Strengthening Argentina’s INTERNATIONAL DE VELOPMENT IN FOCUS Integration into the Global Economy Policy Proposals for Trade, Investment, and Competition Martha Martínez Licetti, Mariana Iootty, Tanja Goodwin, and José Signoret INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN FOCUS Strengthening Argentina’s Integration into the Global Economy Policy Proposals for Trade, Investment, and Competition Martha Martínez Licetti, Mariana Iootty, Tanja Goodwin, and José Signoret © 2018 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4 21 20 19 18 Books in this series are published to communicate the results of Bank research, analysis, and operational experience with the least possible delay. The extent of language editing varies from book to book. This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. 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All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN: 978-1-4648-1275-0 DOI: 10.1596/978-1-4648-1275-0 Cover photos: © Ship by Aun photographer/Shutterstock.com; © globe image by Romolo Tavani/ Shutterstock.com. Both illustrations used with permission; further permission required for reuse. Contents Acknowledgments  ix About the Authors   xi Abbreviations  xiii Executive Summary  1 Notes  18 References  20 Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and CHAPTER 1:  Possible Scenarios  23 New priorities: Strengthening the Argentine economy’s integration into global markets   23 How integrated is Argentina with the global economy?   27 How much could Argentina gain from fostering contestable markets and integrating into the world economy?   41 The importance of FDI, trade in services, e-commerce, and competitive domestic markets: Making the most of the new global trade landscape   54 What mitigation measures can Argentina implement to countervail the transition effects of microeconomic reforms in sensitive sectors?   64 Notes  70 References  75 International Experience with Structural Microeconomic CHAPTER 2:  Reforms  79 Notes  84 References  84 Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into CHAPTER 3:  the Global Economy   85 Investment: Best government practices for jump-shifting investment promotion policy  85 Competition: Enabling impactful and independent competition policy implementation  90 Trade: Best institutional processes for trade policy formulation and implementation  96 Notes  99 References  99  iii iv | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy CHAPTER 4: A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy   101 Opportunities to enter and invest   105 Access to efficient input markets   110 Ability to compete on a level playing field   115 Capacity to expand and thrive in global markets   117 Notes  120 References  122 CHAPTER 5: Conclusions  123 Notes  126 Theoretical and Empirical Links among Trade, Investment, APPENDIX A:  and Competition from the Literature   127 Notes  129 References  130 APPENDIX B: Links between Macroeconomic and Factor Market Policies for Integration  133 Notes  134 References  134 APPENDIX C: The CGE Framework   137 Notes  140 Reference  140 APPENDIX D: The OECD PMR Methodology   141 Note  143 Reference  143 APPENDIX E: Calculation of the Potential Impact of Reforms Associated with Less Restrictive Service Regulations   145 Notes  146 References  147 APPENDIX F: Specifications of the Price Regressions   149 APPENDIX G: Detailed Matrix of Policy Recommendations   151 Boxes ES.1 Economic impact of trade reforms: A CGE analysis   5 1.1 Main reforms to date   24 1.2 Implementing product market reforms can help create better-quality jobs and has the potential to increase aggregate employment in the long term  26 1.3 Comparator countries  31 1.4 Price comparison analysis: Are prices higher in Argentina?   36 1.5 Estimating the association between the intensity of competition and productivity growth in the Argentine manufacturing industry   41 1.6 Brief description of the CGE analysis   45 1.7 Methodology for estimating the impact of deep integration on GVC-related trade  56 1.8 Tax benefits for the use of local auto parts in the automotive industry   57 1.9 Potential deeper linkages in the automotive industry   58 1.10 Deregulation of the dairy industry and compensation measures in Australia, 2001  66 1.11 Argentina’s Programa de Transformación Productiva   68 2.1 Australia’s National Competition Policy and Pacto por México   83 3.1 Separation of promotion and regulation functions: The case of Canada   87 3.2 Highlights of some best-practice IPAs   88 Contents | v 3.3 Main institutional recommendations for fostering IPAs   90 3.4 Main institutional recommendations to foster competition in Argentina   95 3.5 Main responsibilities for effective trade negotiation   97 3.6 Interagency coordination in the United States   97 3.7 Main recommendations for effective trade policy making and implementation  99 4.1 Successful examples of interinstitutional cooperation   104 4.2 Main policy recommendations for opening up opportunities to enter and invest   110 4.3 Main policy recommendations to enhance access to efficient input markets for firms   114 4.4 Main policy recommendations to enhance predictability and level the playing field   117 4.5 Main policy recommendations to enhance the capacity of firms to thrive and expand   120 Figures ES.1 GDP growth accounting in Argentina, 1992–2016   2 ES.2 Average import tariff in Argentina vs. comparator countries   2 ES.3 Inward FDI stock over GDP in Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2015   3 ES.4 Product market regulations in Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16  3 BES.1.1 Interpreting CGE results   5 ES.5 Essential conditions for successful integration into global markets   11 ES.6 Associations between trade, investment, and competition policy areas and conditions for successful integration into global markets   12 ES.7 Proposed policy actions for Argentina and how they relate to the policy areas of trade, investment, and competition   13 1.1 Trade, investment, and competition policies: Attributes, synergies, and complementarities  27 1.2 Trade openness and GDP, 2000–11   28 1.3 Trade openness and GDP, 2012–15   28 1.4 Export growth and change in market share: Argentina vs. world, 2006 Q1–2016 Q1   29 1.5 New exporting firm entry density in Argentina, 1998–2015   29 1.6 Trade in services: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2007–15   30 1.7 GVC participation: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2011   31 1.8 FDI inflows as a share of GDP: Argentina vs. comparator countries, average 2000–15  32 1.9 Inward FDI stock as a share of GDP: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2015  33 1.10 Sectoral composition of FDI inflows in Argentina, 2010–15   34 1.11 FDI complexity and economic complexity index: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2014   34 1.12 PMR indicator: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16   35 1.13 Decomposition of PMR indicator: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16  35 1.14 Product share in food consumption basket   37 1.15 Expected gains in labor productivity following a 10 percent decrease in mean PCMs for 2011–12   43 B1.6.1 Annualized real GDP growth in Argentina under the baseline   45 1.16 Real GDP deviations from the baseline due to unilateral tariff liberalization, 2020–30   47 1.17 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to unilateral tariff liberalization, 2020    47 1.18 Trade and GDP deviations from the baseline due to import license reforms, 2020  48 1.19 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to import license reforms, 2020    48 vi | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy 1.20 Trade and GDP deviations from the baseline due to export control reforms, 2020    49 1.21 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to export control reforms, 2020  50 1.22 Argentine exports (by region), deviations from the baseline due to multilateral reforms, 2030    51 1.23 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to multilateral reforms, 2030    52 1.24 Deep free trade agreements and GVC-related trade: Simple correlations   55 1.25 Services’ share of value added in total gross exports, Argentina, 2011   60 1.26 Human Development Index, 2015   61 1.27 Knowledge Economy Index, 2012   61 1.28 Networked Readiness Index, 2015   62 1.29 Global Innovation Index, 2017   62 1.30 Retail e-commerce sales, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2010–15   63 1.31 Extent of business-to-business ICT use, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2015  64 1.32 Public expenditure on labor programs in OECD countries, 2015   67 2.1 Trends in import and export levels among countries that have experienced structural reforms    80 3.1 Number of public officials in competition authorities   91 3.2 Merger notification thresholds and size of the economy    92 3.3 Number of cartel investigations started and concluded before and after 2007  93 3.4 Contribution of “legal barriers” to restrictiveness of product market regulation subindicator “regulatory protection of incumbents”   94 3.5 Compulsiveness of opinions issued in advocacy initiatives   94 3.6 Restrictiveness of network sector regulation in telecommunications, electricity, gas, post, and rail, air, and road transport, 2013   95 3.7 Extension of rail networks in Argentina, majority shareholders of each network, and their main product market, 2017   96 4.1 Essential conditions for successful integration into global markets   102 4.2 Associations between trade, investment, and competition policy areas and conditions for successful integration into global markets   104 4.3 Distance to frontier scores on Doing Business topics, Argentina, 2018   106 4.4 Argentina’s ranking on Doing Business topics, 2018   106 4.5 Number of professional tasks with exclusive or shared exclusive rights, 2013  107 4.6 Contribution of “entry barriers” to restrictiveness of nonmanufacturing regulation subindicator “air transport,” 2013   107 4.7 Coverage ratios of NTMs in Argentina and other countries, 2015   108 4.8 Estimated AVEs of goods NTMs in Argentina, 2012–14   109 4.9 Broadband speed, April 2017   111 4.10 Logistics Performance Index vs. GDP per capita (2014–16 average)   112 4.11 Sectors with state-owned enterprises (SOEs), 2013   115 4.12 Business risks related to weak competition policies by component, June 2017  116 4.13 Regulatory Governance Index, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2016   118 4.14 Investor–state disputes, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2000–17   118 ­ C.1 Annualized real GDP growth in Argentina under the baseline   139 D.1 ­ OECD PMR indicator   142 D.2 ­ OECD Nonmanufacturing indicators in energy, transport, and communication sectors  142 Map 1.1 Number of active agreements by country, 2015   32 Contents | vii Tables ES.1 Matrix of policy recommendations   17 1.1 Price comparison analysis: Argentina vs. comparator countries in the OECD  37 1.2 Price comparison analysis: Argentina vs. comparator countries in the Pacific Alliance   38 1.3 Price comparison analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. cities in all other countries  39 1.4 Market structure information for individual food products   40 1.5 Relationship between competition (PCMs) and labor productivity   42 1.6 Unilateral liberalization scenarios and economy-wide effects   44 1.7 Regional liberalization scenarios and economy-wide effects   50 1.8 Heat map of sectors in which employment would be lower than the baseline to 2030, by trade integration scenario   53 1.9 Service trade balance in value, Argentina   59 1.10 Compensatory measures applied in selected country experiences   65 2.1 Country indicators  81 3.1 Pros and cons of joint export and FDI promotion   86 3.2 IPA best practices   86 3.3 IPAs and their focus in strategic sectors   89 3.4 Strategic focus of Argentina’s IPA   89 4.1 Incidence of NTMs in Argentina   113 C.1 Sectors identified in the model   138 E.1 Sensitivity analysis of impact calculation   146 F.1 Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. cities in all other countries (with Numbeo data)   149 F.2 Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. comparator cities in Latin America (using the prevailing EIU market exchange rate to convert local currencies into US$)   150 F.3 Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. comparator cities in Latin America, using PPP conversion factor   150 Acknowledgments This publication was prepared at the request of the government of Argentina and in collaboration with various teams within Argentina’s Ministry of Production. The report was prepared by a World Bank Group team led by Martha Martínez Licetti (Investment and Competition Unit, Macroeconomics, Trade, and Investment Global Practice, or MTI) and Mariana Iootty (MTI), under the guid- ance of Jesko Hentschel (Country Director for Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay), Marialisa Motta (Practice Manager, Finance, Competitiveness, and Innovation Global Practice, or FCI), José Guilherme Reis (Practice Manager, MTI), Cecile Fruman (Director, former Trade and Competitiveness Global Practice, or T&C), and Anabel González (Senior Director, former T&C). Principal authors of the report, all from the MTI Global Practice, are Martha Martínez Licetti, Mariana Iootty, Tanja Goodwin, and José Signoret. The report is based on three individual background papers written by technical teams across the MTI Global Practice. The following team members led work on spe- cific topics and sections of the report. José Signoret coordinated a team working on trade liberalization estimations, analysis of trade policy, and trade in services that included Syud Amer Ahmed, Maryla Maliszewska, Martín Molinuevo, Nadia Rocha, and Marinos Tsigas. Roberto Echandi directed the team working on investment policy and promotion, which included Daniela Gómez Altamirano, Valeria di Fiori, Gabriela Llobet, José Ramón Perea, and Erik von Uexkull. Tanja Goodwin led the team working on markets and competition policy issues that included Marta Camiñas, Seidu Dauda, Soulange Gramegna, Lucas Grosman, Diego Petrecolla, Florencia Saulino, and Lucía Villarán. The report draws on a mapping of the automotive sector prepared by an International Finance Corporation team led by Guillermo Foscarini. Specific inputs were provided by Lourdes Rodriguez Chamussy, Guilherme de Aguiar Falco, Morgane Elise Fouche, Aarre Laakso, and Maria Ana Lugo. Administrative assistance was pro- vided by Flavia Dias Braga, Elena Feeney, Geraldine García, Paula Marcela Houser, Osongo Lenga, and Cara Zappala. Kelly Suzanne Alderson, Carolina Marcela Crerar, Daniel Gomez Gaviria, and Leandro Juan Hernandez provided efficient support with dissemination. The team is grateful to Andrea Coppola, Calvin Zebaze Djiofack, Ana Alejandro  Espinosa-Wang, Sebastián Galiani, Cebreiro Gomez, Graciela Miralles Murciego, Julian Peña, Daniel Saslavsky, and Hector Torres for  ix x | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy valuable conversations. The authors also wish to thank the government of Argentina for valuable inputs and feedback throughout the elaboration of the report, in particular, Marina Bidart, Lucio Castro, Germán Coloma, Bernardo Díaz de Astarloa, Martín Goñi, Esteban Greco, Juan Carlos Hallak, Francisco Mango, Gabriel Michelena, Lucas Rusconi Moix, Carlos Gabriel Pallotti, Lucía Quesada, Shunko Rojas, Eduardo Stordeur, Pablo Trevisán, Lorena Triaca, Fernanda Viecens, and Federico Volujewicz, under the leadership of Miguel Braun. Special thanks go to all staff of Sub-Secretaría de Comercio Exterior, Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional (AAICI), and Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia (CNDC) for sharing their views and collaborating with the team during the missions. The team also received thoughtful insights from private-sector representatives and their respective chambers, including Cámara Argentina de Comercio y Servicios, Cámara de Exportadores de la República Argentina, Cámara de Comercio de Córdoba, Unión Industrial de Córdoba, and Cámara de Supermercados y de Autoservicios de Córdoba. The report has benefited greatly from comments, advice, and guidance from and technical discussions with Tania Begazo, Najy Benhassine, Fernando Giuliano, Lusine Lusinyan, Frank Sader, Alain de Serres, Emily Sinnott, Daria Taglioni, David Tinel, and many others. Anabel González and Marialisa Motta have provided critical guidance to the team on policy advice. On international experience with microeconomic structural reform programs, the team benefited greatly from discussions with Jarosław Beldowski, Mårten Blix, Allan Fels, Eduardo Pérez-Motta, and Paul Phumpiu. About the Authors Martha Martínez Licetti is a Global Lead at the World Bank’s Macroeconomics, Trade, and Investment Global Practice, where she heads the Markets and Competition Policy Team. During her eight years at the Bank, Licetti has held different positions, including advisor on trade and competitiveness matters, as well as lead economist of the Global Trade Unit, where she has studied the con- nection between trade agreements and competition-enhancing domestic poli- cies. She has been the technical lead on several projects aimed at improving the investment climate and fostering an efficient private sector through competition reforms across Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa, and the Sub-Saharan Africa region. She has led private-sector contributions to Bank-wide initiatives on state-owned enterprises, public pro- curement frameworks, and improvements to IFC investments. In her current role, she has developed an innovative competition policy offering, and she has built a portfolio of advisory and lending support to more than 60 client countries around the world. Before joining the Bank, Licetti worked as a practitioner in leading positions in the private and public sectors in areas of antitrust, market and competition analysis, state-owned enterprises, telecom regulation, anti-dumping, and trade negotiations. She is an economist, specializing in industrial organization, applied microeconomics, and antitrust, with more than 15 years of experience in eco- nomic regulation, markets, and competition policy. She has given lecture courses in industrial organization, network regulation, antitrust, and economic analysis of law, and she has published articles on antitrust policies in Latin America, Europe, and the United States. She has doctoral, masters, and advanced studies degrees in economics from Northeastern University in Boston, University of Texas at Austin, and the Institute of World Economics in Kiel, Germany. Her current research interests focus on understanding the empirical relationship between competition policy and market regulation, inclusive growths, and shared prosperity. Mariana Iootty is a Senior Economist at the World Bank working in the Macroeconomics, Trade, and Investment Global Practice, Markets and Competition Policy Team. Iootty is a Brazilian national and has been with the World Bank for six years, during which time she has led projects on innovation  xi xii | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy financing, regulatory impact assessment, global value chain analysis, trade com- petitiveness assessment, and productivity analysis in several countries in Eastern Europe and Latin America. Her main area of research is microeconomic analysis of economic development and firm performance. Prior to joining the Bank, Iootty was a tenured assistant professor in Brazil, and a visiting fellow at the University of Reading, United Kingdom. Tanja Goodwin is a Senior Economist at the World Bank’s Macroeconomics, Trade, and Investment Global Practices working with the Markets and Competition Policy Team since 2011. Her work focuses on analytics and techni- cal assistance in pro-competition sectoral regulation, and on the implementa- tion of competition policy with extensive experience in Latin America, as well as Northern Africa and East Asia Pacific. Before joining the World Bank, Goodwin worked at private and public research institutes in Germany and Latin America. She holds a master’s degree in economics from New York University. During her time at the Bank, Goodwin has also taught in different graduate programs, including at the Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru. José Signoret is an Economist in the Global Trade and Regional Integration unit in the Macroeconomics, Trade, and Investment Global Practice of the World Bank. His recent research topics include nontariff measures, analysis of prefer- ential trade agreements, and firm-level trade analysis. Before joining the World Bank, he worked in the Research Division at the U.S. International Trade Commission, where he led several research projects, including the recent report on the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement. From 2007 to 2008, he served as Director for Trade Capacity Building (TCB) at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, focusing on TCB efforts in Latin America. Signoret holds a doc- torate from the University of California, Berkeley, and a master’s degree from the University of Michigan. Abbreviations AAICI Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional ACE Economic Complementation Agreement ARSAT Empresa Argentina de Soluciones Satelitales Sociedad Anónima AVE ad valorem equivalent CES constant elasticity of substitution CET common external tariff CGE computable general equilibrium CNDC Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia ComEx Sub-Secretaría de Comercio Exterior DJAI Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Importación DNPDP Dirección Nactional de Protección de Datos Personales ECI economic complexity index ECTR electricity, communications, and transport EIU Economic Intelligence Unit ENDEI Encuesta Nacional de Dinámica de Empleo e Inovación EU European Union FADEEAC Federación Argentina de Entidades Empresarias del Autotransporte de Cargas FDI foreign direct investment FEDCAM Federación Nacional de Trabajadores Camioneros FTA free trade agreement GCR Global Competition Review GDP gross domestic product GTAP Global Trade Analysis Project GVC global value chain ICT information and communications technology IMF International Monetary Fund INDEC  Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos de la República Argentina IPA Investment Promotion Agency IPR intellectual property rights IT information technology KBS knowledge-based services LAC Latin America and the Caribbean  xiii xiv | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy LAIA Latin American Integration Association LCR local content requirement MCPAT Markets and Competition Policy Assessment Tool MVNO mobile virtual network operator NAFTA North American Free Trade Agreement NTM nontariff measure OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OLS ordinary least squares PCM price-cost margin PMR product market regulation PPML Poisson Pseudo-Maximum Likelihood PPP purchasing power parity PROCAMPO Programa de Apoyos Directos al Campo (Mexico) PTA preferential trade agreement R&D research and development RVC regional value chain SIMI Sistema Integral de Monitoreo de Importaciones SMEs small and medium enterprises SOE state-owned enterprise TAA trade adjustment assistance TFP total factor productivity TPSC Trade Policy Staff Committee TRIPS trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights TiVA trade in value-added UNCTAD United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNDP United Nations Development Programme USTR United States Trade Representative VAT value-added tax WBG World Bank Group WDI World Development Indicators WITS World Integrated Trade Solution WTO World Trade Organization Executive Summary The administration of President Mauricio Macri in Argentina faces an economy that is poorly connected with the world economy. Argentina needs to lift and stabilize economic growth to create more and better jobs while reigniting productivity to bring income closer to that of more advanced economies (figure ES.1).1 Integration into global markets provides opportunities to unleash the country’s growth and higher productivity potential by creating conditions and incentives for markets to function better and resources to be used more efficiently. In addition, further integration into the world economy can help deliver inclusive growth, as consumers will gain from the availability of foreign goods and services, greater variety, and prices that are more competitive, while small and medium enterprises (SMEs) can have more opportunities to expand their activities. ARGENTINA HAS SUBSTANTIAL SCOPE TO INTEGRATE FURTHER INTO THE WORLD ECONOMY The economy is particularly closed to trade. Partly as a result of policies put in place by previous governments, Argentina’s trade flows have fallen by almost half over the last decade. They dropped from 42 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2002 to 26 percent in 2016, slightly above the 1998 level of 23 percent.2 Trade in services is lower as a share of GDP than in all neighboring countries. Argentina’s average import tariff was 13.6 percent in 2015 (figure ES.2),3 similar to Brazil’s (13.5 percent) but well above the level of com- parator countries. Nontariff measures (NTMs) further restrict trade flows, with effects similar to those of tariffs as high as 34 percent. As of October 2016, import licenses for around 1,600 tariff lines were still not subject to automatic approval.4 Countries around the world participate, on average, in about four- teen free trade agreements each; Argentina is a signatory to only one.5 Foreign direct investment in Argentina is low. The value of foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows amounted, on average, to only 2 percent of GDP between 2000 and 2015, below the regional average and the average for upper-middle-income countries (3.6 percent and 2.4 percent of GDP, respectively).6 Consistent with low FDI inflows, stock of FDI is also low, and well  1 2 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE ES.1 GDP growth accounting in Argentina, 1992–2016 15 10 5 Percent 0 −5 −10 −15 19 2 19 3 19 4 19 5 19 6 19 7 98 20 9 20 0 20 1 02 20 3 20 4 20 5 20 6 20 7 20 8 20 9 20 0 20 1 20 2 20 3 20 4 20 5 16 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 19 19 20 Labor quantity contribution Labor quality contribution ICT capital contribution Non-ICT capital contribution Total factor productivity Growth of GDP, log change Source: Data from Conference Board database. (https://www.conference-board.org/data/economydatabase/). FIGURE ES.2 Average import tariff in Argentina vs. comparator countries 16 14 13.6 12 10 Percent 8 Average tariff in comparator economies: 5.5 6 4 2 0 a il M a M co st ia Bu ca Ro ria th nia Br s Fi in Ire d Po d Au nd lia Ze ru d d ut az in ric an n an Co ys ita e ra Ri re lan i a la la ex nt a P So Br Af lg a nl al st m a al ge er h at Ar w Ne Ne G Source: Data from WTO ITC UNCTAD Tariff Profiles, 2016. below the level of comparator countries (figure ES.3). Weak FDI inflows and stock exacerbate Argentina’s already low rate of overall investment, which is critical for closing its infrastructure gap. Gross capital formation in Argentina was 16 percent of GDP in 2016, below the regional average (19 percent) for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in the same year and significantly below the average among upper-middle-income countries (32.3 percent) in 2015.7 The lack of integration with global markets is mirrored by a lack of competition in domestic markets. New data collected jointly by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the World Bank Group (WBG) Executive Summary | 3 FIGURE ES.3 Inward FDI stock over GDP in Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2015 350 300 286 250 Percent of GDP 200 150 102 100 37 39 40 40 43 44 46 50 35 35 15 0 a d il D d nd ca lia co m s nd nd az in an an EC do ra ri i la la ex nt Br Af la nl al st O Po Ire ng ge M er Ze Fi Au h th Ki Ar ut w Ne So d Ne ite Un Source: Data from OECD database (https://data.oecd.org/fdi/fdi-stocks.htm). Note: Inward FDI stock is defined as the value of foreign investors’ equity in and net loans to enterprises resident in the reporting economy. FIGURE ES.4 Product market regulations in Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16 (index scale 0 to 6 from least to most restrictive) 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 3 16 il a M a Ro ico ia ru Bu d Ire a Fi d d lia Ki nd m s nd Co az ic ric i Ar 01 n n an an ar Ne do Pe ra 20 la la a So a R ex Br Af lg la nl l 2 Ne ust m Po ite Zea ng er st h g g A th ut Ar w d Un State control Barriers to entrepreneurship Barriers to trade and investment Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http:// www.oecd.org​/­eco/growth/indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm) suggest that product market regulation (PMR) is not conducive to competition in key sectors of the economy, including transport, energy, and retail. In fact, accord- ing to 2016 data, product market regulation is 30 percent more restrictive in Argentina than the average across 19 LAC countries and highest among relevant comparator countries (figure ES.4). 