force 1 and proposed common for 2016 | proposed | NWFZ1 | ||||
COMESA | in force1 | proposed for 2010 | ? | proposed for 2018 | NWFZ1 | |||||
Common | in force1 | proposed for 2019 | proposed for 2023 | proposed for 2028 | proposed for 2028 | NWFZ1 | ||||
Pacific Alliance | in force | in force | NWFZ | |||||||
USAN | MERCOSUR | in force | in force | proposed for 2015 | in force | proposed for 2014 | NWFZ | |||
CAN | in force | in force 1 | proposed1 | in force | NWFZ | |||||
Common | proposed for 2014 4 | proposed for not after 2019 | proposed for 2019 | proposed for 2019 | in force | proposed for 2019 | proposed | in force | NWFZ | |
EEU | in force | in force1 | in force | Proposed | in force | in force 1 | ||||
AL | GCC | in force | in force | proposed | proposed 1 | in force | in force | |||
Common | in force1 | proposed for 2015 | proposed for 2020 | proposed | proposed | |||||
ASEAN | in force 5 | proposed for 2015 | proposed 8 | in force | proposed for 2015 | proposed for 2020 | NWFZ | |||
CAIS | in force1 | proposed | ? | in force1 | in force1 | proposed | NWFZ | |||
CEFTA | in force | RCC7 | ||||||||
USMCA | in force | in force 1, 7 | ||||||||
SAARC | in force 1, 6 | proposed | proposed | in force9 | ||||||
PIF | proposed for 20211 | NWFZ1 |
1 not all members participating
2 involving goods, services, telecommunications, transport (full liberalisation of railways from 2012), energy (full liberalisation from 2007)
3telecommunications, transport and energy - proposed
4 sensitive goods to be covered from 2019
5least developed members to join from 2012
6least 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.
See also
- Regional integration
- Continental union
Lists of trade blocs
- List of preferential trade areas
- Lists of free trade agreements
- List of bilateral free trade agreements
- List of multilateral free trade agreements
- List of customs unions
- List of common markets
- List of economic unions
- List of monetary unions
- List of customs and monetary unions
- List of economic and monetary unions
- Monetary unions
- Customs unions worldwide
- Free trade areas worldwide
-
References
- Mansfield and Milner 2005, 333.
- Milner 2002, 450.
- Schott 1991, 2.
- O'Loughlin and Anselin 1996, 136.
- Lal, Deepak (1993). "Trade Blocs and Multilateral Free Trade" (PDF). Journal of Common Market Studies. 31 (3): 349–358. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5965.1993.tb00468.x.
- Milner 2002, 458.
- Mansfield and Milner 2005, 330.
- "Stages of Economic Integration: From Autarky to Economic Union".
- "WT/COMTD/N/11". wto.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-25.
- "WT/COMTD/N/21". wto.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-27.
- "Prensa Latina". Prensa Latina. February 3, 2007. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
- "WT/REG238/M/1". wto.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-04.
- "Definidos critérios para o Parlamento do Mercosul". Senado Federal – Notícias. February 3, 2007.
- Twelfth Andean Presidential Council Act of Lima Archived 2010-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
- "?". CNN. February 3, 2007. [dead link ]
- "Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus form Eurasian Economic Union". Washington Post. May 29, 2014. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
- "Archived". www.itar-tass.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.[dead link ]
- "GCC customs union fully operational". The Peninsula. 2016-08-13. Archived from the original on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- Yemen Proposes Replacing Arab League With Arab Union, Agence France-Presse, 11 February 2004
- "Asean Trade Mins Meet To Speed Up Plans For Single Market". Malaysia Dual Lingual Business News. February 3, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28.
- "Envisioning a single Asian currency". International Herald Tribune. February 3, 2007.
- "ASEAN To Sign Accord On Visa-Free Travel". AHN – All Headline News. February 3, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-09-26.
- "ASEAN Leaders Sign Five Agreements at the 12th ASEAN Summit, Cebu, the Philippines, 13 January 2007" (Press release). ASEAN Secretariat. 2007-01-13. Archived from the original on 2012-03-16. Retrieved 2007-01-28.
On the first day of the 12th ASEAN Summit, five Agreements have been signed by ASEAN leaders – reinforcing their commitment in the continuing integration of ASEAN and enhancing political, economic and social cooperation in the region.
- "ASEAN defense ministers aim for security community". ABS-CBN. February 3, 2007. Archived from the original on June 27, 2006.
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:10.2307/144263. JSTOR 144263.
- Schott, Jeffrey J. (1991). "Trading blocs and the world trading system". World Economy. 14 (1): 1–17. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9701.1991.tb00748.x.