4 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Lack of integration could be associated with the significant price differen- tials observed among essential food products, sold in relatively concentrated domestic markets. Overall, households in Argentina spend 28 percent of their overall consumption on food products, more than the 14 percent in comparator countries.8 International price comparisons conducted for this report using panel data for 2010–15 suggest that prices for a series of food products that make up 85 percent of the food consumption basket were, on average, almost 50 percent higher in Argentina when compared to international peers and 35  percent higher than in countries in the Pacific Alliance. Households in Buenos Aires paid, on average, 13 percent more for basic food products than their peers in capital cities worldwide.9 These results take into account differ- ent income levels, import tariffs, and transport costs. Prices for chicken, dairy products, wheat bread, and white rice are significantly higher. This is generally consistent with information on the relatively high concentration in these product markets; however, the level of concentration is only one indicator of the intensity of competition. Further analysis undertaken at specific stages of the supply chain would contribute to identifying specific barriers and con- straints that might be affecting competition.10 THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION IS TACKLING THESE CHALLENGES HEAD-ON, WITH NOTABLE EARLY PROGRESS Complementing macroeconomic and fiscal reforms, the government lifted for- eign exchange controls and rolled out reforms to stimulate private investment. The administration approved a new public–private partnership framework and gradual reductions in energy and transport subsidies.11 Trade-related reforms have included the reduction of export taxes and the establishment of a new import administration system to replace Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Importación (DJAI), the mostly discretionary licensing regime in place until 2015, with a simpler monitoring system, Sistema Integral de Monitoreo de Importaciones (SIMI).12 Even just this import licensing reform is expected to boost GDP by at least 0.14 percent over baseline projections by 2020.13 Argentina is displaying a renewed interest in engaging in trade negotiations and taking a more active role in the international policy arena. Argentina has accelerated negotiations for new free trade agreements (FTAs) with the European Union (EU) and countries of the Pacific Alliance and has bid success- fully for the G20 presidency and the hosting of the Eleventh World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference. The government has taken steps to restructure and strengthen its institutions for investment promotion and competition policy. The renewed investment promotion agency (IPA), Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio ­ Internacional (AAICI), has already facilitated investment in at least 539 cases. This contributed to the announcement of 778 new investment projects in the first 24 months of President Macri’s administration, totaling US$102 billion in new investment.14 This is more than double the annual amount between 2012 and 2015. The new head and staff at the competition authority, Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia (CNDC), have already reduced the time required for merger reviews by almost 50 percent, sanctioned one price-fixing cartel, presented a new competition bill to the National Congress, and promoted changes to strengthen competition in the card payment market.15 Executive Summary | 5 ARGENTINA HAS MUCH TO GAIN FROM CONTINUING TO PURSUE ITS STRATEGY OF OPENING MARKETS AND INTEGRATING INTO THE WORLD ECONOMY BY BOOSTING TRADE, COMPETITION, AND INVESTMENT Partial and general equilibrium analyses suggest that trade, competition, and investment policy reforms will boost growth and productivity. This report presents a set of robust empirical analyses to assess the potential impacts from such reforms. Argentina’s strategy of pursuing unilateral trade policy reforms and regional trade integration will yield permanent gains, if implemented successfully. Using a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model tailored specifically to Argentina, this report assesses the effects of several trade reform measures (see box ES.1). BOX ES.1 Economic impact of trade reforms: A CGE analysis The CGE analysis conducts a comparison between 2030 without reform and the alternative scenario economic outcomes (including GDP, exports, imports, reflecting the policy changes. Certain effects, such as output, and others) that would accrue from policy the potential effect on GDP, can accumulate over time reforms and the baseline projection of the economy (as represented by the area between the curves). with current policies in place through the medium Overall, the simulated effects of potential trade-­ and long terms (2020 and 2030). Figure BES.1.1 illus- opening scenarios using CGE models may underesti- trates how to interpret the CGE results. The estimated mate the actual impact.a The results for Argentina are impact of the reform in the long run, for example, is similar in percentage terms to those for CGE simula- represented by the vertical distance (α) in the figure tions of comparable trade reforms for other countries, between a baseline projection of the economy through such as Brazil.b FIGURE BES.1.1 Interpreting CGE results α = estimated impact of reform Variable of interest (e.g., GDP) policy reform α baseline projection 2017 2030 a The CGE model does not include some possible dynamic factors proposed in the literature, such as productivity increases from endogenous growth effects via technological spillovers and “learning by doing” or FDI and foreign technology inflows that may be induced by the reform. Moreover, certain policy changes that are often difficult to quantify, such as reforms related to NTMs in goods and services, and restrictions on investment, present analytical challenges that may affect the estimated economic effects. CGE results may underestimate the likely impacts due to these limitations. Ex post evidence in the trade reform literature tends to suggest larger gains than ex ante analysis, such as that presented here. See, for example, Casacuberta, Fachola, and Gandelman (2011); Wacziarg and Welch (2008); Salinas and Aksoy (2006); Felbermayr, Prat, and Schmerer (201 1); and Falvey, Foster, and Greenaway (2012). b See, for instance, Petri and Plumer (2016), as well as Araujo and Flaig (2016). 6 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Conservative simulations of the potential gains from unilateral trade policy reform suggest that: • Removing all export taxes would expand GDP by at least 1 percent over base- line projections by 2020. The potential fiscal implications of this measure need to be taken into consideration, however.16 • Expanding the import licensing reform (initiated at the end of 2015) would boost the GDP gains already achieved through the removal of the DJAI to at least 0.22 percent over baseline projections by 2020.17 Conservative simulations of the potential gains from successful trade negoti- ations suggest that: • A more integrated Mercosur—with lower external tariffs and streamlined internal NTMs—would expand Argentina’s economy by at least 1 percent over baseline projections by 2030.18 • A Mercosur–EU FTA would boost Argentine exports to the EU by 80 percent over baseline projections by 2030.19 • A Mercosur–Pacific Alliance FTA would boost Argentine exports to Pacific Alliance countries by 25 percent over baseline projections by 2030.20 GIVEN THAT THE GAINS WOULD ACCUMULATE OVER TIME, ARGENTINA FACES THE COST OF NOT PURSUING THESE REFORMS WITH EVERY YEAR THAT PASSES Trade liberalization reforms would involve the reallocation of labor across sec- tors; employment would shrink relative to the baseline in certain sectors and would need to be absorbed by expanding activities relative to the baseline. Simulations drawn from the CGE model suggest that certain sectors would be more susceptible to losing jobs in response to trade reforms. Overall, for most of the trade integration scenarios modeled, sugar, metal products, footwear, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors are expected to be more susceptible to experiencing large or moderate losses in formal employment. On the other hand, some sectors emerge as formal employment generators, regardless of the trade integration scenario under consideration. These include services and other agriculture and meat sectors. Argentina can gain even more from “deeper” trade agreements and comple- mentary regulatory reforms that foster domestic competition. Partial equilib- rium analysis suggests that “deep provisions,” such as commitments with regard to competition and investment in regional trade agreements, as well as reforms that tackle anticompetitive business practices, remove entry barriers, and modify product market regulations that restrict competition, would translate into tangible gains:21 • With a Mercosur agreement as deep—in terms of the number of enforceable provisions—as the agreement among the EU, Colombia, and Peru, Argentina would export between 1 percent and 9 percent more parts and components to Mercosur members. • Increasing competition in the manufacturing sector would increase the annual growth rate of labor productivity by 7 percent, on average, with all else being equal. Executive Summary | 7 • Reducing the regulatory restrictiveness of competition in Argentine service sectors (such as energy, transport, professional services, and telecommunica- tions) would translate into an additional 0.1 percent to 0.6 percent growth in annual GDP, with all else being equal. THE NEW GLOBAL TRADE LANDSCAPE OPENS UP THREE SPECIFIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR ARGENTINA: CONNECTING TO CERTAIN REGIONAL AND GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS THROUGH FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, TRADING SERVICES, AND EXPANDING E-COMMERCE Trade is not growing as quickly as before, and its nature has been evolving rapidly, leading to the emergence of new opportunities. Setting global economic integration as a priority may seem to be an unusual choice in light of protection- ist threats worldwide and slower growth in total trade volumes, but the chang- ing nature of trade over the past decade opens up specific opportunities for Argentina. As a result of technological changes, the content and mode of trade have shifted. First, trade in intermediate goods has grown faster than trade in final goods, and FDI has played a crucial role in such global value chains (GVCs).22 Second, services can be traded by virtually connecting provider and consumer or by one or the other moving across borders. Today, trade in services makes up over 20 percent of global trade.23 Third, information communications technology (ICT) tools can facilitate cross-border e-commerce and the partici- pation of smaller and new entrants in global markets by boosting their ability to reach a sufficient scale. One opportunity these changes open up for Argentina is the opportunity to connect to specific segments of regional value chains (RVCs) and GVCs by facil- itating trade in intermediate goods, attracting strategic FDI, and building on existing capabilities in specific industries. Trade in parts and components is higher, on average, for countries that have signed deeper agreements with provi- sions on investment, competition, and others.24 As mentioned above, evidence provided in this report suggests that a deeper Mercosur agreement would boost Argentina’s trade in parts and components with its regional partners. Foreign investors who seek efficiencies in Argentina—as opposed to resources or market access—offer the opportunity to connect domestic firms and, in particular, SMEs, to GVCs. For example, building on existing capabilities in specific market segments (such as auto and food processing), Argentina can attract FDI in these sectors while strengthening linkages with local suppliers in order to reorient the production structure and integrate into GVCs and/or RVCs.25 Second, Argentina can leverage comparative advantages in services to increase FDI and exports. Argentina is competitive in knowledge-based ser- vices, such as software and information technology services, business services, and audiovisual services. Twenty-eight clusters already host 1,000 companies and employ 37,000 workers, and Argentina has attracted some of the world’s leading information technology (IT) companies.26 Proper interinstitutional coordination across federal and provincial governments may help to attract more FDI into the knowledge-based service sectors, but investment incentives need to be well coordinated, applied in a (fiscally) conservative manner, bal- anced, competitively assigned, and properly monitored. 8 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Third, Argentina can foster inclusive trade by facilitating cross-border e-commerce for SMEs. Retail e-commerce in Argentina grew by 50 percent between 2010 and 2015, displaying much stronger progress than selected peer economies in the region and the average in Latin America.27 However, its share in world retail e-commerce is one-fifth that of Australia and Brazil, which points to untapped potential. Updating legislation on electronic transactions and signa- tures, privacy and data protection, and consumer protection for online purchases could enhance the growth of e-commerce. By the same token, trade facilitation efforts (in particular, in cross-border procedures) need to be enhanced signifi- cantly to facilitate e-commerce and trade more broadly. ARGENTINA CAN IMPLEMENT MITIGATION MEASURES TO OFFSET THE TRANSITION COSTS OF OPENING UP TO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Integrating into the global economy and taking advantage of available oppor- tunities will entail transition costs in some segments of the economy. Microeconomic reforms, trade integration, and the associated changes in rela- tive prices would trigger a reallocation of production factors (within and between firms and sectors) that entail efficiency gains but also adjustment costs. Some segments of Argentina’s manufacturing sector are susceptible to adjustment costs. According to data from the Argentine Chamber of Commerce and Services, the total number of workers in the private sector in sensitive sectors such as automobiles, home appliances, and textiles represents close to 1.7 percent of Argentina’s total labor force, and these industries are concen- trated mainly in Buenos Aires and the central region, particularly in Córdoba and Santa Fe.28 International experience suggests that there is no one-size-fits-all strategy for effective mitigation measures, but that protecting workers instead of jobs is good practice. When well-designed and tailored to the country context, both active labor-market policies (such as job search assistance and training) and pas- sive policies (including income support and social insurance programs) have proved effective. Complementary policies and reforms in other markets (such as housing, credit, and infrastructure) play a crucial role in facilitating mobility, thereby reducing adjustment frictions.29 Argentina has recently put in place adjustment programs to help domestic workers and companies become more competitive, which is a step toward facil- itating the reallocation of labor in a context of trade opening and technological changes. Argentina launched the Programa de Transformación Productiva at the end of 2016. This adjustment program is designed to help companies enhance their competitiveness through mechanisms that facilitate improving productive processes; implementing jumps in scale or technology; developing new prod- ucts; and reorienting production toward more competitive and dynamic activi- ties that demand long-term, high-quality employment. Within three months of the launch of this program, about 20 firms had presented expansion or ­conversion projects with the potential to add up to 1,000 more workers. The government has also launched the Programa “111 mil, aprende a programar,” an initiative that seeks to train “100,000 programmers, 10,000 professionals, and 1,000 tech- nological entrepreneurs” in the next four years to meet the demand from com- panies in the knowledge-based service sector.30 Additional programs of this kind, Executive Summary | 9 together with policies to protect workers and reduce adjustment frictions, will increase the social benefits of trade integration. INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE IN STRUCTURAL MICROECONOMIC REFORMS REVEALS POTENTIAL GAINS; HOWEVER, PRIOR EXPERIENCE HAS ALSO SHOWN THAT PROPER SEQUENCING AND MONITORING ARE ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESS The economy-wide benefits of trade liberalization are well established, and studies of countries that have executed more comprehensive structural reform packages suggest that FDI and competition policy improvements are comple- mentary. A microeconomic reform program to open markets to competition in Australia complemented unilateral trade liberalization and added 2.5 percent to GDP.31 Substantial structural reforms that opened Sweden up to FDI in the early 1990s encouraged private-sector participation and strengthened competition, and these reforms were followed by the highest productivity growth rate in the OECD (aside from the United States) during the period from 1995 to 2011, together with wage increases. Mexico complemented its early moves toward trade openness with important domestic market reforms beginning in the early 1990s, before accessing NAFTA.32 These country case studies are discussed in this report and can inform not only the sequence and nature of reforms, but also successful compensation mechanisms to support the adjustment process and mitigate social costs. Based on international experience, such ambitious reform programs require a long-term national commitment and interinstitutional coordination. Comprehensive reform programs in Australia, Mexico, and Sweden were grad- ual and took a decade or more. Argentina’s new strategy should, therefore, aim at results beyond the current legislative period. Argentina could consider estab- lishing a national policy and respective institutional setup that could sustain a comprehensive reform package to integrate into the global economy over the coming decade. TO SCALE UP AND SUSTAIN REFORM EFFORTS FOR A SUCCESSFUL TRANSITION TOWARD A MORE COMPETITIVE, OPEN, AND INCLUSIVE ECONOMY, THIS REPORT HIGHLIGHTS BEST PRACTICES IN TERMS OF INSTITUTIONAL SETUP AND POLICY IMPLEMENTATION Institutions in charge of trade, investment, and competition policy are key to implementing a broad national policy of integration into the global economy. Successful institutions are typically structured efficiently and allow comple- mentarity and coordination among them: • According to international experience, successful institutions in charge of promoting FDI have certain good practices in common: a precise mandate that allows effective interaction with investors, separate regulatory and pro- motional functions, and a clear sector strategy. Activities related to trade pro- motion and investment promotion have, by nature, different needs in terms of 10 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy staff expertise, skills, target audiences, clients, and stakeholders. Best prac- tices point, in general, to a split between trade promotion and investment pro- motion, although some IPAs with joint mandates have been successful in attracting FDI. Ireland’s IDA and the Republic of Korea’s KOTRA are good examples of IPAs with separate and joint mandates, respectively. Particularly potent are investment promotion agencies that have some semiautonomous status, either as an autonomous public body, a joint public private or private entity, or a semiautonomous agency that reports to a ministry rather than merely being the subunit of a ministry. Another feature of the most effective investment promotion agencies is that they focus on promoting specific loca- tions and do not have regulatory roles. A precise mandate to serve investors, to focus on foreign investors and not just domestic investors, and to target strategic sectors—as in the case of knowledge-based services in Argentina—is also key to a conducive investment climate. To address these responsibilities, IPAs can benefit from staff with a private sector–minded culture and deep business knowledge. • Effective competition agencies design and implement enforcement and advo- cacy tools to ensure the greatest impact on market outcomes, work to embed competition principles in broader public policies, and operate under techni- cal and functional autonomy. Autonomy can be critical to applying effective sanctions and issuing recommendations based on objective criteria alone and without political interference. More than half of the world’s 120 competition agencies are institutionally independent from ministerial control. Of these independent agencies, 22 are in developing and transition economies.33 To use scarce public resources effectively, effective competition authorities also typ- ically focus on the most harmful violations of competition—cartel ­agreements—and use other antitrust tools, such as merger control, as residual tools. Agencies set appropriate thresholds for merger notifications to be able to focus on transactions that are large and may reduce competition signifi- cantly in the medium term. A comparative review across 82 countries sug- gests that these thresholds are generally aligned with the size of the economy. Through dedicated competition advocacy units, agencies also identify and recommend changes to rules and regulations that may have facilitated anti- competitive practices in the first place. Authorities also develop joint pro- grams and/or collaboration mechanisms with sector regulators in order to foster procompetition economic regulation. • Preparation and conduct of negotiations, as well as implementation of their outcomes, are the core responsibilities of trade institutions. To ensure ­ effective trade negotiation, best practices highlight three main responsibili- ties: analysis, communication and coordination, and representation. Trade institutions should have institutional capacity to collect, analyze, utilize, and disseminate trade-related information and to ensure independent assess- ment of the negotiated agreement. Communication and coordination with all stakeholders is also important. Countries such as the United States have set up sophisticated interagency coordination processes to ensure the flow of information among all involved government agencies. In terms of consulta- tion and legitimization of internal negotiations with the private sector during trade negotiations, countries like Mexico, through the Coordinating Body of Foreign Trade Business Associations, have successfully established a recog- nized consultation process that channels the participation of the private sec- tor and strategic social groups. These functions are best served by Executive Summary | 11 representatives who are fully trained in trade policy and negotiation tech- niques and institutions that are equipped with crucial resources and skills that ultimately guarantee the predictability of trade agreements. AGAINST THIS BACKDROP, THE REPORT MAPS KEY CHALLENGES THAT FIRMS HAVE BEEN FACING IN ARGENTINA AS THEY ATTEMPT TO INTEGRATE INTO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY. TO ADDRESS THESE CHALLENGES, THIS REPORT PROPOSES MEASURES IN THE AREAS OF TRADE, INVESTMENT, AND COMPETITION POLICY Successful integration into the global economy relies on the following four con- ditions faced by firms: (1) opportunities to enter and invest; (2) access to efficient input markets; (3) ability to compete on a level playing field; and (4) capacity to expand and thrive in global markets (figure ES.5). Specific measures designed under trade, investment, and competition policy areas can influence these conditions and have positive effects on market and pro- ductivity dynamics while boosting shared prosperity. Figure ES.6 illustrates how particular policy measures under these three policy areas are associated with each of the four conditions firms face in integrating into the global economy. If implemented in a coherent way, these measures can have positive effects on pro- ductivity dynamics and consumer welfare and generate more and better jobs. For example, opportunities to enter may depend on licenses (which might be FIGURE ES.5 Essential conditions for successful integration into global markets For Argentina to become more competitive and integrate into the global economy, firms need to have… …opportunities to enter 1 and/or invest as domestic or foreign firms into new domestic markets …access to efficient input markets 2 (besides labor and capital) through competitively priced inputs and services of quality and variety …ability to compete on a level 3 playing field through nondiscriminatory access to essential facilities and nondistorted market conditions 4 …capacity to expand and thrive in global markets 12 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE ES.6 Associations between trade, investment, and competition policy areas and conditions for successful integration into global markets For Argentina to become more competitive in the global economy… …which requires adequate …generating the implementation of trade, …firms need to have following effects on ...and boosting shared competition, and investment policy the following… instruments at the national and market and productivity prosperity. dynamics… subnational levels… Investor entry regimes …opportunities to enter Incentive regimes Consumer welfare: and/or invest Investment promotion policies and capacity More product variety as domestic or foreign firms Market access to domestic markets into new domestic markets (import output tariffs and NTMs) Better jobs: With Custom procedures/border management international standards Merger control policies and potential for Exclusive rights/monopolies knowledge transfer Knowledge spillovers from from FDI Favorable labor and FDI (especially vertical, capital markets and through backward and innovation infrastructure forward linkages) Reduced exercise of market Access to efficient input power Conducive environment for linkages with markets local suppliers Between-firm/sector through competitively priced Consumer welfare: productivity improvements inputs and services of Import input tariffs and NTMs Better deals and more (Reallocation of market good quality and variety variety for essential shares toward higher productivity firms) consumer products in domestic markets, too Ability to compete on a Within-firm productivity (with distributional level playing field Competitive neutrality improvements effects) through nondiscriminatory Market regulation in key sectors (incentives to invest in access to essential facilities (access, nondiscrimination) new technologies, cut and undistorted market Antitrust enforcement managerial slack, adopt conditions new management practices, change input variety, improve production Investment protection processes, change the Investment grievance management output mix, and diversify) Investment aftercare (retention, expansion, Better Jobs: More and diversification) productive jobs Capacity to thrive in global markets Export taxes and border management (learning by exporting, deepening linkages Merger control policies with local suppliers) Antitrust enforcement (cartels and abuse of dominance) Note: Purple-colored policy instruments refer to trade instruments, blue to competition policy instruments, and green to investment policy instruments. general or sector specific), approval from the CNDC to acquire or merge with a local company—potentially an incentive (especially for foreign companies) from investment promotion agencies to cover the risk and cost of investment— approval to import (import licenses and tariffs) inputs, and so on. When this condition is met, the domestic markets are more contestable, can benefit from knowledge spillovers, and can generate new and better jobs. Based on this framework, this report highlights potential reforms across these policy areas to address business and market challenges in Argentina. Evidence collected for the report suggests that firms that already operate or seek to invest in Argentina have faced challenges across all four conditions, and that the solutions to these challenges lie in all three policy areas (trade, investment, and competition) across the four conditions. That is, no one policy alone can ensure that these conditions are fulfilled and firms can integrate into the global Executive Summary | 13 FIGURE ES.7 Proposed policy actions for Argentina and how they relate to the policy areas of trade, investment, and competition Trade Investment Lower tariffs and NTMs in priority sectors Revise incentives framework Unilaterally reduce NTMs in input products Strengthen Introduce effective policies to promote Remove nonautomatic licenses to increase the legal linkages with local suppliers predictability framework Set up comprehensive regulatory Boost regional integration agreements to for e-commerce improvement and simplification increase market accesss mechanisms Address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles that affect ease of doing business and trading across borders Harmonize technical Open up key sectors standards with trade for investment partners Strengthen anticartel enforcement Overhaul merger control framework Strengthen procompetition sector regulation in key input services Implement competitive neutrality principles Competition economy (figure ES.7). A summary of policy recommendations is presented in the matrix at the end of this summary (table ES.1). It reflects a systematic review of all policy areas and regulatory frameworks in key sectors, as well as the prior- itization process described below. Rather than sequencing reforms among policy areas, this report suggests sequencing specific reform options within each policy area so as to advance in all three areas simultaneously. When assessing the potential sequence of reforms, priority should be given to reforms that are feasible in the short term and can achieve tangible results. Argentina should focus first on policy steps that remove key bottlenecks and yield results in the short term and later on those that require significant resources or comprehensive legal reforms. Table ES.1 organizes the recommendations along these lines. For example, removing import bans on used machinery and equipment would, arguably, benefit in particular smaller businesses that cannot afford new machinery and equipment. Setting up a sys- tematic inventory of incentives is a small but necessary step toward conducting a thorough evaluation and streamlining of incentive programs. Raising merger notification thresholds is an urgent step toward more efficiently using the scarce resources of the competition authority. Strengthening the capacity to investigate cartels is a critical prerequisite for an effective leniency program, under which the first cartel member to come forward can seek exemption from fines in return 14 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy for assistance in pursuing the rest of the cartel. In addition, ensuring the auton- omy of the competition agency is key to addressing the most harmful private and public barriers to competition. ARGENTINA CAN OPEN UP OPPORTUNITIES TO ENTER AND INVEST BY ADDRESSING CHALLENGES IN THE BUSINESS- ENABLING ENVIRONMENT Currently, entrepreneurs generally face difficulties in starting businesses, regis- tering property, and paying taxes. Obtaining a construction permit, for example, takes almost a full year. Argentina ranks at 117th out of 190 countries in terms of the overall ease of doing business (World Bank Group 2018). Some firms cannot invest at all because of absolute barriers to entry, such as limits on foreign invest- ments in air transport. Where firms want to invest, there is little predictability in terms of which incentives they can access, and they are often required to negoti- ate with several levels of government. Argentina can address the red tape and bureaucratic hurdles by setting gen- eral procedures for regulatory simplification and establishing a broad applica- tion of the silence-is-consent rule. The government can further open up key sectors for investment and eliminate barriers that limit market entry (for exam- ple, in the air transport sector) and improve the incentive framework by setting up systems to help adjudicate, monitor, and evaluate incentive schemes. Finally, the government can facilitate entry of firms that organize their activities around imports of final goods rather than investment in production by lowering tariffs and NTMs in protected sectors, such as furniture and home appliances, as was recently done with computers.34 The large number of measures related to prod- uct standards reveals opportunities to streamline regulations to lower trade costs. ARGENTINA CAN PROVIDE INVESTORS WITH ACCESS TO MORE EFFICIENT INPUT MARKETS BY STRENGTHENING PROCOMPETITION REGULATIONS Improved regulatory design in key service input markets could achieve higher contestability in communications technologies, allow for price signals to attract investment in electricity generation, and reduce the risk of collusion among transport providers. Currently, only 40 percent of broadband connections in Argentina provide speeds above 4 megabits per second, compared to 67 percent of top performers in the region. SMEs lost, on average, 2.4 percent of sales due to outages, which is double the amount in comparator countries. Logistics costs have increased by 40 percent since 2003 in real terms (Castro, Szenkman, and Lotitto 2015). In industrial input markets, investors seeking more competitive inputs from abroad face nonautomatic licenses and other NTMs, as well as local content requirements. Since 2005, Argentina has increased its use of temporary barriers to trade (for example, putting antidumping measures in place) more rapidly than many other middle-income countries.35 A review of the market characteristics of products affected by these temporary measures suggests that these barriers may often reinforce market dominance. Executive Summary | 15 Argentina can strengthen procompetition regulation in key network sectors, such as transport, electricity, and telecommunications. It can further strengthen anticartel enforcement, in particular in homogeneous input markets, and simul- taneously reduce NTMs, including nonautomatic licenses for input products. Finally, Argentina can actively promote linkages with domestic firms by setting up online databases of national suppliers, redesigning performance require- ments, and avoiding local content requirements. ARGENTINA CAN FURTHER LEVEL THE PLAYING FIELD AND ENSURE UNDISTORTED MARKET CONDITIONS TO ALLOW THE MOST PRODUCTIVE AND EFFICIENT FIRMS TO GROW Argentine state-owned enterprises (SOEs) operate in 17 sectors without a clear set of rules that guarantee competitive neutrality relative to private investors. These and other direct government interventions in the market (such as the price control system) can generate business risk and reduce investor confidence. To ensure that government interventions in the market do not reduce pre- dictability for potential market entrants, Argentina can establish rules that set the right incentives for SOEs to compete in the markets or that simulate compet- itive outcomes. For example, it can incorporate SOEs under the same regime as joint-stock companies and introduce tax and regulatory neutrality principles for SOEs. In addition, it can fully revoke instruments that can—even if gradually being phased out—eventually allow for discretionary application, such as the Supply Law that enables price control.36 ARGENTINA CAN PROMOTE FIRMS’ CAPACITY TO EXPAND AND THRIVE IN GLOBAL MARKETS AND TO FULLY INTEGRATE INTO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY BY REDUCING NONTARIFF MEASURES, BOOSTING INVESTOR CONFIDENCE, AND FACILITATING MORE EFFICIENT REVIEW OF PROPOSED MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS In the past, adverse government interventions have prevented investment from expanding and thriving. Participation in global production networks has been stifled by high tariff and nontariff barriers on parts and components. As of October 2016, over 1,600 tariff lines were still subject to import licenses not sub- ject to automatic approval, and other NTMs and procedural obstacles remained. Existing import bans on used capital goods constrain expansion, potentially more so for SMEs that are less able to afford new machines.37 Furthermore, Argentina has an unfavorable track record on investor–state disputes, even though most of these arose under previous governments. Argentina can reduce NTMs and harmonize technical standards with trade partners and, thereby, facilitate both exports and imports. It can establish clear protocols to address problems faced by foreign investors and proactively create a legal obligation for regulatory agencies to publish proposed regulations before they are enacted. A systematic investor response mechanism could also increase investor confidence. Finally, Argentina can overhaul the framework for review- ing mergers and acquisitions to accelerate efficient firm consolidation. 16 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TO ACHIEVE THE FULL POTENTIAL OF ARGENTINA’S REINTEGRATION INTO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY, INSTITUTIONS WILL NEED TO COORDINATE EFFECTIVELY SO THAT REFORM INITIATIVES ARE CONCURRENT, COHERENT, AND INTEGRATED IN DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION Reforms in these areas need to be implemented in a coherent way to ensure that positive payoffs stemming from reforms on one front are not curtailed by inappropriate (or lack of ) reforms on the other two fronts. In this way, firms can enter and invest in the market, access inputs to their products, compete on a level playing field, and expand and thrive in global markets. In line with figure ES.7, the AAICI will not be able to promote FDI in GVCs successfully if trade in parts and components is obstructed by NTMs involving other govern- ment institutions. By the same token, the CNDC’s objective of ensuring a level playing field among domestic and foreign competitors could be hampered by potential discretionary and selective investment incentives relevant to AAICI. Similarly, attempts by the Ministry of Production’s Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade (Sub-Secretaría de Comercio Exterior) to expand market access for Argentine exporters could be impaired by distortive regulation of input ser- vices (such as logistics, telecommunications, and energy). The CNDC can also act as a market intelligence institution, providing recommendations and anal- ysis on market structure and dynamics to other public bodies in order to foster more contestable markets. This can positively influence a better economy-wide regulation agenda. Ultimately, Argentina can design better policies and regulations to break down barriers to competition. In some cases, this will involve jointly removing or over- riding rules that hinder competition; in other cases, it means designing different rules and regulations that achieve public policy objectives while minimizing market distortions and preventing firms from engaging in anticompetitive behavior. A comprehensive regulatory reform agenda with clear prioritization, improvement mechanisms, and monitoring can tackle this systematically. Given the connections among trade, investment, and competition policy—in theory and in practical application—all institutions will need to coordinate to ensure that integrating Argentina into the world economy elicits the greatest possible gains in terms of increasing the welfare of the broader population. Looking forward, Argentina could benefit from a comprehensive strategy to improve data availability—especially at the firm level—as well as further analyt- ical work. Systematic data collection and statistics are key for detailed design of reform options and estimations of the potential impact of further reform. While individual surveys, such as the Pilot Survey on Innovation and Employment Dynamics (Encuesta Nacional de Dinámica de Empleo e Innovación, or ENDEI, in Spanish) yield valuable information, Argentina could aim to collect firm- level panel data in a consistent manner and make it publicly available to aca- demia, specialized government units, and private think tanks, making sure to adhere to the usual data protection standards. This information can also be complemented by market-level information stemming from competition enforcement and advocacy implementation. This would allow a broader body of research to become available as an input into effective, evidence-based policy design and as a means to help identify policy changes that could foster addi- tional reform momentum. Executive Summary | 17 TABLE ES.1  Matrix of policy recommendations SHORT TERM MEDIUM TERM LONG TERM POLICIES THAT REQUIRE HIGH-LEVEL, IMPORTANT MILESTONES: POLICY ACTIONS QUICK WINS: URGENT POLICY ACTIONS WITH COMPLEX INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS AND WITH SUBSTANTIAL IMPACT THAT REQUIRE SHORT-TERM IMPACT THAT ARE RELATIVELY COULD ENCOUNTER SUBSTANTIAL MORE SUBSTANTIVE LEGAL REFORMS, FEASIBLE POLITICAL OPPOSITION AND/OR INVOLVE NEGOTIATIONS, OR INSTITUTIONAL EFFORTS SIGNIFICANT EXTERNAL CONSTITUENCIES Open up further opportunities to enter and invest Lower tariffs and NTMs in priority sectors Limit nonautomatic licenses to the Unilaterally reduce tariffs for highly Harmonize standards among Mercosur minimum (such as hazardous imports) protected sectors parties   Pursue FTA with EU Pursue “community reforms” at Mercosur Improve incentive framework to attract efficiency-seeking FDI more effectively Introduce a systematic inventory of Create a procedural mapping of steps to   incentives adjudicate incentives   Strengthen monitoring and evaluation of   incentives Open key sectors for investment and eliminate barriers that limit market entry Limit government’s liability for losses of Eliminate “public hearing” for granting Open domestic air transport market to Aerolineas Argentinas new licenses for air transport services foreign carriers Address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles that affect ease of doing business, particularly in the entry phase Improve regulation efforts to facilitate Apply broadly the “silence is consent” rule Devise a general procedure for regulatory doing business in key areas simplification Enhance access to more efficient input markets for firms Unilateral NTM reduction in input products Remove import ban on used machinery, Reduce NTMs for key industrial inputs   equipment, instruments, devices, and parts Introduce effective policies to promote linkages with domestic firms Develop a central (online) database of Redesign performance requirements and   national suppliers local content rules—for example, revise tax benefits in auto industry   Introduce behavioral incentives for firms to   enhance capacities Strengthen anticartel enforcement, especially in homogeneous input products Strengthen cartel investigation techniques Elevate sanctions for cartels   (IT forensic capabilities)   Introduce leniency program   Strengthen procompetition sector regulation in key input services Implement rules to protect competitive Fully enforce Mobile Virtual Network Allow pay-TV companies to offer telecom- neutrality in the telecom sector Operator (MVNO) framework munication services Guarantee effective nondiscriminatory Review toll exemption rules for private   access in rail freight (“self”) cargo transport and public cargo transport (to third parties) Enhance predictability and a level playing field for the private sector Implement competitive neutrality principles and eliminate instruments that can limit competition Eliminate the government’s ability to Incorporate state-owned enterprises Introduce regulatory and tax-neutrality control prices (SOEs) under the same regime as private principles for SOEs joint-stock companies continued 18 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE ES.1, continued SHORT TERM MEDIUM TERM LONG TERM POLICIES THAT REQUIRE HIGH-LEVEL, IMPORTANT MILESTONES: POLICY ACTIONS QUICK WINS: URGENT POLICY ACTIONS WITH COMPLEX INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS AND WITH SUBSTANTIAL IMPACT THAT REQUIRE SHORT-TERM IMPACT THAT ARE RELATIVELY COULD ENCOUNTER SUBSTANTIAL MORE SUBSTANTIVE LEGAL REFORMS, FEASIBLE POLITICAL OPPOSITION AND/OR INVOLVE NEGOTIATIONS, OR INSTITUTIONAL EFFORTS SIGNIFICANT EXTERNAL CONSTITUENCIES Enhance the capacity of firms to thrive and expand Remove nonautomatic licenses to increase predictability   Ensure that nonautomatic licenses are set   to the minimum Reduce regulatory and legal uncertainty through broad regulatory improvement mechanisms Introduce a clear procedural protocol to Create legal obligation for regulatory Establish a systemic investor response solve problems faced by foreign agencies to publish text or proposed mechanism investors and arising from regulatory regulations before enactment conduct Strengthen the legal framework for e-commerce Remove exemptions to e-signatures and Strengthen consumer protections specific   e-documents; give validity to all types of to electronic consumers e-signatures Overhaul merger control framework Raise notification threshold for mergers Introduce fast-track procedures for   mergers unlikely to have anticompetitive effects   Improve procedural effectiveness in   reviewing mergers Note: While this table identifies short-, medium-, and long-term priorities based on the binding constraints, medium- and long-term priorities should be addressed simultaneously with short-term priorities if they require changing the same law. The reforms may also involve other third parties (such as regulators, cancillería, parliament, and others), which this table does not highlight. NOTES 1. As seen from the growth accounting exercise, total factor productivity has, in fact, been dragging down growth rather than boosting it over the past few years. 2. All values are from the World Bank’s World Development Indicators (WDI) database. 3. Simple average of most favored nation (MFN) rate for 2015. 4. More recently, in January 2018, the Ministry of Production issued a resolution (No. 5-E/2018) that eliminates 314 products from the list of nonautomatic import licenses. 5. Argentina is party to five partial-scope agreements, according to the World Trade Organi- zation’s regional trade agreements database. 6. World Bank Group (WBG) analysis using data from the Argentine Central Bank shows that, between 2012 and 2015, half of this FDI constituted reinvestment of earnings artificially boosted, at least in part, by restrictions on repatriation of investors’ profits. 7. See WDI database. Low (private and public) investment has led to a declining capital stock in Argentina, with direct effects on infrastructure quantity and quality. According to the World Bank (2015), Argentina dropped 62 positions in the worldwide ranking of infrastruc- ture quality between 2006 and 2015, as per the World Economic Forum survey. Investing more in infrastructure would be a key driver to increase the country’s competitiveness by enabling firms to reap the benefits of further integration with the global economy. FDI can play a pivotal role in this area. 8. Percentage of household final consumption expenditures spent on food that was consumed at home (in 2016), as computed by Economic Research Services of the US Department of Agriculture. The comparator countries are the same as used throughout this report. When considering only the developing economies in this comparator group, the average share is 18 percent. Data are available at https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-expendi​ tures.aspx. Executive Summary | 19 9. Estimations based on Numbeo data for 2010–15. 10. Argentina’s competition authority has initiated market studies in some of these product markets. 11. The exception is the social tariff for transport services targeted to poor people. 12. The elimination of the DJAI and introduction of the SIMI, at the end of 2015, eliminated the preapproval process. This new regime maintained about 1,400 tariff lines subject to nonautomatic licenses. Subsequent resolutions have modified the list of nonautomatic licenses, with the end result of increasing tariff lines to 1,626 in October 2016. 13. With the removal of the DJAI, the NTM ad valorem equivalent is reduced by five percent- age points for many goods sectors. The Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) exercise compares the resulting economic outcomes accrued by the introduction of SIMI/replace- ment of DJAI versus a baseline projection through 2020 without the reform. CGE results show that real GDP would be 0.14 percent higher than the baseline value by 2020. 14. Based on Télam (2017) and AAICI (2018). 15. The competition authority (CNDC) had determined that the payment card acquirer, pro- cessor, and point-of-sale operator Prisma (owned by Visa and 14 Argentine banks) had a dominant position in the market and recommended changes to the legal framework for payment cards, many of which have since been implemented. In September 2017, CNDC accepted a divestment plan by Prisma that also obliges the firm to offer its payment pro- cessing services to competitors in a nondiscriminatory way. In March 2017, banks, payment card companies, and chambers of commerce in Argentina agreed on a plan to reduce inter- change fees gradually from 3 percent to 1.8 percent by 2021. 16. See discussion on the fiscal implications in the main report. 17. As mentioned above, CGE results show that the removal of DJAI and introduction of SIMI at the end of 2015 would increase real GDP by 0.14 percent above the baseline value by 2020. This “elimination of DJAI” scenario is considered a partial reform in the sense that nonautomatic import licenses still cover a share of trade in certain sectors; as of October 2016, about 1,600 tariff lines remained with import licenses that were not subject to automatic approval. CGE simulations suggest that expanding this reform to eliminate all remaining nonautomatic licenses would bring the GDP gains from 0.14 percent to 0.22 percent above the baseline projections for 2020. 18. This scenario includes a reduction in tariffs in all Mercosur countries for world imports by 50 percent (tariffs within Mercosur are essentially zero), a 15 percent cut in NTMs within the borders of Mercosur, and the elimination of export controls among Mercosur parties. 19. This scenario includes reciprocal tariff reductions, where the average tariff applied to EU products by Argentina would fall from about 11 percent to about 3 percent by full imple- mentation in 10 years, while the average tariff in the EU for Argentine products would fall from about 3 percent to close to zero. Also, NTMs would be streamlined by 15 percent and export controls eliminated among the parties. 