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 UseStages 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 EEA Switzerland 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 GNP 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 TerminologyA 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 StatisticsThis article needs to be updated The reason given is newer GDP numbers needed Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2023 Selection of GDP PPP data top 10 countries and blocs in no particular orderTrade bloc Population Gross domestic product USD Members2006 2007 growth per capitaEconomic and monetary unionsEMU 324 879 195 10 685 946 928 310 12 225 304 229 686 14 41 37 630 17 Austria Belgium Cyprus Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Ireland Italy Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Portugal Slovakia Slovenia SpainOECS sovereign states 593 905 3 752 679 562 3 998 281 731 6 54 6 732 6 Antigua and Barbuda Dominica Grenada Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesOII 504 476 12 264 278 329 14 165 953 200 15 51 28 081 3 French Polynesia New Caledonia Wallis and FutunaCCCM 6 418 417 39 616 485 623 43 967 600 765 10 98 6 850 12 6 OECS members Barbados Belize Guyana Jamaica Suriname Trinidad and TobagoCustoms and monetary unionsCEMAC 39 278 645 51 265 460 685 58 519 380 755 14 15 1 490 6 Cameroon Central African Republic Chad Republic of the Congo Equatorial Guinea GabonUEMOA 90 299 945 50 395 629 494 58 453 871 283 15 99 647 8 Benin Burkina Faso Ivory Coast Guinea Bissau Mali Niger Senegal TogoCustoms unionsCAN 96 924 486 281 269 141 372 334 172 968 648 18 81 3 448 4 Bolivia Colombia Ecuador PeruEAC 127 107 838 49 882 030 443 61 345 180 041 22 98 483 5 Burundi Kenya Rwanda Tanzania UgandaEUCU 574 602 745 15 331 827 900 202 17 679 376 474 719 15 31 30 768 33 30 EEA members Andorra San Marino TurkeyGCC 36 154 528 724 460 151 595 802 641 302 477 10 79 22 200 6 Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab EmiratesMERCOSUR 271 304 946 1 517 510 000 000 1 886 817 000 000 12 44 9 757 5 Argentina Brazil Paraguay Uruguay VenezuelaSACU 58 000 000 1 499 811 549 187 1 848 337 158 281 23 24 6 885 5 Botswana Lesotho Namibia South Africa EswatiniPreferential trade areas and Free trade areasAANZFTA ASEAN 3 2 085 858 841 10 216 029 899 764 11 323 947 181 804 10 84 5 429 15 10 ASEAN members Australia China Hong Kong Macau Japan New Zealand South KoreaALADI 499 807 662 2 823 198 095 131 3 292 088 771 480 16 61 6 587 12 4 CAN members5 MERCOSUL members Chile Cuba MexicoAFTZ 553 915 405 643 541 709 413 739 927 625 273 14 98 1 336 26 5 EAC members5 SACU members Angola Comoros Democratic Republic of the Congo Djibouti Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mauritius Mozambique Seychelles Sudan Zambia ZimbabweAPTA 2 714 464 027 4 868 614 302 744 5 828 692 637 764 19 72 2 147 6 Bangladesh China Hong Kong Macau India Laos Sri Lanka South KoreaCARIFORUM EUCU OCTs 592 083 950 15 437 771 092 522 17 798 283 524 961 15 29 30 060 67 12 CCCM members33 EUCU members3 OII members Anguilla Aruba Bahamas British Antarctic Territory British Indian Ocean Territory British Virgin Islands Cayman Islands Dominican Republic Falkland Islands French Southern and Antarctic Lands Greenland Mayotte Montserrat Netherlands Antilles Pitcairn Islands Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Saint Pierre and Miquelon Turks and Caicos IslandsCACM 37 388 063 87 209 524 889 97 718 800 794 12 05 2 614 5 Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras NicaraguaCEFTA 27 968 711 110 263 802 023 135 404 501 031 22 80 4 841 8 Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Kosovo North Macedonia Moldova Montenegro SerbiaCISFTA 272 897 834 1 271 909 586 018 1 661 429 920 721 30 62 6 088 11 6 EAEC members Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Ukraine MoldovaDR CAFTA US 356 964 477 13 345 469 865 037 14 008 686 684 089 4 97 39 244 7 5 CACM members Dominican Republic United States Puerto Rico ECOWAS 283 096 250 215 999 071 943 255 784 634 128 18 42 904 15 8 UEMOA members Cape Verde Gambia Ghana Guinea Liberia Nigeria Sierra LeoneEEA EU EFTA 499 620 521 14 924 076 504 592 17 186 876 431 709 15 16 34 400 30 27 EU members Iceland Liechtenstein NorwayEFTA SACU 68 199 991 1 021 509 931 918 1 139 385 636 888 11 54 16 707 9 4 EFTA members5 SACU membersEAEC 207 033 990 1 125 634 333 117 1 465 256 182 498 30 17 7 077 6 Belarus Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Russia Tajikistan UzbekistanUSMCA 449 227 672 15 337 094 304 218 16 189 097 801 318 5 56 36 038 3 Canada Mexico United States Puerto Rico TPP 25 639 622 401 810 366 865 468 101 167 294 16 50 18 257 4 Brunei Chile New Zealand SingaporeSAARC 1 567 187 373 1 162 684 650 544 1 428 392 756 312 22 85 911 8 Afghanistan Bangladesh Bhutan India Maldives Nepal Pakistan Sri LankaSPARTECA 35 079 659 918 557 785 031 1 102 745 750 172 20 05 31 435 21 3 OII members12 PICTA members Australia Marshall Islands New Zealand Palau Timor Leste TokelauPacific Alliance 218 649 115 1 371 197 216 140 1 525 825 175 045 11 28 6 978 4 Colombia Chile Peru MexicoThis list is based on the data obtained from United Nations