20. This scenario is similar to the Mercosur–EU agreement, but with lower tariff reductions. The average tariff applied by Argentina to products from the Pacific Alliance would fall from about 1 percent to 0.3 percent, and the average tariff in the Pacific Alliance on prod- ucts from Argentina would fall from 2.3 percent to 0.3 percent. 21. Empirical estimations used as inputs for these results include a gravity model on trade in parts and components, a panel-data estimation with firm-level data on price–cost margins and firm-level productivity, and a panel-data estimation of the link between regulatory re- strictiveness in service sectors and growth in industries that use such services intensively among OECD and additional developing economies. 22. Trade in intermediate goods contributed more than trade in final goods to the growth of total manufacturing trade in 2001–08 and 2009–14 (World Bank et al. 2017). 23. The share of service exports increased from around 9 percent in 1970 to around 20 percent in 2014 (Loungani et al. 2017). 24. Most modern-day trade agreements contain provisions that cover a wide array of NTMs, both at the border and behind the border—for example, technical barriers to trade (TBTs) and sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures, rules on investment and intellectual prop- erty rights protection, provisions on competition policy, and so on. Recent FTAs tend to go beyond multilateral rules. The literature refers to these new trade agreements as “deep” to distinguish them from traditional FTAs that focus only on market access commitments— sometimes referred to as “shallow” (Osnago, Rocha, and Ruta 2015). 20 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy 25. A more detailed GVC analysis could offer insights into the potential for upgrading and diversifying these exports. 26. See Nahirnak 2016 for further details. 27. According to data from eMarketer. 28. See Camara Argentina de Comercio y Servicios 2017 for further details. 29. Evidence suggests that adjustment frictions can reduce the gains from trade. In the case of Mexico, Kambourov (2009) finds that a lack of flexibility in the labor market slowed the reallocation of labor in response to trade reform, so that the benefits of the reform were as much as 30 percent less than would have been achieved under a more flexible labor market. Similarly, Dix-Carneiro (2014) finds that the reallocation in the labor market following trade liberalization in Brazil would accelerate from fourteen years to four years if capital were completely mobile. 30. See Ministry of Production, Argentina website: https://www.argentina.gob.ar/111mil. 31. See Productivity Commission (2005) for further details. 32. See Dougherty (2015) for further discussion. 33. See UNCTAD (2011) for further discussion. 34. Import tariffs for certain computer items were brought down to zero in March 2017. 35. Estimations based on the World Bank’s Global Antidumping Database (Bown 2016) measuring the stock of antidumping measures (antidumping investigation resulting in an- tidumping measures, minus measures revoked over time) in Argentina and 32 other econ- omies. The average number of measures in place in Argentina in 2005–09 was 79, which increased to 103 by 2010–14 (a 30 percent increase). Middle-income countries in the data- base accounted for 936 measures in place in 2005–09, which increased to 1,070 measures by 2010–14 (a 14 percent increase). High-income countries accounted for 565 measures in 2005–09, which decreased to 532 measures by 2010–14 (a 6 percent decrease). By 2010–14, Argentina would be the top-seven user of antidumping measures, after India, the United States, Turkey, Brazil, China, and the EU. 36. Although the Macri administration initially reduced the number of products included under the “Precios Cuidados” program, in September 2017 it extended it again until January 2018, maintaining 325 products on the list and adding 151 new products. 37. Argentina generally restricts or prohibits the importation of used and remanufactured goods, including agricultural machinery, auto parts, and medical equipment. Capital goods that may be imported are subject to higher duties than new ones. Recently, in December 2016, the government introduced a program to facilitate imports of used production lines as part of investment projects, subject to approval under certain conditions, including that these production lines are complete and autonomous (decree 1174/2016). REFERENCES AAICI. 2018. Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional. http://www​ investandtrade.org.ar/mapadelainversion.php (accessed August 23, 2017). .­ Araujo, S., and D. Flaig. 2017. “Trade Restrictions in Brazil: Who Pays the Price?” Journal of Economic Integration 32 (2): 283–23. Bown, C. 2016. Global Antidumping Database. Washington, DC: World Bank. Cámara Argentina de Comercio y Servicios. 2017. “Informe CAC: Costo Argetnino Agosto de 2017.” http://www.cac.com.ar/data/documentos/11_CAC%20-%20Informe%20Costo%20 Argentino%20-%20Agosto%202017.pdf. Casacuberta, C., G. Fachola, and N. Gandelman. 2011. “Employment, Capital and Productivity Dynamics: Trade Liberalization and Unionization in the Uruguayan Manufacturing Sector.” The Developing Economies 49 (3): 266–96. Castro, L., P. Szenkman, and E. Lotitto. 2015. “¿Cómo puede cerrar el próximo gobierno la brecha de infraestructura?” Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento. Documento de políticas públicas no. 148. https://www.cippec.org/wp​ -content/uploads/2017/03/1241.pdf. Dix-Carneiro, R. 2014. “Trade Liberalization and Labor Market Dynamics.” Econometrica 82 (3): 825–85. Executive Summary | 21 Dougherty, S. 2015. “Boosting Growth and Reducing Informality in Mexico.” OECD Economic Department Working Papers. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 1188. http://www.oecd-ilibrary​ .org/docserver/download/5js4w28dnn28​- en.pdf ?​expires=1520534212​&id​ =id&accname=guest&checksum=31D4E67FCB48CFC​6B2A2B27223590885. Falvey, R., N. Foster, and D. Greenaway. 2012. “Trade Liberalization, Economic Crises, and Growth.” World Development 40 (11): 2177–93. Felbermayr, G., J. Prat, and H. Schmerer. 2011. “Trade and Unemployment: What Do the Data Say?” European Economic Review 55 (6): 741–58. Kambourov, G. 2009. “Labour Market Regulations and the Sectoral Reallocation of Workers: The Case of Trade Reforms.” Review of Economic Studies 76 (4): 1321–58. Loungani, P. M., and K. Wang. 2017. “World Trade in Services: Evidence from a New Dataset.” IMF (International Monetary Fund) Working Paper No. 17-77. https://www.imf.org/en​ /­Publications/WP/Issues/2017/03/29/World-Trade-in-Services-Evidence-from-A-New​ -Dataset-44776. Nahirñak, P. 2016. Informes de Cadenas de Valor: Software y Servicios Informáticos (10.13140/ RG.2.2.21708.82567 ed.). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Ministerio de Hacienda y Finanzas Públicas. Osnago, A., N. Rocha, and M. Ruta. 2015. “Deep Trade Agreements and Vertical FDI: The Devil Is in the Details.” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 7464 (no. WPS 7464), World Bank, Washington, DC. Petri, P., and M. Plummer. 2016. “The Economic Effects of the Trans Pacific Partnership: New Estimates.” Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper No. 16-2. https:// piie.com/publications/working-papers/economic-effects-trans-pacific-partnership-new​ -estimates. Productivity Commission. 2005. “Review of National Competition Policy Reforms.” Productivity Commission Inquiry Report No. 33, World Bank, Washington, DC. Salinas, G., and A. Aksoy. 2006. Growth Before and After Trade Liberalization. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4062, World Bank, Washington, DC. Télam. 2017. Télam S. E. Agencia Nacional de Noticias. http://www.telam.com.ar/notas​ /201705/188892-gobierno-lanzo-mapa-inversiones.html (accessed August 23, 2017). UNCTAD. 2011. Foundations of an Effective Competition Agency. Geneva: UNCTAD. Wacziarg, R., and K. H. Welch, 2008. Trade Liberalization and Growth: New Evidence. World Bank Economic Review 22 (2): 187–231. World Bank. 2015. Argentina: Notas de políticas públicas para el desarrollo. Report no. 106122. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/899411467995396294/pdf/106122-WP​ -P156046-PUBLIC-SPANISH-NotasdePol%C3%ADticas-ARGENTINA.pdf.World Bank, IDE-Jetro, OECD, and WTO. 2017. Global Value Chain Development Report: Measuring and Analyzing the Impact of GVCs on Economic Development. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank Group. 2018. Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs. Economy Profile: Argentina. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/899411467995396294/pdf​ /106122-WP-P156046-PUBLIC-SPANISH-NotasdePol%C3%ADticas-ARGENTINA.pdf. 1 Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios NEW PRIORITIES: STRENGTHENING THE ARGENTINE ECONOMY’S INTEGRATION INTO GLOBAL MARKETS The government of Argentina is undertaking a major transition in its economic policies, moving beyond correcting urgent macroeconomic imbalances to prior- itizing reintegration of the Argentine economy in global markets to ensure a return to sustainable growth. Following President Mauricio Macri’s inaugura- tion in 2015, substantial economic reforms were undertaken in 2016. Argentina removed foreign exchange controls, tightened monetary policy, reached a major deal with holdout creditors, and reduced subsidies on utility prices and trans- port services to narrow the fiscal imbalance (box 1.1). The government improved supply-side policies for connecting with international markets. Export taxes on most crops, beef, and most industrial manufacturing products were eliminated, while export taxes on soy were reduced by 5 percentage points. In addition, Argentina officially replaced its previous Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Importación (DJAI) import licensing system with a new, simpler monitoring system, Sistema Integral de Monitoreo de Importaciones (SIMI), thus moving, in line with World Trade Organization (WTO) procedures, from de facto nonauto- matic to automatic import licenses for the majority of products and facilitating imports. The government also sent a new competition bill to Argentina’s congress,1 created a new investment promotion agency, and removed prohibi- tions on repatriating profits. Integration into global markets can improve the efficiency of the Argentine economy, providing opportunities for private investment to flourish and for the associated benefits to accrue to consumers. Productivity growth remains critical in Argentina, and its insufficiency lies at the heart of the country’s lack of income convergence with most developed economies.2 Policies that support further integration into the global economy have the potential to boost productivity gains, both economy-wide and within sectors and firms.3 Economic integration would open several sources of efficiency simultaneously. First, firms would have access to larger markets with higher elasticity of demand. Second, entering such markets would allow Argentina to exploit economies of scale without encoun- tering large declines in prices. Third, it would spur competition, as domestic  23 24 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 1.1 Main reforms to date • Foreign exchange controls lifted and exchange a bond issuance of US$16.5 billion in April 2016, rates unified (December 2015). Exporters, the largest single bond issuance in history for an importers, and the public could now buy foreign emerging economy. currency freely at a unique exchange rate with- • Energy and transport subsidies reduced, with out authorization from the Federal Tax Agency, a social tariff maintained for low-income users resulting in the unification of the official and (March–April 2016). Electricity and gas tariffs unofficial exchange rates. were increased, although they had to be revised • Restrictions on the repatriation of profits following a Supreme Court ruling based on the removed (December 2015). A successful tax lack of mandatory public hearings. Transport amnesty program was implemented to encour- subsidies were also reduced (with the excep- age repatriation of undeclared funds held abroad. tion of the social tariff for poor people). Energy It resulted in additional tax revenues amounting subsidies will continue to decrease gradually to 1.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). until they are eliminated by 2019, except for • Credibility of the national statistical system social tariffs. restored (December 2015). As a result, the • Social safety net expanded (April 2016). Family International Monetary Fund (IMF) lifted its allowances were expanded to reach 4.1 million Declaration of Censure on Argentine official children, up from 2.9 million. statistics. • Income tax reform implemented (April 2016 and • New imports administration system implemented December 2016). The income tax floor was raised (December 2015). To facilitate imports, Argentina from Arg$15,000 gross per month to Arg$30,000. replaced its licensing system for authorizing In December 2016, the Congress approved imports (DJAI), which had been mostly subject another reform to the income tax that raised all to a nontransparent preapproval process, with a tax brackets and decreased the minimum income simpler import monitoring system (SIMI). tax rate. • Export taxes reduced (December 2015). • Monetary policy adopted (September 2016). Argentina eliminated export taxes on agricul- The Central Bank formally adopted an inflation-­ tural goods (including beef, wheat, and corn) targeting regime with a floating exchange rate while cutting the tariff on soybeans by 5 percent- (target of 2 to 25 percent by the end of 2016, age points (from 35 percent to 30 percent). falling to 5 percent by 2019). It committed to • New investment promotion agency created decreasing financial assistance to the central (March 2016). By a decree of the Ministry of government gradually. Production (Resolution 83/2016), the statutes • International relations normalized. In November of Fundación Exportar—a private entity dedi- 2016, the IMF conducted its first Article IV con- cated exclusively to export promotion—were sultation with Argentina in a decade. Moreover, amended to create the Argentina Investment and Argentina held the WTO Ministerial Conference Trade Promotion Agency (Agencia Argentina de in 2017 and will hold the G20 presidency in 2018. Inversiones y Comercio Internacional, or AAICI) • Inflation-indexed accounting unit (Unidad de and dedicate it not only to export promotion but Valor Adquisitivo, in Spanish) introduced by also to investment promotion and facilitation. the Central Bank to support the development of • Return to international financial markets the market for mortgages in Argentina. Mortgages (March–April 2016). Argentina reached a major are growing but from negligible levels. deal with holdout creditors and successfully • Framework for public–private partnerships returned to international capital markets with approved. Congress approved a new public–­ private continued Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 25 Box 1.1, continued partnership framework to help address the coun- public procurement (via compr.ar portal), and try’s existing infrastructure deficit and to stim- a renewed commitment to open government ulate private investment in major sectors of the with the open  data portal (datos.gob.ar) and the economy, such as infrastructure, housing, services, implementation of the second open government production, applied research, and technological action plan. innovation. • New export regime for SMEs established. The • Transparency promoted in government. President Ministry of Production and the Federal Tax Macri declared his intention to place Argentina Authority published Joint General Resolution among the top countries in the world in terms No. 4049-E/2017 in the Official Gazette. It set of transparency. The primary measures included out the framework of a simplified export regime passing the Access to Public Information Law called “Exporta Simples,” which implements a in 2016 (which entered into force in September fast track procedure for SMEs to make it easier 2017), ongoing reforms in procurement for to export their products via private postal service public infrastructure (contrat.ar portal) and providers (couriers). firms are pushed to face fiercer pressure from either import competition or the entry of foreign companies and as those who enter export markets face compe- tition from international peers. Fourth, it would relax technological constraints through access to better-quality and competitively priced inputs, which increase returns to investment and innovation while allowing firms to join the growth platform provided by international production networks. Finally, consumers would benefit from the availability of foreign goods and services, greater variety, and more competitive prices. For a detailed review of these effects identified in the theoretical and empirical literature, refer to appendix A. Spurring integra- tion into the global economy can also help create more and better jobs (see box 1.2 for further discussion). Among many policies that are important for integrating into the global econ- omy, particularly relevant—and also challenging—are trade, investment, and competition policies. Adequate macroeconomic policies, labor market policies, credit and financial policies, innovation policies, and business regulations can all shape the incentives and opportunities for economic agents at home and abroad (appendix B). As documented in the empirical literature (see appendix A) and suggested by international evidence covered in this report, investment and com- petition policy reforms are important complements to trade liberalization. They are particularly important, in fact, for integration into the 21st century’s global, interconnected, and competitive world economy. These three policies are often shaped and determined by diffuse rules, policies, and regulations in many indi- vidual markets and sectors. In such specific segments of the economy, particular interest groups can block reforms that would benefit the overall economy. Trade, investment, and competition policies are not set in one law or one institution alone. While there is often one investment law and one competition law, many sector-specific laws or public policy programs have effects on the attractiveness of the economy for investment and the intensity of competition. This has two implications. First, policy improvement requires detailed analysis of sector-specific laws, regulations, and their implementation; and, second, no 26 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 1.2 Implementing product market reforms can help create better-quality jobs and has the potential to increase aggregate employment in the long term Creating new (and better) jobs is essential in Argentina, The impact on aggregate employment will owing to high unemployment and underemployment depend on macroeconomic conditions and labor rates. Of Argentina’s workforce, 11.2 percent are under- market institutions. Empirical evidence on the employed, meaning that employees work part-time impact of product market reforms on employment jobs because they cannot get full-time positions points to overall positive gains in the long term. (INDEC 2017). A  comprehensive literature review presented by By boosting productivity growth—among other Schiantarelli (2016) shows that procompetitive mechanisms, through labor reallocation toward more product market reforms generate significant productive firms and sectors—reforms in the area of employment in the long term in Organisation for trade, investment, and competition can help improve Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) the quality of jobs by increasing demand for highly countries by stimulating firms’ demand for labor skilled workers or by allowing workers to learn while and their willingness to invest. Favorable long-term working and be deployed to higher-value-added tasks. employment effects are more likely if labor markets Making jobs more productive typically generates are rigid and tend to be enhanced by product mar- higher wages. From a trade perspective, a set of ket deregulations that encourage labor market (strong) stylized facts helps to support this view: first, reforms. In addition, the empirical literature using exporters are more productive than nonexporters cross-country data suggests that countries that are (see, for instance, Bernard and Jensen 1999 and Melitz more open to trade have lower unemployment (see, 2003, among many others), and, second, exporters for instance, Felbermayr, Prat, and Schmerer 2011). tend to pay higher wages than nonexporters (see, for Additional empirical evidence provided by instance, Brambilla, Depetris Chauvin, and Porto 2016, Hollweg, Lederman, and Mitra (2014) suggests that who show that Argentine exporters pay 31 percent pro-opening reforms increase both employment higher wages than nonexporters). and wages. one institution alone can change trade, investment, or competition policy. For all three to be coherent and efficient in achieving their objectives, institutional cooperation and coordination are indispensable. Effective trade, investment, and competition policies reinforce each other in fostering firms to source, produce, and sell across borders. From a microeco- nomic perspective, there are multiple, nonexclusive contractual modes for integrating domestic firms into global markets: exporter, importer, outsourcer, outsourcee, foreign owner, and foreign direct investor.4 The success of firm internationalization through any combination of these modes depends on how policies shape incentives and rules. While foreign investment policy encourages or discourages entry of new international actors, trade policy influences the size of the output market and the range of input sources available to firms, and com- petition affects “behind the border” market entry and the contestability of both input and output markets while providing incentives to innovate and increase productivity (figure 1.1). Based on robust empirical analysis for Argentina and a comprehensive review of international experience in this regard, this report develops recommendations for each institution in charge of the three respective policy areas, together with a roadmap of specific reforms that all institutions can promote jointly. This report and its recommendations build on the results of a robust set of empirical analyses Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 27 FIGURE 1.1 Trade, investment, and competition policies: Attributes, synergies, and complementarities Competition policy (affects market entry/ contestability, as well as the incentives to innovate and increase productivity) Tighter competition increases opportunities Entry of foreign to enhance gains companies tightens from trade competition in Competitive markets domestic markets Easing output create investment tariffs increases opportunities/enhance competition gains from investment (Foreign) Investment policy Trade policy Trade openness increases (encourages/discourages entry (shapes the size of investment flows of new foreign actors; potential output market and FDI increases trade flows conduits for technology and the range of input sources) knowledge transfer) comprising a tailor-made computable general equilibrium (CGE) model for Argentina that allows for simulations of different trade liberalization scenarios; a partial equilibrium exercise based on a gravity framework to estimate the aver- age effect of deeper integration on trade within global value chains (GVCs); firm- level analysis of potential productivity gains from enhanced competition; simulation of a reform of product market regulation and its effect on growth in service-intensive industries; and a cross-country price comparison using pan- el-level data. Furthermore, this report draws on worldwide comparative analysis of institutional characteristics of trade, investment promotion, and competition authorities. A new comparative review of international experience with struc- tural microeconomic reform programs yields insights for Argentina’s design and sequencing of such reforms. Competition policy reform opportunities are devel- oped following the WBG’s Markets and Competition Policy Assessment Tool (MCPAT). Finally, the individual reform recommendations are presented in an integrated step-by-step framework from the firm perspective to illustrate the critical challenges to investment and internationalization for Argentine firms. HOW INTEGRATED IS ARGENTINA WITH THE GLOBAL ECONOMY? Argentina trades little, and its share in world exports has been declining since the 2008 global financial crisis. Trade openness, as measured by exports and imports over GDP, has been below the level that Argentina’s per-capita income would predict, with no signs of improvement (figure 1.2; figure 1.3). Trade openness in Argentina fell from 40.5 percent in 2005 to 23 percent in 2015.5 Aided by strong commodity prices in international markets, Argentina’s exports 28 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.2 Trade openness and GDP, 2000–11 400 300 Trade to GDP (percent) 200 100 Argentina 0 6 8 10 12 Log of GDP per capita (PPP adjusted) Fitted values Source: Data from World Development Indicators (WDI) dataset (http://wdi.worldbank​ .­org/tables). FIGURE 1.3 Trade openness and GDP, 2012–15 400 300 Trade to GDP 200 100 Argentina 0 6 8 10 12 Log of GDP per capita (PPP adjusted) Fitted values Source: Data from World Development Indicators (WDI) dataset (http://wdi.worldbank​ .­org/tables). grew above the world average before the global economic collapse of 2008, with an average rate of 20 percent per quarter between the first quarter of 2006 and the fourth quarter of 2008. As a result, Argentina gained market share, as indi- cated by the green area in figure 1.4. Since the crisis, Argentina’s exports have been retrenching by 2.6 percent each quarter, on average, resulting in losses of world market share for Argentina, as indicated by the red area in figure 1.4. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 29 FIGURE 1.4 Export growth and change in market share: Argentina vs. world, 2006 Q1–2016 Q1 40 Log first differences (delta log), year-on-year 30 20 10 0 −10 −20 −30 −40 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Change in Argentina export growth Change in world export growth Source: Data from Measuring Export Competitiveness (https://mec.worldbank.org/). Note: The numbers in the figure are log first differences. They approximate the percentage change in the variable of interest. Strictly speaking, the percentage change in a variable Y at period t is defined as (Y(t)−Y(t−1))/Y(t−1), which is approximately equal to log(Y(t))−log(Y(t−1)). FIGURE 1.5 New exporting firm entry density in Argentina, 1998–2015 140 New firms per one million inhabitants 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 19 19 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 Source: Data from World Development Indicators (WDI) dataset (http://wdi.worldbank.org​ /­tables) and GPS de Empresas, Ministerio de Producción, Argentina (http://www​ .­produccion.gob.ar​/­gpsempresas/). Contrary to global trends, trade in services is declining in Argentina, and fewer firms start to export each year than one or two decades ago. Argentina’s export sector is not very dynamic; the entry density of new exporting firms in the country has been declining since the peso devaluation in 2002, falling from 121 new exporting firms per one million habitants in 2001 to less than 30 in 2014 (figure 1.5). Argentina may also be forgoing a major source of efficiency and an 30 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.6 Trade in services: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2007–15 20 18 16 14 Percent of GDP 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Argentina Brazil Chile Paraguay Peru Uruguay Source: Data from World Integrated Trade Solutions (WITS) dataset (https://wits.worldbank​ .­org/). enabler of trade in higher-value-added goods, as trade in services fell to merely 5.5 percent of GDP in 2015, the lowest among neighboring countries (figure 1.6). In addition, Argentina’s integration into GVCs, the 21st century mode of trade, is somewhat limited and is relatively stronger on the seller (forward) side than on the buyer (backward) side. The production of export goods is becoming increasingly unbundled; global trade in parts and components has grown faster than trade in final goods over the last 20 years.6 In GVCs, a country does not need the capability to produce an entire export good but instead contributes a seg- ment of its production process. The latest Trade in Value Added (TiVA) data from OECD, for 2011, suggest that Argentina could participate more strongly in GVCs, especially in buying goods produced abroad and using them as inputs for production of higher-value export goods. Backward GVC participation—­ measured as the share of foreign value added embodied in Argentina’s gross exports—amounted to 14.1 percent in 2011,7 less than in comparator countries such as Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Mexico, Poland, and Romania (box 1.3).8 Forward GVC participation—measured as the share of Argentina’s value added embodied in foreign countries’ gross exports—was higher when compared to the backward participation measure, amounting to 16.8 percent, and essentially reflected Argentina’s export of agribusiness commodities (for example, the use of Argentine soy in soy products). Argentina’s forward GVC integration was still lower than in Australia, Brazil, and Peru, however (figure 1.7). Overall, Argentina’s limited integration into GVCs relates to its low partici- pation in free trade agreements (FTAs). Worldwide, more and more countries participate in FTAs,9 but Argentina is an exception to this pattern. Part of this may be explained by the fact that, as part of the Mercosur customs union, Argentina cannot negotiate bilateral trade agreements on its own. Instead, it must seek consensus and coordination with all Mercosur members. As of 2015, countries participated in an average of 14 agreements. The European Union (EU) participated in the largest number of agreements (37), followed by European Free Trade Association members (between 31 and 29), Singapore (21), Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 31 FIGURE 1.7 GVC participation: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2011 50 Value added as a share (percent) of domestic and foreign gross exports 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 il ru lia a d a m Co nia ca s o nd d ia sia nd nd az in ric ic an an ar do Pe ra Ri ay la la ex nt a Br Af lg la al nl st m Po Ire ng a al ge er M Ze Bu Fi Au st Ro h M th Ki Ar ut w Ne So d Ne ite Un Forward Backward Source: Data from OECD/WTO TiVA dataset (https://stats.oecd.org/index.aspx?queryid=75537). Note: Countries are ranked by backward participation ratios. BOX 1.3 Comparator countries Throughout the report, Argentina is benchmarked based on data from the World Integrated Trade Solution against a consistent set of countries: Australia, Brazil, (WITS); (2) GDP per capita, using WDI data; (3) popu- Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Finland, Ireland, Malaysia, lation as a measure of size, using WDI data; (4) human Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Peru, Poland, capital, measured as average of years of schooling Romania, South Africa, and the United Kingdom. among the population aged 15 years or more in 2010; This set of peers was selected on the basis of three and (5) physical capital, measured as capital stock per criteria. The first relies on an algorithm that identifies capita in 2010, using WDI data. Per this first criterion, peer countries that are similar in economic develop- the following set of comparator countries was selected: ment and/or size, competitors with similar export bas- Brazil, Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Peru, Poland, kets, or “neighboring” countries within the region, as South Africa and Romania.a The second criterion draws well as benchmark countries. The algorithm employs from a selected set of OECD countries: Finland, Great five specific economic dimensions: (1) export basket Britain, Ireland, Netherlands and New Zealand. The composition (measured as product share in exports, third includes Australia, a country whose economy using Standard International Trade Classification bears similarities to the Argentine economy, and (SITC Rev2) with one digit and using products 0 to 8, Mexico, to enlarge the subset of LAC comparators. a. The algorithm calculates the Manhattan distances among all countries (Argentina and potential peers) for each dimension. For two points with coordinates (x1, …, xn) and (y1, …, yn), the Manhattan distance between the two is defined as |x1 – y1|+|x2 – y2|+…+|xn - yn|. The five coordinates are not on the same scale, which calls for standardization. Countries with weighted smallest distances are selected as final comparators. Chile (22), Turkey (18), Mexico (10), and Egypt (5) (map 1.1). Argentina had only one preferential trade agreement in force, the Mercosur.10 According to WDI data, Argentina receives little foreign direct investment (FDI) in comparison to  small or large Latin American economies. FDI in Argentina amounts to only 2 percent of GDP and has consistently been below the 32 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy MAP 1.1 Number of active agreements by country, 2015 30–44 20–30 10–20 5–10 1–5 0–1 Source: Data from World Bank Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) Content dataset (https://wits.worldbank.org/gptad/trade​ _­database.html). FIGURE 1.8 FDI inflows as a share of GDP: Argentina vs. comparator countries, average 2000–15 45 40 35 30 Percent of GDP 25 20 15 10 5 0 d ca ia m a nd o d ia lia il sia ru ca s nd nd az in ic an an an ar do Pe ra ri Ri ay la la ex nt Br Af lg la al nl st m Po Ire ng ta al ge M er Ze Bu Fi Au Ro h M s th Ki Co Ar ut w Ne So d Ne ite Un 2000–04 2005–09 2010–15 Source: Data from World Development Indicators (WDI) database (http://wdi.worldbank.org/tables). Note: Countries are ranked by 2010–15 values. average for LAC. Global FDI flows rose by 38 percent in 2015, reaching US$1.76 trillion—their highest level since the global economic and financial crisis of 2008. An intense wave of cross-border mergers and acquisitions, mainly in developed countries, accounted for this recent growth of global FDI. Argentina shared this upward trend in FDI accruals during 2015, reaching almost US$12 billion, after enduring an intense downward trend during the preceding years. The share of FDI inflows in Argentina’s GDP is among the lowest across a selected group of advanced and emerging markets (figure 1.8). This share has Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 33 FIGURE 1.9 Inward FDI stock as a share of GDP: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2015 350 300 286 250 Percent of GDP 200 150 102 100 35 35 37 39 40 40 43 44 46 50 15 0 a d il D nd nd Au a lia o m s nd nd az in ric ic an EC do ra a la la ex nt Br Af la nl al st O Po Ire ng ge M er Ze Fi h th Ki Ar ut w Ne So d Ne ite Un Source: Data from OECD database (https://data.oecd.org/fdi/fdi-stocks.htm). Note: Inward FDI stock is defined as the value of foreign investors’ equity in and net loans to enterprises resident in the reporting economy. stayed systematically at around 2 percent, below not only the best performers in Latin America (such as Costa Rica) but also the largest regional economies (such as Brazil and Mexico). Argentina’s performance is no better when compared to countries outside the region; Argentina has had one of the lowest FDI-to-GDP ratios in the world since 2000. Consistent with low FDI inflows, stock of FDI is also low, and well below the level of comparator countries (figure 1.9). While FDI flows into many sectors, it does not translate into higher export complexity. Overall, FDI inflows have been quite diversified across sectors; data for 2010 to 2015 suggest that the chemicals (15 percent), mining (11 percent), and financial (10 percent) sectors accounted for the largest individual shares of FDI (figure 1.10). Meanwhile, several smaller sectors contributed to a substantial por- tion of FDI inflows; besides food and beverages (8 percent) and communication (7 percent), sectors such as automotive, machinery and equipment, wholesale, and others also accounted for some FDI inflows. This diversification in foreign investment has not translated into higher economic and export complexity, however (figure 1.11). Unsophisticated, unprocessed products—primarily in the agricultural sector—still dominate Argentina’s export portfolio, leading to a rel- atively low economic complexity index (ECI).11 Argentina’s ECI was −0.502 (ranking 72nd out of 107 countries) in 2014.12 FDI complexity13 in Argentina was also low, at –0.39 (ranking 78th) in the same year. This value falls below the global average and below other Latin American countries (such as Brazil and Costa Rica) with similar ECI standings. Argentina has both the most restrictive product market regulations in the region and more restrictive regulations than other countries of similar size and income level. The OECD’s product market regulation (PMR) indicators measure the degree to which policies or regulatory measures promote or inhibit compe- tition in areas of the product market where competition is viable.14 Data collected jointly by the World Bank Group (WBG) and OECD suggest the existence of sig- nificant regulatory constraints on competition in Argentina. Compared to other 34 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.10 Sectoral composition of FDI inflows in Argentina, 2010–15 Others 12% Chemical IT industry 1% 15% Textile industry 3% Machinery and equipment 4% Mining 11% Car industry 6% Construction Oil 2% 6% Transport 3% Oils and cereals 3% Commerce Common metals 5% 3% Communications Agriculture 7% 1% Financial Food, beverages, private sector and tobacco 10% 8% Source: Data from Central Bank of Argentina. FIGURE 1.11 FDI complexity and economic complexity index: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2014 1.0 pol cri rou bor mex irl 0 bra mys fin FDI complexity zaf gbr arg aus per nzi −1.0 −2.0 –2 –1 0 1 2 ECI Source: Data from MIT observatory of economic complexity (https://atlas.media.mit.edu​ /­en/rankings​/­country/eci/). LAC countries and countries outside the region with similar market character- istics, PMR in Argentina is restrictive (figure 1.12). In fact, the PMR scores assigned according to the restrictiveness of legal and regulatory provisions in each country indicate that product market regulation is 30 percent more restric- tive in Argentina than across 19 Latin American countries, on average. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 35 FIGURE 1.12 PMR indicator: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16 3.5 Index 0 to 6 from least to 3.0 most restrictive 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 s m nd alia nd nd ria nd eru nia ico ica ica azil 13 16 nd o a r r la gd eala str inla rela ulg ola P a m Me x Af a R Br 20 20 he Kin Z Au F I B P Ro t h ost in a na i t u Ne ted Ne w So C e nt ent i g g Un Ar Ar Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http://www.oecd.org​/­eco/growth/ indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm). FIGURE 1.13 Decomposition of PMR indicator: Argentina vs. comparator countries, 2013–16 3.5 Index 0 to 6 from least to most restrictive 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 13 16 il a M a Ro ico ia Po u Bu nd Ire a Fi d A nd ite Zea a Ki and th om s nd Co az ic ric i Un w rali r n an ar Pe 20 20 la la a So ta R ex Ne d Br Af lg la nl l Ne ust m ng er h a a s ut in in nt nt d ge ge Ar Ar State control Barriers to entrepreneurship Barriers to trade and investment Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http://www.oecd.org​/­eco/growth/indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm). The extent to which Argentine government interventions in markets restrict competition in product markets is driven in particular by the degree of state con- trol and barriers to trade and investment (figure 1.13). In key sectors, private inves- tors face both state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and private national incumbents that appear to benefit from regulatory protection. Investors face business risks as a result of a policy that regulates prices for over 400 specific consumer goods. 36 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy This policy, “Precios Cuidados,” is being phased out by the current administration but has not yet been revoked, and in September 2017 the number of products included was extended.15 Furthermore, investors are exposed to the potential for discretionary application of unusually complex administrative procedures. Lack of competition in input markets, such as professional services, can limit the competitiveness of downstream firms. The prevalence of anticompetitive business practices and government-­ imposed barriers to competition can affect the price level of basic tradable con- sumer goods. International evidence shows that a lack of competition is associated with higher prices for homogeneous staple goods.16 High concentra- tion in specific segments of the supply chain, lack of effective antitrust enforce- ment, and low market contestability due to regulatory barriers to foreign or domestic market entry can reduce the intensity of competition and allow firms to raise prices above the competitive level on international markets. In Argentina, basic food product markets exhibited prices that were nearly 50 percent higher, on average, than those of international peers in 2010–15. The underlying empirical analysis used different panel-level data sources for the BOX 1.4 Price comparison analysis: Are prices higher in Argentina? The price comparison analysis uses two data sources levels in Argentina and the average across other coun- to explore whether food prices in Argentina are tries after adjusting for differences in per-capita GDP higher than in comparator countries: (a) “Numbeo” PPP, import costs, customs duties, and product type, database, and (b) the EIU database. The sample was as well as time-specific effects. The variable to cap- restricted to products with yearly data available in ture costs to import (taken from the Trading Across both Numbeo and EIU. The sample covers yearly Borders dataset) accounts for domestic transport information on prices for 11 products from 2010 to costs. Other sources of transport costs (overseas ship- 2015. Both databases apply a common methodology in ping) depend on the origin and destination of each gathering price data across countries, thus strength- product, for which data are not consistently available. ening the comparability of price information used in In the case of Argentina, many of these goods come this analysis. from domestic production. The baseline empirical specification for the price The food products were selected based on avail- comparison analysis follows the equation, ability across databases,a relevance in the Argentine consumption basket, and product characteristics. For Ln( priceijt) = b  1GDPit + b 2 Ln(Xit), + b3 Argentina + hj example, products that are relatively similar (or homo- + d t + e ijt, geneous) across countries were selected to minimize where i = country; j = product; t = year; Xit = GDP per the differences associated with product differentia- capita, cost of imports, tariffs; d t = year fixed effects, and tion. The analysis uses different sets of comparator hj = product fixed effects. The Argentina dummy vari- jurisdictions to account for potential distortions in able captures the relative difference between price markets of other countries.b a. The analysis uses the following products: milk (regular, 1 liter), loaf of fresh white bread (500g), rice (white, 1kg), eggs (12), local cheese (1kg), chicken breasts (boneless, skinless, 1kg), beef round (1kg, or equivalent back leg red meat), apples (1kg), bananas (1kg), oranges (1kg), tomatoes (1kg), potatoes (1kg), onions (1kg), and lettuce (1 head). b. The comparator countries in Latin America with available data include Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. The comparator countries in the OECD with available data are Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 37 FIGURE 1.14 Product share in food consumption basket Others 15% Milk 17% Fruit (apples and oranges) 9% Bread 12% Vegetables (tomatoes, lettuce) 10% Cheese 1% Potatoes Rice 12% 2% Eggs 11% Meat 11% Source: Data from INDEC (2016). TABLE 1.1  Price comparison analysis: Argentina vs. comparator countries in the OECD (1) (2) (3) Argentina 0.667*** 0.693*** 0.487*** (0.126) (0.160) (0.084) Log of GDP per capita PPP 0.971*** 0.972*** 1.100*** (2011 international $) (0.133) (0.136) (0.150) Log of cost of import — −0.038 −0.047 (0.147) (0.109) Tariff rate, applied — — 0.071*** (0.024) Number of observations 1,242 1,242 1,242 R-squared 0.817 0.817 0.827 Source: An elaboration using Numbeo data. Notes: Results are from an ordinary least squares (OLS) regression using data from Numbeo. All regressions include product and year fixed effects. Standard errors clustered at the country level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. — = not available. 2010–15 period and estimation techniques to compare the average prices of 11 basic food items for which there was comparable information at the interna- tional level (for details on the methodology, see box 1.4). These food items make up 85 percent of the food consumption basket (figure 1.14).17 The results suggest that the prices for these products in that period were 49 percent higher than in OECD countries,18 after accounting for differences in income per capita, cost of import (which captures domestic transport costs), and tariff rates (table 1.1, specification (3)). 38 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE 1.2  Price comparison analysis: Argentina vs. comparator countries in the Pacific Alliance (1) (2) (3) Argentina 0.391*** 0.461*** 0.347*** (0.032) (0.028) (0.053) Log of GDP per capita PPP 0.193 0.092 −0.045 (2011 international $) (0.111) (0.047) (0.061) Log of cost of import — −0.166** −0.546*** (0.046) (0.115) Tariff rate, applied — — 0.103** (0.035) Number of observations 300 300 300 R-squared 0.904 0.910 0.921 Source: An elaboration using Numbeo data. Notes: Results are from an ordinary least squares (OLS) regression using data from Numbeo. All regressions include product and year fixed effects. Standard errors clustered at the country level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. — = not available. Prices were 35 percent higher in Argentina than in Pacific Alliance countries. Drawing on Numbeo data19 and comparing the simple level of food product prices across countries in 2010–15, prices in Argentina appeared to be 21 percent higher than in a large set of comparator countries in Latin America.20 However, this difference can be explained in part by other factors, such as the tariff rate. Arguably, there are many other countries in Latin America where prices may not be competitive due to government interventions or lack of effective competition law enforcement. A more appropriate benchmark is countries in the Pacific Alliance (namely Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru), which have generally more open regulatory and trade regimes than other Latin American countries. The country-level regression results comparing prices in Argentina to those in the Pacific Alliance are reported in table 1.2. They show that food prices were about 35 percent higher in Argentina than in Pacific Alliance countries, after controlling for income levels and potential cost drivers (table 1.2, specification (3)).21 Even when comparing food prices among the typically more expensive capital cities, results suggest that, in 2010–15, households in Buenos Aires paid 13 percent more, on average, for basic food products than their peers in capital cities worldwide. Within countries, there is often substantial price-level variation.22 Hence, the country-level average price level might not be represen- tative across all households in the economy. Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) data for food prices in capital cities around the world suggest that, after taking into consideration differences in purchasing power and trade costs, prices were still 13 percent higher in Buenos Aires (table 1.3, specification (4)). The difference in countrywide estimations suggests that the wedge between domes- tic and international price levels may be more accentuated outside the Argentine capital. Even after controlling for an overvalued exchange rate, price differentials remain. Price differences may be explained in part by an overvalued exchange rate, but even after accounting for available proxies for differences in pur- chasing power, several of the comparisons presented above still find Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 39 TABLE 1.3  Price comparison analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. cities in all other countries (1) (2) (3) (4) Argentina 0.018 0.087*** 0.097*** 0.134*** (0.029) (0.028) (0.035) (0.042) Log of GDP per capita PPP — 0.199*** 0.196*** 0.149*** (2011 international $) (0.029) (0.030) (0.036) Log of cost of import — — −0.020 −0.002 (0.049) (0.050) Tariff rate, applied — — — −0.023* (0.012) Number of observations 11,684 11,433 11,433 11,433 R-squared 0.626 0.678 0.678 0.682 Source: An elaboration using EIU data. Notes: Results are from an ordinary least squares (OLS) regression using EIU data. All regressions include product and year fixed effects. Standard errors clustered at the city level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. — = not available. a significant wedge in prices. The differences in income level and exchange rate may affect price levels and are accounted for in this analysis.23 Given that there may still be differences in purchasing power that are not captured (for example, in the case of an overvalued exchange rate), we also convert the unit values in local currency into U.S. dollars using a purchasing power parity (PPP) conversion factor. Even though these specifications do not explain the variation as well,24 and the PPP  conversion factor for Argentina may be endogenous to the price differentials analyzed, 25 several specifications still point to a statistically significant price difference of over 10 percent (appendix F). More importantly, evidence that there is no statistically signif- icant difference in prices for some food products suggests that the results of these regressions are not affected by general currency overvaluation or infla- tion trends (table 1.4). While there is broad evidence that the price level for basic food products is higher, on average, in Argentina, results vary among specific product markets and may reflect different degrees of intensity of market competition. The results suggest that the prices for certain individual products are significantly higher in Argentina than in comparator countries in the OECD and the Pacific Alliance. Chicken breasts, eggs, dairy products, wheat bread, and white rice had signifi- cantly higher prices. The analysis of tariff equivalence of nontariff measures (NTMs) suggests that this is not necessarily due to protection from imports. The price differences are more consistent with information on a relatively high degree of concentration in these product markets: one bread company makes up 80 percent of production,26 and out of one thousand milk companies, four pro- cess 40 percent of the entire market.27 The level of concentration is only one indicator of the intensity of competition, and further analysis would need to be undertaken at specific stages of the supply chain, as other factors also determine effective competition.28 Argentina’s competition authority has selected several food product markets for in-depth market studies, including meat and dairy products, as well as the supermarket sector. 40 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE 1.4  Market structure information for individual food products LEVEL OF PRICES IN ARGENTINA/BUENOS AIRES … MARKET SHARE NUMBER OF VERTICAL PRODUCT NTM TARIFF IMPORTANCE OF PRODUCT . . . VS. . . . VS. CONCENTRATION OF LARGEST FIRMS INTEGRATION DIVERSITY EQUIVALENT IMPORTS . . . VS. COMPARA- COMPARA- PLAYER OECD TOR CITIES TOR CITIES (NUMBEO) (EIU) Oranges — — Lower Low 36 major firms 30% (exports) High Low Low Low Apples — — — Low (medium only 42 major firms 24% (exports) Medium Low High Low and in exports) increasing Potatoes — Higher — Medium 4 major process- 75% (potato Low Medium Low — ing firms chips), 60% (frozen potatoes) Tomatoes Higher Higher N/A Medium 40 firms — Low Low Low Low White — Higher N/A High 200 (industrial 80% High High Medium Low bread bakeries) White rice Higher Higher N/A Medium 40 18% Low Low Medium High Chicken Higher Higher Higher Medium 60 — High — N/A Low Eggs Higher Higher Higher Medium 13 (industrial) 40% High — N/A Low Cheese Higher Higher N/A Medium 20 (in 2008) — — High Medium Low Milk Higher Higher Higher High 900 >40% — Low N/A Low Source: Author’s own summary based on publicly available information. Note that the data may refer to specific segments of the value chain (for example, processing rather than production). Cells with “−“ in columns 2 to 4 suggest that the difference is not statistically significant. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 41 HOW MUCH COULD ARGENTINA GAIN FROM FOSTERING CONTESTABLE MARKETS AND INTEGRATING INTO THE WORLD ECONOMY? Boosting competition intensity can increase productivity growth. Competition enhances productivity by improving allocative efficiency, enhancing productive efficiency, and boosting innovation. Empirical studies have linked the intensity of competitive pressures—proxied by price-cost margins (PCMs)—to the increase in labor and total factor productivity growth in developed economies29 as well as developing countries, such as Turkey, Tunisia, and China.30 An early study from the United Kingdom shows that an increase of 10 percentage points in PCMs is associated with, on average, a 1.3–1.6 percent loss in total factor pro- ductivity growth.31 For Tunisia, World Bank (2014) estimated in 2013 that a decrease of 5 percentage points in PCMs was associated with an additional 5 percent growth in labor productivity. In Argentina, more competition in manufacturing sectors could add almost 7 percent to annual labor productivity growth. Empirical analysis using data from over 3,500 firms surveyed in the 2010–12 Encuesta Nacional de Dinámica de Empleo e Innovación (ENDEI) suggests that higher PCMs (implying that firms face lower levels of competition intensity) are significantly associated with lower growth in labor productivity in the following year (box 1.5). The coefficients fur- ther suggest that increasing competition intensity (using a 10 percent decrease BOX 1.5 Estimating the association between the intensity of competition and productivity growth in the Argentine manufacturing industry Following the standard in the literature, we approxi- excluding costs of capital from the Lerner measure mate market power using the price–cost margin, does not affect the results, given that these costs which is derived from the Lerner Index. The PCM are relatively small and constant over time. Changes measures margins (that is, the difference between in PCM within a sector drive changes in productiv- price and marginal cost) as a proportion of price. In ity, while the different levels of PCMs across sec- the absence of information on price and marginal cost, tors are not indicative of differences in productivity the extent of pricing power in an industry is proxied levels. Typically, the capital stock or cost and the by the difference between value added and labor costs capital rent as a fraction of value added do not as a proportion of sales (all measured in current change dramatically from year to year within prices), as follows: one sector. We use real labor productivity growth as our mea- ( value added )jt − (salaries ) jt PcM jt , (1) sure of productivity growth. We calculate real labor sales jt productivity by firm j as real value added per worker, where j denotes the firm and t denotes the respec- as recorded in the ENDEI survey. tive year (varying from 2010 to 2012). Sales, valued Using contemporaneous values of the measures to added, and salaries are all taken from the ENDEI evaluate the relationship between market power and enterprise survey. Owing to a lack of data, financial productivity growth could be problematic. Higher costs of capital are not included in the average margins could be the result, rather than a cause, of costs. However, Aghion et al. (2005) show that innovation and changes in productivity growth. continued 42 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Box 1.5, continued Similarly, the cost advantage gained from innovation Aghion et al. 2005, 2008) have shown that the rela- could translate into higher margins. We address this tionship between market power and productivity problem, therefore, by relating PCMs from the pre- growth could be nonlinear, and so we allow for that by ceding year (denoted as “[t-1]”) with changes in con- including the squared term of PCM in the regression temporaneous productivity growth, as done in other analysis. studies (for example, Aghion et al. 2008). Exceptional Based on Aghion et al (2008), we estimated the growth in labor productivity can occur independently following fixed effect regression: from firms’ innovation efforts. The analysis therefore ( ) 2 PcM jt-1  ln lPj,t / lPj,t-1 = α + βPcM jt-1 + γ   accounts for productivity shocks that occur economy-­ (2) wide at specific points in time and for differences + ∑ θ j firm j + ∑ δt time t + ∈jt j t across firms in the growth rates of productivity that are unrelated to competition levels and do not change where ∆LPi,j,t,t−1/LPi,j,t−1 is defined as the growth rate of over time by including firm and year fixed effects. real labor productivity of firm j, from year t-1 to t. The (For robustness, we also include estimations with sec- term PCMjt−1 denotes the one-year-lagged markup in tor- instead of firm-level effects. However, this is less firm j, as computed in equation (1). If competition conservative since it allows firm-specific effects to spurs productivity growth, we would expect a influence the results.) Recent studies (for example, negative coefficient for PCM. TABLE 1.5  Relationship between competition (PCMs) and labor productivity (1) (2) (3) (4) (LINEAR) (NONLINEAR) (LINEAR) (NONLINEAR) PCM[t-1] −2.471*** −2.661*** −0.249*** −0.619*** (0.234) (0.307) (0.013) (0.062) PCM[t-1] squared — 0.427 — 0.472*** (0.279) (0.070) Constant 0.832*** 0.807*** 0.211*** 0.230*** (0.065) (0.065) (0.009) (0.008) Firm fixed effects Yes Yes No No Sector fixed effects No No Yes Yes Year fixed effects Yes Yes Yes Yes Number of observations 6,675 6,675 6,675 6,675 R-squared 0.571 0.575 0.038 0.063 Source: An elaboration using ENDEI data. Notes: Results are from a fixed effects ordinary least squares (OLS) regression. The dependent variable is the real labor productivity growth; PCM = (value added – salaries)/sales. Standard errors (clustered at either firm or sector level) are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. — = not available. from the average PCM as a proxy) would be expected to generate additional growth in labor productivity of 7 percent per year, on average (table 1.5, specifi- cations (1) and (2)).32 Productivity growth may accelerate to a much greater extent in individual sectors and up to 10 percent for wood products, basic metals, and paper industries (figure 1.15). Reducing regulatory restrictiveness in the service sectors can strengthen competition and accelerate growth. Product market regulation that limits entry, distorts the level playing field, or does not enable more efficient producers to Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 43 FIGURE 1.15 Expected gains in labor productivity following a 10 percent decrease in mean PCMs for 2011–12 14 12.6 12 10.9 11.4 10.7 10 9.4 9.4 8.5 8.9 8.0 8.2 7.8 8 7.3 7.5 6.2 6 4.9 4.6 4.3 4.3 4 2 0 s l s ts s g ts ts s s ts t n ts rs t re ts re en en ile ct ct al al io in ile uc uc uc uc en uc itu pa er et du du at xt ish pm pm tra od od od od od m in m rn Ap Te ic ro ro bl ru m ui ui Fu pr pr pr pr pr un sic d rp rp Pu st eq eq an lic m d al tic al g Ba in he pe rin oo ic et al m d rt es as al at em et Pa an m po co W tu cl pl tic Le nm hi ac ed ns Ch ry nd op d ve uf an ne no tra at ,a an d ic or hi er an TV er er br m ot ac bb th th Fa al M o, M er O O Ru ic di th ed Ra O M Source: World Bank calculation using ENDEI data. gain market share can lead to higher prices, lower quality, and less availability.33 PMR data suggest that, in Argentina, this affects transport, communications, electricity, and professional services (such as legal, accounting, and architectural services). These sectors provide inputs to firms in other sectors. Hence, struc- tural reforms and competition-driven market outcomes could translate into ben- efits for other sectors that use such services intensively.34 A simulated scenario in which Argentina undergoes reforms that decrease the regulatory restrictiveness of service sectors suggests that such reforms would translate into additional growth of 0.1 percent to 0.6 percent in annual GDP, with all else being equal.35 Easing barriers to trade in Argentina would also improve the overall econ- omy; in sum, the greatest gains in terms of economic growth can be achieved from a Mercosur-wide reduction in tariff and nontariff measures. Reducing tar- iffs on world imports by 50 percent in all Mercosur countries, cutting NTMs within the borders of Mercosur by 15 percent, and eliminating export controls within Mercosur could boost GDP by at least 1 percent compared to baseline projections to 2030. This would open Argentina to all world trade and allow importers to source from the most efficient producers worldwide. While the greatest gains would be achieved in this scenario, the current political economy context makes this an elusive goal in the short term. A Mercosur–EU FTA would boost Argentina’s exports to the EU by a remarkable 80 percent by 2030, relative to the baseline. Argentina’s companies would still benefit from access to more efficient inputs, but only from Europe, so gains for the overall economy would be smaller than in the case of a 50 percent tariff cut by all Mercosur members for worldwide imports. Unilaterally, Argentina could pursue NTM reforms, such as eliminating all nonautomatic licenses and export taxes to the world, which could boost GDP notably in the medium term (by about 0.22 percent and 0.97 percent 44 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE 1.6  Unilateral liberalization scenarios and economy-wide effects NTM LIBERALIZATION: IMPORT TARIFF LIBERALIZATION NTM LIBERALIZATION: EXPORT TAXES LICENSING REGIME REMOVAL OF ELIMINATION/ ELIMINATION OF ONE SECTOR ELIMINATION REMAINING REDUCTION OF EXPORT SIMULTANEOUS ALL REMAINING AT A TIME OF DJAI NONAUTOMATIC TAXES APPLIED TO EXPORT TAXES IMPORT LICENSES SEVERAL PRODUCTS Assumptions Target the top protected sectors. Already Already implemented Average export tax Focus on tariff lines that can be implemented (end of 2015, early is brought down lowered to zero in each targeted (end of 2015) 2016): trade-weighted from 8 percent to sector; this would reduce the average export tax fell 0 percent. average tariff for each sector. from about 14 percent to 8 percent. Deviations from the baseline by 2020 (percent) GDP 0.05 0.16 0.14 0.22 0.27 0.98 (furniture) Exports 16.1* 26.8* (footwear) 3.00 4.50 8.20 16.80 (footwear) Imports 129* 121.8* (furniture) 2.50 3.50 7.10 14.50 (furniture) Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. * Estimated numbers refer to trade effects for the sectors in parentheses only. above baseline projections, respectively, to 2020). Sectoral effects are likely to be heterogeneous in these scenarios, with particular gains for agriculture and food products and for services. Argentina also has options for unilateral trade liberalization. Three types of unilateral reforms can be modeled using a CGE framework customized for Argentina (table 1.6; box 1.6). The first option is a unilateral tariff reform. In prin- ciple, the scope for unilateral tariff liberalization is limited, given Mercosur com- mitments. One way to lower tariffs, however, would be to make use of national exceptions to the common external tariff (CET). Against this backdrop, the first scenario targets the liberalization of the most protected sectors as of 2015 (including, among others, footwear, furniture, and textiles and apparel);36 in this case, the number of tariff lines that could be lowered to zero in each sector is identified,37 and the associated tariff reduction at the sector level is computed.38 Two hypothetical variants of tariff reforms are simulated: liberalizing one sector at a time, and simultaneous sector liberalization.39 A second type of scenario comprises the reform of the nonautomatic import license system. Two variants are modeled: the elimination of DJAI (already implemented in 2015),40 and the hypothetical expansion of this reform to eliminate all remaining nonautomatic import licenses. Finally, the third type of scenario comprises reforming export taxes. Two (complementary) settings are considered: the recent (by early 2016) elimination of export taxes applied to several products, and the hypothetical expansion of this reform to eliminate all remaining export taxes. A unilateral tariff liberalization reform targeting highly protected sectors would increase GDP, with different impacts across sectors. Argentina imposes relatively high tariffs on its imports from the rest of the world on a most-favored nation basis; the simple average tariff in 2015 was about 14 percent.41 Liberalizing the 10 highest tariff sectors42 one at a time would have a negligible impact on the overall economy; the largest individual effect would result from eliminating the tariff on furniture, and this would increase real GDP by at least 0.05 percent over baseline projections to 2020 (figure 1.16).43 A combined and simultaneous tariff Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 45 BOX 1.6 Brief description of the CGE analysis A dynamic CGE analysis assesses several implications GTAP sectors. Appendix C displays the CGE model’s of trade integration for Argentina. The analysis uses final sector aggregation. economic data and an economic model to simulate how The potential economic effect of a policy change an economy would react to exogenous policy changes. can be measured at any point in time relative to a The model used is the LINKAGE model, a dynamic, baseline projection absent the reform. The dynamic multisector, multiregion model with economy-wide analysis starts from the development of a long-term coverage for each region. For each economy, the model baseline scenario, which reflects a projection of the tracks the linkages between sectors through input– Argentine and global economies with current policies output transactions, as well as various sources of final in place (figure B1.6.1). This baseline is used to com- demand, including private and government consump- pare alternative scenarios under which policies are tion, imports, exports, and investment. changed (or “shocked”) to reflect the reform in ques- The CGE analysis uses data based on the Global tion (whether it is a unilateral or reciprocal liberaliza- Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) database,a modified to tion). The construction of the baseline targets certain update the data and identify subsectors of interest for economy-wide variables based on available forecasts— Argentina. Starting from the GTAP database 9.2, the for example, real GDP per capita and labor supply. base year of 2011 was updated to 2015 and the input– These include macroeconomic projections by the output structures for Argentina were updated to World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects dataset and reflect the latest official tables from the National working-age population growth by the United Nations Institute of Statistics and Censuses (Instituto Nacional World Population Prospects dataset. de Estadística y Censos de la República Argentina, or The economic effects of trade agreements would INDEC). The sectoral dimension in GTAP was have a permanent impact on trade, production, and expanded to include several new sectors of interest in employment. The regional integration scenarios con- Argentina. These included beef, soybeans, soybean sidered provide economy-wide increases in trade and products, wine, footwear, furniture, home appliances, output. To the extent that these reforms are not and auto parts that are part of more aggregated rescinded, trade and output values would remain FIGURE B1.6.1 Annualized real GDP growth in Argentina under the baseline 3.0 2.5 2.0 Percent 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 2015–20 2020–25 2025–30 2015–30 continued 46 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Box 1.6, continued above their baseline levels over time. Effects on real spillovers, “learning by doing,” or inflows of foreign GDP, for example, are found to be positive, but are technology and FDI induced by liberalization. These modest on a percentage basis. This reflects in part the effects, while potential, are difficult to measure and relatively large size of the economy and its domestic incorporate in this type of analysis. Moreover, certain orientation, as well as the specifics of the liberaliza- policy changes that are often difficult to quantify— tion (whether it is full versus partial, unilateral versus such as reforms related to NTMs in goods and services reciprocal, or preferential versus most-favored and restrictions on investment—present analytical nation). Yet the small GDP effects are in perpetuity challenges that may affect the estimated economic and can translate into significant cumulative real effects. Owing to these limitations, the CGE results income gains over time. presented in this report are likely to be conservative. Estimated results from the CGE analysis may be CGE analyses are best thought of as tools for under- interpreted as partial effects. The ability to assess standing the implications of different scenarios. comprehensively the impact of policy changes Thanks to their rich structure, they capture complex depends on the extent to which all changed conditions linkages between sectors and long-term developments can be measured. While the model is dynamic in the in demand and supply. They provide a rigorous frame- sense that the capital stock can change over time, work that is most useful in helping to understand the the model does not include other dynamic factors pro- underlying and contradicting economic forces and posed in the literature, such as productivity increases mechanisms at play and in comparing different from endogenous growth effects via technological scenarios in ex ante policy analysis. a. GTAP is a network of researchers coordinated by the Center of Global Trade Analysis in Purdue University’s Department of Agricultural Economics. For further details, see https://www.gtap.agecon.purdue.edu/. liberalization of these highly protected sectors would have greater benefits for the economy (expanding GDP by at least 0.16 percent above baseline projections to 2020) but would require Mercosur-wide changes.44 While the overall Argentine economy would grow following tariff liberalization, import competi- tion would reduce the real output of all sectors for which tariffs were liberalized. Figure 1.17 shows how much real output would change by 2020 and by 2030— relative to projected values without the reform—under both scenarios: opening all sectors simultaneously or opening one at a time. A unilateral NTM reform with a focus on a less restrictive licensing regime would bring permanent effects on total trade and economic activity. The 2015 elimination of prior approval for many imports (through the replacement of the DJAI with the SIMI) was a key reform in reducing nontariff barriers to trade.45 CGE estimations show that this change will permanently accelerate trade, increasing both imports and exports by at least 2.5 to 3 percent, respectively, by 2020, compared to baseline projections to 2020 without this reform. Real GDP will also be 0.14 percent higher than baseline projections to 2020 (figure 1.18). Expanding this reform to eliminate remaining nonautomatic licenses would bring even greater benefits; total imports would be at least 3.5 percent higher than baseline projections to 2020, and total exports would be at least 4.5 percent higher. Similarly, economic activity would be higher, boosting GDP at least 0.22 percent over baseline projections to 2020. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 47 FIGURE 1.16 Real GDP deviations from the baseline due to unilateral tariff liberalization, 2020–30 0.5 0.4 0.3 Percent 0.2 0.1 0 s re el r t s es rs e r ea ga en ou ct in te r tu nc pa u W w Su pm ne pu ni od ia ot ap r ta pl m ui Fu pr Fo ul ap d Co eq an al m et e Si d om s an M ile H xt ry Te ne hi ac M 2020 2030 Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. FIGURE 1.17 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to unilateral tariff liberalization, 2020 10 0 −10 Percent −20 −30 −40 r re l e r s rs t es re ea ga en ct in te tu nc pa u W w Su m pu ni od ia ot ap ui r pl m Fu pr Fo eq ap d Co an al d et e an om es M il ry H xt ne Te hi ac M Sector-wise liberalization Simultaneous liberalization Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. 48 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.18 Trade and GDP deviations from the baseline due to import license reforms, 2020 5 4.4 4 3.5 3.2 3 2.5 Percent 2 1 0.14 0.22 0 License reform Full license reform Exports Imports GDP Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. FIGURE 1.19 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to import license reforms, 2020 1 0 Percent −1 −1.5 −2 −2.6 −3 License reform Full license reform Agri and food Manufacturing NR and energy Services Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. While output as a whole would expand, the effect would vary by sector. Simulations suggest that real output in the manufacturing sector would be 1.5 percent lower than if DJAI had continued; this contraction would be led by retrenchments in pharmaceuticals, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors (figure 1.19). Not all manufacturing sectors would shrink, however. In the vehi- cle sector, for example, imports would increase, but real output would still expand from higher sales in the domestic and foreign markets, owing to cheaper imported parts. Real output in the food and agriculture sector, on the other hand, Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 49 FIGURE 1.20 Trade and GDP deviations from the baseline due to export control reforms, 2020 18 16.8 16 14.5 14 12 Percent 10 8.2 8 7.1 6 4 2 0.97 0.27 0 Export tax reform Export tax elimination Export Imports GDP Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. would grow above the baseline; this expansion would be led by higher exports of soybeans and soybean products, partly compensating for the increase in net imports in other sectors. These sectoral patterns hold in the scenario where all nonautomatic licenses are removed. However, the contraction in real output for manufacturing is accentuated because the remaining nonautomatic licenses are concentrated in these sectors. Trade and economic activity would expand in response to a unilateral NTM reform focused on easing export taxes, and, again, different sectors would face distinct impacts. In 2015, export taxes were the predominant form of export con- trol and accounted for 7 percent of total tax revenue for the country. By early 2016, Argentina had mostly eliminated export taxes, but certain products were still taxed, including soybeans and soybean products.46 CGE estimations suggest that, as a result of the export tax reduction implemented in 2016, exports will be 8 percent higher and imports about 7 percent higher in 2020 than under a sce- nario without reforms. Real GDP will be 0.27 percent higher than baseline pro- jections to 2020 (figure 1.20). If all export taxes were eliminated, the (weighted) average export tax would decrease from the current 8 percent to zero, the impact on both exports and imports would double, and the effect on real GDP would more than double to 0.98 percent above baseline projections to 2020.47 The elim- ination of all export taxes would have the strongest impact on the agricultural sector, with real output being almost 16 percent above baseline projections to 2020 (figure 1.21). Growth in the real output of the food and agriculture sector would be driven largely by a drastic expansion in soybean products, soybeans, and other food and agriculture products.48 Argentina has taken up trade negotiations with various potential partners, and this could result in substantial reciprocal trade liberalization. Up to now, Argentina has sat at the margins of regional integration trends in other parts of the world. Recently, however, there has been a renewed interest in deepening integration with the global economy. Three prospective trade agreements are 50 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.21 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to export control reforms, 2020 18 15.6 14 10 6 Percent 2.0 2 0.1 0.3 0.0 0 −2 −0.7 −3.8 −6 −5.4 −10 Export tax reform Export tax elimination Agri and food Manufacturing NR and energy Services Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. TABLE 1.7  Regional liberalization scenarios and economy-wide effects “COMMUNITY REFORMS” PACIFIC ALLIANCE– EU–MERCOSUR FTA EU27–MERCOSUR FTA AT MERCOSUR MERCOSUR FTA Assumptions Tariffs Tariffs in all Mercosur Bilateral tariffs: in Bilateral tariffs: in Bilateral tariffs: in countries reduced by 50% Argentina from 11.0% to Argentina from 11.0% to Argentina from 1.0% to 3.0%; in the EU from 3.0%; in the EU from 2.7% 0.3%; in the Pacific 2.7% to nearly 0% to nearly 0% Alliance from 2.3% to 0.3% NTMs Reduced by 15% Reduced by 15% among Reduced by 15% among Reduced by 15% among intra-Mercosur; export parties; export controls parties; export controls parties; export controls controls eliminated eliminated eliminated eliminated Deviations from the baseline by 2030 (percent) GDP 0.94 0.37 0.35 0.19 Exports 5.9 7.0 6.5 3.5 Imports 4.6 5.8 5.4 3.0 Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. particularly relevant. Four major trade negotiation scenarios are modeled (table 1.7).49 In the first scenario, each Mercosur country unilaterally reduces tar- iffs by 50 percent with respect to non-Mercosur countries.50 The second sce- nario considers a reciprocal preferential trade agreement between Mercosur and the EU, under which the average tariff applied by Argentina to EU products would fall from about 11 percent to about 3 percent by full implementation in 10 years, while the average tariff in the EU for Argentine products would fall from about 3 percent to close to zero.51 In the third scenario, a potential EU agreement is assessed with the exclusion of the United Kingdom as part of the EU.52 The final scenario considers a preferential trade agreement between Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, under which Mercosur countries and Pacific Alliance countries gradually reduce tariffs over 10 years. For Argentina, the trade-weighted average tariff applied to products from countries in the Pacific Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 51 Alliance would fall from about 1 percent to 0.3 percent. The average tariff faced by Argentina in the Pacific Alliance would fall from 2.3 percent to 0.3 percent.53 A free trade agreement between the EU and Mercosur would boost Argentina’s exports to the EU by 80 percent by 2030, relative to the baseline. An agreement between the EU and Mercosur would reduce bilateral tariffs by more than the other liberalization scenarios. As a result, Argentine exports would increase by at least 7 percent and imports by 6 percent over baseline projections by 2030, with slightly lower effects in an FTA with the EU, excluding the United Kingdom (table 1.7). Argentina’s exports to the EU alone would grow by 80 percent and imports from the EU would expand by close to 50 percent, relative to baseline projections (figure 1.22). Similarly, trade between Argentina and the rest of Mercosur would expand, although to a lesser extent, as the two economic blocks integrated by reducing nontariff barriers. The sizable expansion in trade with the EU would divert trade from other parts of the world. An FTA with the EU would expand real GDP by at least 0.4 percent above baseline projections to 2030 (table 1.7). Reforms within Mercosur would have a smaller effect on total trade but a larger permanent impact on overall economic activity. When compared with the EU scenario, the scenario of “community reforms at Mercosur” would boost trade to a slightly lesser degree because tariff liberalization would only be partial in all sectors (table 1.7). This liberalization, however, would apply to all countries in the world, so allocative efficiencies would be expected to be larger. Except for slightly lower exports to other Mercosur countries, relative to baseline projec- tions, exports to all other regions would be higher (figure 1.22). This most-­ favored nation liberalization, albeit partial, would increase real GDP by at least 1 percent over baseline projections to 2030 (table 1.7). FIGURE 1.22 Argentine exports (by region), deviations from the baseline due to multilateral reforms, 2030 100 80 60 Percent 40 20 6.6 0 −4.6 −4.3 −2.5 −20 s TA TA e rm nc rF rF lia fo su su re Al co co r fic su er er ci co –M –M Pa er EU 27 M EU EU countries Other Mercosur Pacific Alliance Rest of world Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. 