Statistics Division Comparison between regional trade blocsActivitiesRegional bloc Free Trade Area Economic and monetary union Free Travel Political pact Defence pact OtherCustoms union Single market Currency union Visa free Border lessEU in force in force7 in force2 in force 1 in force in force Schengen 1 7 NPU and CTA 1 in force in force CFSP ESDP 1 ESA 1 7EFTA in force in force2 7 in force in force 1 7 in force 1 7 ESA 1 7CARICOM in force in force in force 1 in force 1 and proposed common in force 1 proposed proposed NWFZAU ECOWAS in force 1 3 in force 1 proposed in force 1 and proposed for 2012 1 and proposed common in force 1 proposed proposed in force NWFZ1ECCAS in force1 1 in force1 proposed in force1 in force in force NWFZ1EAC in force in force proposed for 2020s proposed for 2024 proposed proposed for 2023 NWFZ1SADC in force1 in force1 proposed for 2015 de facto in force 1 and proposed common for 2016 proposed NWFZ1COMESA in force1 proposed for 2010 proposed for 2018 NWFZ1Common in force1 proposed for 2019 proposed for 2023 proposed for 2028 proposed for 2028 NWFZ1Pacific Alliance in force in force NWFZUSAN MERCOSUR in force in force proposed for 2015 in force proposed for 2014 NWFZCAN in force in force 1 proposed1 in force NWFZCommon proposed for 2014 4 proposed for not after 2019 proposed for 2019 proposed for 2019 in force proposed for 2019 proposed in force NWFZEEU in force in force1 in force Proposed in force in force 1AL GCC in force in force proposed proposed 1 in force in forceCommon in force1 proposed for 2015 proposed for 2020 proposed proposedASEAN in force 5 proposed for 2015 proposed 8 in force proposed for 2015 proposed for 2020 NWFZCAIS in force1 proposed in force1 in force1 proposed NWFZCEFTA in force RCC7USMCA in force in force 1 7SAARC in force 1 6 proposed proposed in force9PIF proposed for 20211 NWFZ11 not all members participating 2 involving goods services telecommunications transport full liberalisation of railways from 2012 energy full liberalisation from 2007 3telecommunications transport and energy proposed 4 sensitive goods to be covered from 2019 5least developed members to join from 2012 6least 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 See alsoEconomics portalRegional integration Continental unionLists of trade blocs List of preferential trade areas Lists of free trade agreements List of bilateral free trade agreements List of multilateral free trade agreements List of customs unions List of common markets List of economic unions List of monetary unions List of customs and monetary unions List of economic and monetary unionsMonetary unions Customs unions worldwide Free trade areas worldwide MercosurReferencesMansfield and Milner 2005 333 Milner 2002 450 Schott 1991 2 O Loughlin and Anselin 1996 136 Lal Deepak 1993 Trade Blocs and Multilateral Free Trade PDF Journal of Common Market Studies 31 3 349 358 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5965 1993 tb00468 x Milner 2002 458 Mansfield and Milner 2005 330 Stages of Economic Integration From Autarky to Economic Union WT COMTD N 11 wto org Archived from the original on 2009 03 25 WT COMTD N 21 wto org Archived from the original on 2009 03 27 Prensa Latina Prensa Latina February 3 2007 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 WT REG238 M 1 wto org Archived from the original on 2009 03 04 Definidos criterios para o Parlamento do Mercosul Senado Federal Noticias February 3 2007 Twelfth Andean Presidential Council Act of Lima Archived 2010 07 07 at the Wayback Machine CNN February 3 2007 dead link Russia Kazakhstan Belarus form Eurasian Economic Union Washington Post May 29 2014 Retrieved June 1 2014 Archived www itar tass com Archived from the original on September 30 2007 dead link GCC customs union fully operational The Peninsula 2016 08 13 Archived from the original on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 11 January 2015 Yemen Proposes Replacing Arab League With Arab Union Agence France Presse 11 February 2004 Asean Trade Mins Meet To Speed Up Plans For Single Market Malaysia Dual Lingual Business News February 3 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Envisioning a single Asian currency International Herald Tribune February 3 2007 ASEAN To Sign Accord On Visa Free Travel AHN All Headline News February 3 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 09 26 ASEAN Leaders Sign Five Agreements at the 12th ASEAN Summit Cebu the Philippines 13 January 2007 Press release ASEAN Secretariat 2007 01 13 Archived from the original on 2012 03 16 Retrieved 2007 01 28 On the first day of the 12th ASEAN Summit five Agreements have been signed by ASEAN leaders reinforcing their commitment in the continuing integration of ASEAN and enhancing political economic and social cooperation in the region ASEAN defense ministers aim for security community ABS CBN February 3 2007 Archived from the original on June 27 2006 BibliographyMansfield 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 10 2307 144263 JSTOR 144263 Schott Jeffrey J 1991 Trading blocs and the world trading system World Economy 14 1 1 17 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9701 1991 tb00748 x