52 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Integration with the Pacific Alliance would also contribute to the growth of the Argentine economy, mostly through exports to Pacific Alliance countries. Bilateral exports to Pacific Alliance countries would increase by 25 percent and imports by about 10 percent over baseline projections to 2030 (figure 1.22). In this scenario, where integration within Mercosur would also be enhanced, trade with other Mercosur countries would also expand. Real GDP in this scenario would be 0.2 percent higher than baseline projections to 2030 (table 1.7). Different regional integration scenarios have distinct output effects across sectors. An FTA with the EU would boost real output relative to baseline pro- jections in the agriculture and food sector (figure 1.23); this would be driven by expansion of soybean products and beef.54 Real output in manufacturing, how- ever, would be lower (−1.6 percent) relative to baseline projections to 2030, driven mainly by contractions in auto parts and pharmaceutical activities. On the other hand, output in the vehicle sector would expand relative to the base- line. The sectoral pattern is similar under a unilateral reform by Mercosur, with a larger contraction in manufacturing (–3.3 percent) relative to baseline projec- tions to 2030. In this case, the vehicle sector would see lower real output (rela- tive to the baseline), owing to increased import competition, and the same would occur in the auto parts, textiles and apparel, furniture, and footwear sec- tors. Real output in all other sectors would expand relative to baseline projec- tions to 2030 as resources would shift to other activities. The sectoral impact of integration with the Pacific Alliance would be more modest and less heteroge- neous relative to the baseline. Real output in the agricultural and food sector would expand above the baseline—driven, as in the other integration scenarios, by higher real output of soybean products and beef activities. In manufacturing, some sectors, such as auto parts, textiles and apparel, and footwear, would FIGURE 1.23 Sectoral output deviations from the baseline due to multilateral reforms, 2030 6 4 2 Percent 0.6 0 −2 −1.3 −1.6 −3.3 −4 s TA TA e rm nc rF rF lia fo su su re Al co co r fic su er er ci co –M –M Pa er EU 27 M EU Agri and food Manufacturing NR and energy Services Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 53 experience a decrease in real output, but the pharmaceutical and vehicle sec- tors would expand, and the real output for manufacturing overall would be 0.6 percent above baseline projections to 2030. Real output in overall services would expand, although by less than in other scenarios. Finally, output in natu- ral resources and energy products would expand, driven by higher exports of fuel and fuel products. Employment effects would vary by regional trade integration scenario, with certain sectors being more susceptible to losing jobs relative to the baseline sce- nario, which would need to be absorbed by expanding activities. By linking the CGE estimations of changes in the sectoral wage bill with formal employment numbers by sector (from the Boletín Trimestral de Empleo Registrado),55 it is pos- sible to identify sectors that would release formal employment relative to the baseline to 2030 under different trade negotiation scenarios.56 Table 1.8 displays the results for each trade integration scenario using a “heat map,” in which the varying colors indicate relatively small (light green), moderate (orange), or large TABLE 1.8  Heat map of sectors in which employment would be lower than the baseline to 2030, by trade integration scenario “COMMUNITY REFORMS” AT MERCOSUR EU–MERCOSUR FTA PACIFIC ALLIANCE–MERCOSUR FTA Dairy       Sugar       Fruits and vegetables       Wine       Meats       Other agriculture and       food Natural resources and       fuel Agricultural machinery       Computers       Other machinery and       equipment Metal products       Footwear       Textile and apparel       Furniture       Home appliances       Pharmaceuticals       Vehicles       Auto parts       Other manufacturing       Communication,       financial, and business services Other services       Source: Estimates from CGE analysis. Note: Light green indicates small losses in formal employment, orange indicates moderate losses, and red indicates large losses. Dark-green cells indicate sectors that would absorb labor, but the table makes no distinction with respect to the relative intensity at which labor is absorbed in those sectors. 54 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy (red) losses of formal employment; dark green sector cells indicate sectors that would absorb formal employment.57 Key results are summarized below: • Reforms within Mercosur would trigger moderate or largely negative impacts on formal employment in the following sectors: sugar, fruits and vegetables, metal products, footwear, textile and apparel, furniture, vehicles, auto parts, and other manufacturing. • Under the EU-Mercosur scenario, sugar, natural resources and fuel, other machinery and equipment, metal products, footwear, pharmaceuticals, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors would experience moderate to large losses in formal employment, relative to the baseline. • Under the Pacific Alliance–Mercosur scenario, sugar, metal products, and footwear sectors would experience a moderately negative impact on formal employment, relative to the baseline. Overall, this analysis suggests that, relative to the baseline, the sugar, metal products, footwear, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors would be more susceptible to experiencing moderate or large losses in formal employment for most of the trade integration scenarios modeled. On the other hand, some sectors emerge as formal employment generators above the baseline, regardless of the trade integration scenario modeled; these include overall services, as well as meats and other agricultural and food products. Measures that can support the transition process and the affected labor force are discussed later in the chapter. THE IMPORTANCE OF FDI, TRADE IN SERVICES, E-COMMERCE, AND COMPETITIVE DOMESTIC MARKETS: MAKING THE MOST OF THE NEW GLOBAL TRADE LANDSCAPE The current trade scenario poses substantial challenges for outward economic growth strategies. Trade growth has been low since 2011; growth in total trade volumes has shrunk to an average of 3 percent since 2012, substantially lower than the average of 7.1 percent in 1987–2007, before the global financial crisis. Structural factors, rather than cyclical components, largely explain this slow growth. A decline in the ratio between world trade elasticity and GDP suggests that trade has been growing more slowly since the global crisis—not only because global GDP growth has been lower, but also because trade itself has become less responsive to GDP.58 Opening the economy in this context is a challenge, espe- cially in light of the renaissance in protectionist rhetoric.59 Changes in the characteristics of world trade also bring new opportunities, however. First, the unbundling of production of export goods has given rise to GVCs, and the signing of deep FTAs has been the main vehicle for bringing in new disciplines that allow factories to connect across borders in a seamless way. Second, trade in services has given rise to new export and diversification oppor- tunities. Argentina can take advantage of both, and the attracting of strategic foreign investment can be a key to success. Investors that seek efficiencies in Argentina—as opposed to resources or market access—are in a position to connect to GVCs and to develop more competitive service exports, such as knowledge-based services. Third, growth in cross-border e-commerce opens opportunities for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to participate in global markets. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 55 FIGURE 1.24 Deep free trade agreements and GVC-related trade: Simple correlations 15 Average GVC-related trade (log) 10 5 0 No PTA Low depth Medium depth High depth Source: Calculations based on World Bank PTA Content dataset (https://wits.worldbank.org​ /­gptad​/­trade_database.html). Note: Low depth = agreements with less than or equal to 15 provisions; medium depth = agreements with 15 or more provisions, but less than or equal to 30; and high depth = agreements with more than 30 provisions. Integrating into GVCs requires deeper trade agreements, with provisions in areas such as investment and competition. The world has witnessed an acceler- ation of FTA deals while Argentina has sat on the sidelines. The depth of cover- age of these FTAs has been increasing as well; agreements signed before 1991 included 9 policy areas, on average, whereas agreements signed between 2005 and 2015 included 15 policy areas, on average.60 Mercosur, the only preferential trade agreement to which Argentina is a signatory,61 includes provisions in 17 areas.62 By contrast, the maximum depth of agreements signed by other Latin American countries ranges from 20 to 30 provisions.63 Evidence suggests that GVC-related trade (proxied by trade in parts and components) is higher on aver- age for countries that have signed deeper agreements (figure 1.24). Signing deep FTAs would be a fruitful way for Argentina to connect to spe- cific segments of RVCs and GVCs and attract foreign investment. Results of a gravity model show that deepening Mercosur would further increase Argentina’s GVC-related exports to its FTA partners (box 1.7). If Mercosur had the same depth as the EU–Colombia and Peru agreement, Argentina would export between 1 percent and 9 percent more (US$54 million–$480 million) to Mercosur members.64 Revising Mercosur would require introducing policy areas such as visa and asylum, data protection, health, and industrial cooperation. By the same token, if Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance were to sign an agreement as deep as the Pacific Alliance’s deepest agreement with an economic bloc (EU–Colombia and Peru, with 20 policy areas), then Argentina’s GVC-related exports to Pacific Alliance countries would increase between 6 percent and 13 percent. The agree- ment would need to include three policy areas that are not in Mercosur—­ investment, movement of capital, and innovation policies—to achieve this boost. Building on existing capabilities, some segments of the automotive industry emerge as providing good opportunities to connect domestic firms to global markets. Half (50 percent) of local production in the automotive industry is 56 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 1.7 Methodology for estimating the impact of deep integration on GVC-related trade Gravity equations are derived from models that seek coefficient downward. A simultaneity problem can to explain or predict the relationship between a arise, for instance, when the governments of two (dependent) variable (in this case, bilateral trade in countries that trade more than their “natural” levels of parts and components) and a set of other (independent trade may be induced to form a FTA, as there is less or explanatory) variables whose values can be esti- probability of trade diversion. In this case, the FTA mated (in this case, elements of deep integration). coefficients will be biased upward. An augmented gravity equation is estimated for 93 To account for this potential bias, the approach countries, using data from 1990 to 2014, to investigate used by Baier and Bergstrand (2007) is followed here.a the effect of deep integration on GVC-related trade. Specifically, we estimate a fixed-effect gravity This methodology has been used extensively by econ- regression:b omists to test empirically the determinants of trade flows and to estimate the effects of preferential trade GVCijt = b1Depthijt + b2Depthijt* ARG + dij + dit +djt + eijt, opening on trade flows. Estimation of the effects of free trade agreements (FTAs) on bilateral trade flows where GVCijt is a measure of GVC-related trade using a gravity equation is susceptible, however, to an between countries i and j. GVC-related trade is prox- endogeneity problem. ied by trade in parts and components.c Depthijt is a Endogeneity arises when an explanatory variable measure of the depth of FTAs. A statistically signifi- in an equation is correlated with the error term of the cant and positive coefficient β1 implies that signing a equation, and the error term is the unexplained devia- deeper agreement is associated with greater GVC- tion of sample data from their unobservable “true” related trade. This variable is calculated as the num- value. Studies such as Baier and Bergstrand (2007) ber of enforceable provisions that are included in a show that omitted variables and, to a lesser extent, certain agreement (normalized between 0 and 1).d simultaneity are the two most important sources of Depthijt * ARG is an interaction term between depth endogeneity bias caused by FTAs. The omitted vari- and a dummy variable equal to one if the exporting or ables problem of FTAs arises because the error term importing country is Argentina. This variable cap- may retain the effect of some unobservable country-­ tures the heterogeneous effects of deep FTAs for specific policy variables, which at the same time affect Argentina. A positive (negative) and significant coeffi- both trade and the probability of forming an FTA. If, cient implies that for the same level of depth, Argentina for example, the formation of an FTA also induces exported or imported relatively more (less) than the reforms in trade-restrictive domestic regulation, the average country in the sample. The δs are a series of likelihood of an FTA is higher (since the expected fixed effects: i for importer, j for exporter, and t for gains from the FTA are higher), and the omission of five-year periods from 1980 to 2014. Finally, εijt is the the domestic regulation variable will bias the FTA error term. a. As an additional robustness check for endogeneity, the regressions are estimated using an instrumental variables approach. In particular, the variable of interest—depth between country i and country j—is instrumented with the (weighted) average depth of all the agreements signed by i and j with any other country, excluding the agreement(s) they have in common. b. To account for the presence of zeroes in trade flows, equation (1) is estimated using the Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood (PPML) estimator proposed by Silva and Tenreyro (2006). c. Parts and components are defined as BEC 21, 22, 42, and 53. d. Other indices based on principal component analysis are used to calculate the depth of FTAs. See Osnago, Rocha, and Ruta (2015). Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 57 BOX 1.8 Tax benefits for the use of local auto parts in the automotive industry In July 2016, the new Regime for the Development and amount of domestic content used in the assembly of Strengthening of the Argentine Auto Parts Sector each vehicle or part. Automobiles incorporating at (Régimen de Desarrollo y Fortalecimiento del least 30 percent domestic auto parts can access this Autopartismo Argentino, Law No. 27263) was intro- benefit. In addition, companies are expected to pres- duced. The law gives automotive companies and road ent new projects or substantially modify the units they and agricultural machinery manufacturers tax bene- are producing to ensure that they are using new and fits when they give preference to the use of local com- exclusive car platforms (that is, platforms that are ponents, with the overall objective of strengthening developed only in Argentina within Mercosur) and to the auto parts sector and fostering greater national maintain their staffing levels. integration. By some accounts, this legislation is seen as a short- The law grants an electronic tax credit that may be term palliative measure for the auto parts industry, used by motor vehicle and auto parts producers to pay which mainly comprises domestic companies, while domestic taxes. The tax credit ranges from 4 percent longer-term strategic initiatives to address the sector’s to 15 percent, depending on the product and the competitiveness are developed and implemented. exported, with Brazil accounting for 80 percent of exports. While exports of car parts and accessories are oriented mostly toward Mercosur and other neighbor- ing countries like Chile, foreign firms in Argentina also export final vehicles— trucks—to Australia, the EU, Mexico, and South Africa. Argentina could further attract FDI in these segments, while strengthening linkages with local suppliers to reorient the production structure and integrate into GVCs and RVCs. The recent design of incentives in this sector has not been conducive to attracting strategic FDI and fostering global integration, however. Rather than allowing firms to source inputs from the most efficient producers and support- ing local producers in increasing their productivity, the tax incentives distort the market by offering tax benefits for the preferential use of local components (box 1.8). Supporting domestic linkages by tackling market failures and building capac- ities can help Argentina take better advantage of FDI and add more value to exports. Argentina’s automotive industry, for example, has significant produc- tion capacity in the form of 11 international car manufacturers and over 600 auto parts firms. Most of the auto parts firms are small and produce standardized, less sophisticated auto parts, which may be destined for car manufacturers or for the aftermarket. Programs to support their linkages with larger firms would need to improve the timeliness, quality, and quantity of their production, given the industry’s demanding standards and just-in-time system of production. Appropriate measures would include behavioral incentives for technical train- ing, skill building, and attainment of international certifications. In addition, an online database of national suppliers could help overcome imperfections in information markets. If larger firms had online access to high-quality informa- tion on local auto parts companies, this would increase industry-wide efficiency by bringing down the costs associated with identifying adequate and reliable 58 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 1.9 Potential deeper linkages in the automotive industry The strategic importance of the automotive industry demanding standards and just-in-time system of pro- in Argentina has motivated consecutive governments duction. The design of behavioral incentives aimed at to pay special attention throughout its 60-year history promoting technical training, skill building, and in the country. Today’s industry has significant pro- attainment of international certifications could help duction capacity, which was stimulated gradually by bring Tier 3 companies up to the required standards. protectionist measures coupled with an attractive In addition, an online database of national suppli- domestic market, public policies aimed at supporting ers is an important tool for promoting linkages. Global the growth and development of local firms, early experience has shown that imperfections in informa- development of technical know-how, and availability tion markets often lead to suboptimal levels of link- of a large supply of skilled workers. ages in an economy. Providing online access to The auto parts sector comprises a number of com- high-quality information on local auto parts compa- panies that directly supply auto companies (Tier 1 nies would not only help overcome this market fail- companies), involving engineering processes and ure, but it would also bring down the costs associated often global production. These are typically multina- with identifying adequate and reliable local suppliers tional subsidiaries or large companies that work for automakers and Tier 1 firms. To be useful, the closely with auto companies through confidentiality database would need to be designed carefully to agreements and on the basis of detailed specifications ensure that it is easy to access and search, and that it and design. A second group of companies (Tier 2) sup- includes prescreened, up-to-date information, plies specialized auto parts and components to Tier 1 including contact details, a description of the compa- firms. A third group of companies (Tier 3) produces ny’s products, production capabilities, technical spec- standardized, less sophisticated auto parts that may be ifications, and quality standards and certifications. destined for car manufacturers or for the aftermarket. Importantly, the database would need to be updated There are around 200 Tier 1 and Tier 2 firms, and periodically. about 450 Tier 3 companies. Tier 3 companies are In addition, systematically organizing matchmak- mostly SMEs. ing events to bring together Tier 3 firms and local and While there are existing linkages between Tier 1 foreign buyers—and following up on such events to and automakers, and between Tier 1 and Tier 2 firms, obtain feedback and measure results—would help there is room to promote adequate and stronger link- bridge information asymmetries. The biennial ages between Tier 3 companies and larger firms. To do Automechanika Buenos Aires fair, which includes side so, many Tier 3 companies will need to be brought up events where local auto parts companies meet foreign to higher standards—in terms of timeliness, quality, buyers and local automakers, is a step in the right and quantity of production—given the industry’s direction. local suppliers. Matchmaking events, such as the biennial Automechanika Buenos Aires fair, can mitigate information asymmetries between Tier 3 firms and local and foreign buyers (box 1.9). A more detailed GVC analysis could pro- vide further insights into strategic areas and segments in which to upgrade. The second significant change in the global trade landscape is in trade in ser- vices. Over the last two decades, the four modes of trade services have expanded rapidly: shipping services, such as software, from one country to another; consumers purchasing services abroad (tourists); service providers establishing a commercial presence in the consumer’s country; and service providers (a mining engineer, for example) traveling to the consumer’s country. Today, the service trade accounts for over a quarter of global trade flows. Developing countries’ share of world service exports has grown from 3 percent in 1970 to 20 percent in 2014.65 Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 59 While opening the economy could be detrimental to certain protected sectors in Argentina, it would also provide opportunities to expand other activities, such as services. The CGE simulations show that easing barriers to trade in Argentina would improve the overall economy, with positive impacts on trade and GDP in the medium and long terms. Different activities would face different effects, however. As illustrated in figure 1.23, manufacturing as a whole would suffer the largest contraction in real output, relative to baseline projections, in almost all integration scenarios modeled (despite the heterogeneity across sectors within manufacturing). Real output of overall service activities, on the other hand, would grow, relative to baseline projections, in all regional integration scenarios. Trade in services is determined by a country’s connectivity, capacity, and reg- ulatory framework; in Argentina, therefore, investment, trade, and competition reforms are essential. First, high-quality and efficient electronics and informa- tion and communications technology (ICT) infrastructure (telecommunications networks, for example) are critical for effective communication, dissemination, and processing of information. Second, the availability of skilled labor is partic- ularly essential for knowledge-based service (KBS) exports, which require edu- cation and skills development. Finally, the quality of a country’s institutions has been shown to have a strong influence on trade in services. Corruption and com- plex export procedures can stifle trade in services. Case studies of developing countries that have succeeded in exporting services shows that reducing barri- ers to trade and fostering investment contribute to the importance of the service sector and enhance a country’s export potential.66 The KBS sector represents a fruitful opportunity for Argentina, not only as a source of export revenues but also as an input to manufacturing exports and competitiveness.67 Despite a decline in overall trade in services as a proportion of GDP since 2007 (figure 1.6), Argentina maintained a positive trade balance in central KBS activities. These included “other business services” (sectors such as legal services, accounting and tax consulting services, business consultancy, advertising, and technical services) and “telecommunications, computer, and information services” (table 1.9). KBS activities have also contributed to the TABLE 1.9  Service trade balance in value, Argentina 2012 2016 SERVICE LABEL (US$, THOUSANDS) (US$, THOUSANDS) Other business services 2,348,000 1,370,070 Telecommunications, computer, and 864,080 547,502 information services Construction (11,090) (2,117) Government goods and services n.i.e. (223,580) (36,103) Financial services (72,181) (267,078) Personal, cultural, and recreational services (141,355) (283,161) Insurance and pension services (340,733) (317,443) Charges for the use of intellectual (1,970,532) (1,950,244) property n.i.e. Transport (2,415,990) (2,446,178) Travel (1,015,080) (3,597,592) All services (2,978,500) (6,982,344) Source: Data from International Trade Centre’s Trade in Services Statistics database (http://www​ .­intracen.org/itc/market-info-tools/trade-statistics/). Note: Figures in parentheses are negative values. n.i.e. = not included elsewhere. 60 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.25 Services’ share of value added in total gross exports, Argentina, 2011 Other business and ICT Transport Distribution Other services Other consumer services Finance Communication Construction Insurance Water 0 2 4 6 8 Export value added, share Source: Data from World Bank’s Export Value Added database (https://wits.worldbank.org​/­analyticaldata/evad/Country/ARG​ /­Year/2011/Summary). value added embodied in total gross exports from Argentina.68 The “other busi- ness services and ICT” sector generates the most export value added. It is responsible for 7.4 percent of total export value added (figure 1.25), more than services that have traditionally been considered major catalysts for economic activity (such as transport and distribution). The positive performance of KBS to date in Argentina reflects a combination of comparative advantages and investment incentives. The widespread use of investment incentives (both nationally and locally), combined with major com- parative advantages (such as human capital and relatively widespread English proficiency) has promoted the development of several clusters across the coun- try.69 Argentina ranks higher on the United Nations Development Programme’s Human Development Index than competitors such as Brazil, Costa Rica, and Mexico (figure 1.26). Based on the Knowledge Economy Index, Argentina can compete with Brazil and Mexico in the knowledge economy (figure 1.27). In fact, because KBS activities typically do not require high capital investments, several smaller cities and towns have been promoting the development of KBS to create jobs and diversify exports.70 As a result of these widespread policies, there are more than 28 KBS clusters or poles in Argentina, mostly in software and infor- mation technology (IT) services, with over 1,000 companies employing over 37,000 workers. Many of the world’s leading IT companies (IBM, HP, Accenture, Intel, Motorola, SAP, Google, and Tata, to name a few) are established in Argentina. Many local companies (for example, Fuego and Core Security Technologies) export highly innovative software globally. Moreover, a variety of companies (Globant, ASSA, and Prominente, among others) provide services to the global market.71 To continue attracting FDI into the sector, however, it is crucial that Argentina exploit potential synergies among the main institutional actors. When it comes to how well a country uses ICT to boost competitiveness and well-being, Argentina falls behind its competitors, despite having improved in the Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 61 FIGURE 1.26 Human Development Index, 2015 1.0 indicating higher human development 0.9 0.83 Index score from 0 to 1, with 1 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 lia s d Ki nd m d ge d Ro ina Bu ia a M a o il ut eru a nd az Co ari c ric ic n an n an do ra Ri la la la ex nt P Br Af la lg nl st m Ne Ire ite Zea Po ng a er Fi Au st h th Ar w Ne So d Un Source: Data from UNDP Human Development Indicator dataset (http://hdr.undp.org​ /­en/composite​/­HDI). FIGURE 1.27 Knowledge Economy Index, 2012 10 Index score from 0 to 10, with 10 indicating compete in the knowledge economy 9 that a country is more prepared to 8 7 6 5.4 5 4 3 2 1 0 th nd Ze ds Au nd ite Ire a Ki nd m Ro nd Bu ia a ca ge il ut ina M a o ru Ar raz li Co ari ric ic an do Pe ra Ri n Ne inla a a la ex So nt Af Ne erla lg al l B st m Po ng a st F h w d Un Source: Data from World Bank’s Knowledge Economy Index dataset (https://knoema​ .­com​/ ­WBKEI2013/knowledge-economy-index-world-bank-2012). networked readiness index ranking from 100th to 91st out of 143 countries between 2014 and 2015 (figure 1.28). Argentina could enhance its institutional environment to facilitate innovation, given existing weaknesses in the business and regulatory environment (figure 1.29). Strengthening the positive perfor- mance of the KBS sector will, therefore, require further coordination among the main institutional actors. They include the AAICI, the Undersecretariat for Technological and Productive Services (which hosts an Observatory of the Knowledge Economy), Argencon (an association of companies exporting KBS), 62 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.28 Networked Readiness Index, 2015 7.0 Index score from 0 (worst) to 7 (best) 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.8 3.0 2.0 1.0 0 Un th nd ds Ze m Au nd lia nd Co and a Bu a Ro ria M a o il Ar eru a az ic ric i in ic an o ra an a Ne inla a la So a R ex nt P Ne gd Br Af lg al l st m Ire Po ite erl ge st n F h Ki ut w d Source: Data from World Economic Forum’s Networked Readiness Index dataset (http:// reports​.­weforum.org/global-information-technology-report-2016/networked-readiness​ -index/dataset). FIGURE 1.29 Global Innovation Index, 2017 70 Index score from 0 (worst) to 100 (best) 60 50 40 32 30 20 10 0 ng s m d Ze d Au d Bu ia ia Ro nd a a M a o il ge u a nd az Co ani ic ric in r ic an an an l ar do Pe ra la So a R ex nt Br Af la lg nl Ne Irel al st m Po er Fi st h th Ki Ar ut w Ne d ite Un Source: Data from Global Innovation Index dataset (https://www.globalinnovationindex.org​ /­analysis-indicator). and other strong industry chambers, such as the Chamber of the Argentine Software Industry. The recently created “Red Federal”72 might be a useful plat- form for attracting more FDI into the sectors while ensuring that investment incentives provided to KBS activities across the country are well coordinated, balanced, and properly monitored to avoid tax wars across provinces. Third, strengthening e-commerce can provide an opportunity to spread the benefits of trade integration to SMEs. In principle, the advent of new ICT tools can facilitate cross-border e-commerce and participation in global markets for smaller and new entrants by lowering barriers to entrepreneurship and boosting their ability to reach a sufficient scale. The growth of retail e-commerce in Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 63 FIGURE 1.30 Retail e-commerce sales, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2010–15 35 60 30 50 Growth rate (percent) 25 Sales in US$, billions 40 20 30 15 20 10 3.4 10 5 0.4 0 0 a o d d s il lia a nd az in ic ic an an ra er ex nt Br la nl al st Am ge M er Ze Fi Au th Ar w tin Ne Ne 2010 2015 La Compound annual growth rate Source: Data from eMarketer dataset. Argentina has been impressive over the past decade; the 2010–15 compound average growth rate of retail e-commerce sales was 52 percent, well above selected LAC peers and even the LAC average (figure 1.30). However, Argentina’s share of worldwide retail e-commerce was well below that of its peers in 2015, at  0.2 percent as compared to 1 percent for Brazil, 0.3 percent for Mexico, 1.9 percent for the LAC region, and 1.1 percent for Australia.73 This discrepancy suggests that Argentina has untapped potential in e-commerce. Reinforcing procompetition regulation in the telecommunications sector, enhancing trade facilitation, and streamlining specific e-trade laws and regula- tions could provide a substantial boost. In practice, Argentina could lose many potential gains if the right conditions for SMEs are not in place. In this regard, Argentina lags behind its peers in infrastructure and the quality of Internet ser- vices. As discussed in chapter 4, this lag results, in great part, from gaps in the telecommunications sector regulatory regime. In addition, Argentina lags in e-commerce skills development, measured using a qualitative indicator of business-to-business use of ICT as a proxy (figure 1.31). On the other hand, Argentina has laws and regulations to promote e-commerce, particularly regarding electronic transactions and signatures, privacy and data protection, consumer protection for online purchases, and cybercrime prevention. Moreover, certain provisions in Argentina’s rules on e-signatures and e-documents (includ- ing mandatory licensing of commerce service providers and mandatory e-government with free certification service) are exemplary.74 Room for improve- ment remains, however. For example, Argentina still needs to update the legisla- tion in several ways to reflect the evolution of e-commerce. One is granting validity to all types of e-signatures while recognizing digital signatures as the enhanced alternative. Another is removing the exemptions from coverage, allow- ing the use of e-signatures and e-documents in all cases. Still, Argentina also has consumer protection and intermediary liability laws and regulations. Argentina’s Civil and Commercial Code of 2014 calls for contracts to be interpreted in the sense that is most favorable to the consumer, while online transactions are 64 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 1.31 Extent of business-to-business ICT use, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2015 6 Index from 1 (not at all) to 7 (to a great extent) 5.3 5 5.1 5 4.7 4.8 4.6 4.6 3.9 4 3 2 1 0 a il ru a o ey ca a t in az Pe bi ic rk Ri ric en Br m ex Tu a Af g lo M st h Ar Co Co ut So Source: Data from World Economic Forum’s Networked Readiness Index dataset (http:// reports​.­weforum.org/global-information-technology-report-2016/networked-readiness-index​ /­dataset). subject to the Consumer Protection Law, which requires fair and dignified treat- ment of consumers. Updates to this legislation could help strengthen the protec- tion of Argentine electronic consumers, facilitating the growth of international commerce. One recommendation would be to enact legislation for consumer e-­ protection that is specific to electronic consumers; the law could include provi- sions for e-payments, dispute resolution mechanisms, and redress. In addition, trade facilitation—particularly cross-border procedures—need to be enhanced to facilitate e-commerce and trade more broadly. WHAT MITIGATION MEASURES CAN ARGENTINA IMPLEMENT TO COUNTERVAIL THE TRANSITION EFFECTS OF MICROECONOMIC REFORMS IN SENSITIVE SECTORS? Microeconomic reforms and the associated changes in relative prices trig- ger a reallocation of production factors (within and between firms and sectors) that entails efficiency gains, but also adjustment costs. Underlying the process of integration into global markets is a reallocation and churning movement, through which productive resources are expected to move to more productive uses, also within and between firms and sectors, which is then expected to bring productivity growth. As part of this process, both firms and workers bear adjustment charges that are asymmetrical across sectors, regions, and worker types. Typically, low-skilled workers and firms in sensitive sectors, along with regions where the latter operate (especially if an industry is regionally concentrated), tend to bear the brunt of the adjustment costs. Some segments of Argentina’s manufacturing sector are susceptible to adjust- ment costs, as industries producing electronics, household appliances, automo- biles, and textiles will have to compete with production coming from countries Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 65 that enjoy comparative advantages. As discussed above, the analysis in this report suggests that employment losses are most likely to occur in sugar, metal products, footwear, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors, while employ- ment gains can be expected in meat, other agriculture and food, and services. Factors such as wage levels and logistics costs play a role in how susceptible industries will be international competition. In the textile industry, for example, low-income countries like Cambodia and Haiti pay monthly wages of US$115, on average, whereas an Argentine worker receives US$1,300 for the same job.75 This wage differential may not be explained fully by productivity differences; Argentina’s infrastructure currently lags in the region, and logistics costs are high (see chapter 4). According to data from the Argentine Chamber of Commerce and Services, the total number of occupied workers in the private sector in sensitive sectors such as automobiles, home appliances, and textiles is close to 350,000, or 1.7 percent of Argentina’s total labor force. These industries are concentrated mainly in Buenos Aires and the central region, particularly in Córdoba and Santa Fe. Policymakers in Argentina can take early and comprehensive action to ensure that policy shocks lead to more widespread gains for the country. International experience shows that most countries that have gone through a structural reform process have resorted to adjustment or compensatory programs, along with a welfare system that served as a safety net. The design and implementation of each mitigation measure is specific to each country and depends on different variables, such as the country’s fiscal situation and political pressures. Countries listed in table 1.10 used various types of adjustment or compensatory programs, such as retraining to facilitate reallocation in the labor market, early retirement and entrepreneurial programs, compensatory measures for affected firms, and incentives for lagging regions. Australia designed structural adjustment programs for each industry, espe- cially the sensitive ones. Analysis of government policy documents found 135 structural adjustment programs between 2000 and 2012.76 The nature of these programs is diverse: industry restructuring (especially in primary industries), enterprise assistance, labor market reforms, and investment attraction strategies. Australia determined the programs’ objectives, specific restructuring TABLE 1.10  Compensatory measures applied in selected country experiences AUSTRALIA POLAND SWEDEN MEXICO GENERAL MECHANISM BENEFICIARIES (1983) (1989) (1991) (1993) Unemployment compensation ¸ ¸ ¸ ¸ Subsidies ¸ ¸ ¸ ¸ Technical assistance/training ¸ ¸ ¸ ¸ The unemployed Social initiatives ¸ Support for entrepreneurship ¸ ¸ ¸ Quotas on number of dismissals ¸ SPECIAL MECHANISMS BENEFICIARIES Direct compensation Firms and workers ¸ ¸ ¸ ¸ affected by structural adjustment measures PROCAMPO (cash transfers) Farmers affected by ¸ NAFTA Regional support programs Disadvantaged regions ¸ ¸ ¸ ¸ 66 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 1.10 Deregulation of the dairy industry and compensation measures in Australia, 2001 Australia established the Dairy Adjustment Authority granted up to US$45,000, tax-free (subject to an to manage the implementation of adjustment programs. asset assessment), to farmers who were leaving The authority offered three types of assistance: the industry. (Australia designed this program for farmers who believed that this alternative • The Dairy Structural Adjustment Program pro- would better compensate their decision to exit vided financial support to all herders who were the market.) in the industry on September 28, 1999. This was • Dairy Regional Assistance provided funding the largest of the aid programs, granting US$1.6 for diversification to communities previously billion in assistance over eight years. dependent on the dairy industry. • As an alternative to the Dairy Structural Adjustment Program, the Dairy Exit Program incentives, duration, and government budget according to the industry (box 1.10). These programs have not targeted a single policy objective but have instead sought to secure employment for displaced workers or business owners, sup- port industries in their transformations, compensate property owners for the loss of rights or other economic opportunities, and generate new economic opportunities in communities affected by change. A primary goal of industry restructuring programs has been—and remains—to help industries adjust to new economic conditions to ensure their long-term viability. Many programs introduced since 2000 have sought to do this by helping nonviable enterprises exit the industry. There is mixed evidence regarding the effectiveness of adjustment programs directed toward firms and regions, which highlights the importance of ensuring well-tailored policy design if one of these approaches is to be implemented. In the case of firms, individual support measures could distort the level playing field or violate competitive neutrality principles that prevent firms from attaining undue competitive advantages vis-à-vis their competitors so that the most efficient firms succeed in the market. In the case of support for regions, there is a risk of misdirecting public policy efforts and resources in trying to promote industries in places where the location or resource endowments may not yield competitive production or services, rather than letting each region find its vocation. The recent literature suggests focusing on protecting workers, not jobs. Programs to assist workers can take the form of active labor market adjustment policies, such as training and acquisition of new skills, job search assistance, and subsidized employment through short-term contracts for displaced workers. Such programs can also take the form of passive labor market policies, such as direct compensation to workers, unemployment benefits, or insurance.77 It is important to strike the right balance between active and passive labor market programs, since they are complementary to each other and each has its draw- backs. Passive programs support the economic well-being of laid-off workers and help reduce political pressures, but they generate fiscal pressures. Active programs boost incentives to seek new jobs, but a moral hazard problem remains if these training and job search programs are not temporally limited. As stated by IMF, WBG, and WTO (2017), the balance between the use of active and passive labor market programs will ultimately depend on a country’s labor market Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 67 institutions and rigidities. Social protection policies serve as complementary measures to curtail adjustment costs. These typically comprise health insurance, severance payments, and general income support. Among the comparator coun- tries, and according to OECD data, Finland has the most expansive coverage of labor market policies; in 2015, the Finnish government spent 2.94 percent of GDP on (active and passive) labor market policies (figure 1.32).78 Mexico lies at FIGURE 1.32 Public expenditure on labor programs in OECD countries, 2015 a. Active policies Finland Netherlands Ireland OECD countries Poland New Zealand United Kingdom Australia Mexico 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 Percent of GDP PES and administration Training Employment incentives Sheltered and supported employment and rehabilitation Direct job creation Startup incentives b. Passive policies Finland Netherlands Ireland OECD countries Poland New Zealand United Kingdom Australia Mexico 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 Percent of GDP Out-of-work income maintenance and support Early retirement Source: Data from OECD Labor Market Policies and Institutions database (http:// www.oecd.org/els​/­emp/employmentdatabase-labourmarketpoliciesandinstitutio ns.htm). Note: Figures for the United Kingdom are for 2011. 68 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy the opposite end of the spectrum, having spent only 0.01 percent of GDP for the same purpose during the same period. Well-targeted and well-designed labor adjustment assistance programs can achieve results even with limited resources. Despite reduced spending on labor market programs overall, Mexico has one of the most successful programs. Mexico established its Farmers Direct Support Program (Programa de Apoyos Directos al Campo, or PROCAMPO) in 1993–94 to compensate crop producers who were expected to see prices decline after the initiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the United States and Canada. The program provided per-hectare cash transfers to farmers who had land ded- icated to staple production before NAFTA. PROCAMPO has been in place for over 15 years and is now the largest agricultural program in Mexico. Although it has changed over time, it continues to provide a subsidy per hectare of land cul- tivated to all farmers who subscribed initially. Cord and Wodon (2001) found that PROCAMPO had a positive effect on poverty reduction and a multiplier effect on household income: one peso in PROCAMPO cash transfers resulted in a two-peso increase in household income.79 Argentina has recently put in place adjustment programs to help domestic workers and companies become more competitive. The programs encompass incentives to both workers and companies. Argentina launched the Programa de Transformación Productiva (Productive Transformation Program) at the end of 2016. This adjustment program is designed to help companies enhance their competitiveness through mechanisms that facilitate improving productive pro- cesses; implementing jumps in scale or technology; developing new products; and reorienting production toward more competitive and dynamic activities that demand long-term, high-quality employment. Within three months of the launch of this program, about 20 firms had presented expansion or conversion projects, with the potential to add up to 1,000 more workers (box 1.11). The gov- ernment has also launched the Programa “111 mil, aprende a programar,” an ini- tiative that seeks to train “100,000 programmers, 10,000 professionals, and 1,000 technological entrepreneurs” to meet the demand of companies in the KBS sector. BOX 1.11 Argentina’s Programa de Transformación Productiva Objective 50 percent of their most recent salaries, guaran- Business growth in existing and new markets, along teeing at least the minimum living wage), integral with job creation. family assistance, and state facilitation of their reintegration into companies that are part of the Benefits program. For workers: capacity building for employed work- ers who want to perform new tasks and for unem- • For firms that identify opportunities for ployed workers who want to re-enter the labor productive transformation: financial and market. The latter receive extended unemploy- technical assistance, including a guarantee ment insura nce (up to six mont hs at up to fund with the aim of promoting innovation to continued Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 69 Box 1.11, continued improve production processes and business guarantee funds. The company also benefits from models. Specifically, companies can receive lower labor costs. loans of up to US$140 million, with rate Eligibility bonuses up to 6 percentage points, or access • Companies of any size, located in Argentina, to guarantees. that are part of any activity or productive sector, • For “dynamic” firms with feasible, sustainable except public services, mining, fishing, and agri- investment projects and job demand: employ- culture. Mutual associations and cooperatives ment subsidies for hiring workers seeking to are not eligible. re-enter the labor market through the program and assistance with expanding their produc- Requirement tive capacity. Specifically, for each worker hired • Presenting a project for productive transforma- under the program, the company can receive tion or a project to implement short-, medium- or credits of US$500,000 to US$140 million, with a long-term investment that proves to be feasible bonus of up to 5 percentage points or access to and sustainable and demands labor. Targeted trade-specific programs can complement labor adjustment assis- tance programs and help reduce opposition to trade openness, but the effective- ness of these programs has been mixed, and their coverage and size tend to be small. The most prominent examples of such programs are the United States’ Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) program 80 and the EU European Globalization Adjustment Fund. The TAA and the EU fund had budgets of US$800 million (2015) and €115 million (2014), respectively. So far, the effective- ness of the TAA program has been limited. On the one hand, as stated by the IMF, WBG, and WTO (2017), a comprehensive evaluation of the TAA found that the training obtained by workers did not improve their earning and employment outcomes (D’Amico, et al. 2007). On the other hand, others found evidence that the training component did have a positive effect (Park 2012) (Rosen, 2008), although smaller in terms of wage insurance, since take-up rates for the insur- ance were low. Additional findings suggest that low take-up rates could partially be linked to lack of knowledge about the program (D’Amico, et al. 2007). Other relevant adjustment programs include the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy and the Austrian Steel Foundation programs. They include direct compensation (such as direct payments to EU farmers) and unemployment insurance and wage subsidies (as in the TAA). As a complement to implementing programs, understanding frictions (coming from different sectors, markets, and society) and tailoring policies to tackle them is essential to accelerating adjustment and maximizing the gains from trade. Many obstacles can impede workers from switching firms, sectors, or regions. These frictions can vary, from skill mismatches to job search and travel costs, social barriers, housing policies, job protection regulations, and lack of capital mobility. In the case of Argentina, possible frictions include the fact that it is a federal country, since this implies that each region can have dif- ferent policies, which could potentially deter interstate mobility; the geograph- ical extension of the country, which increases travel costs; and rigid labor systems that complicate the reallocation of resources. Artuc et al. (2013) and 70 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Dix-Carneiro (2014) found that adjustment frictions in advanced economies can reduce the gains from trade by up to 30 percent (IMF, WBG, and WTO 2017). Evidence from Mexico and Brazil support these findings. Kambourov (2009) finds that a lack of flexibility in Mexico’s labor market slowed the real- location of labor in response to trade reform, such that the benefits of the reform were as much as 30 percent less than what could have been achieved under a more flexible labor market. Likewise, Dix-Carneiro (2014) finds that the reallocation in the labor market following trade liberalization in Brazil would accelerate from 14 years to 4 years if capital were completely mobile. Credit policies can facilitate the overall adjustment process. For workers, a well-functioning mortgage market and easy access to credit to help finance education, self-employment, or startups could ease adjustment.81 Finally, macroeconomic stabilization policies can help ease the adjustment process. Macroeconomic stabilization policies should complement active labor market policies, since displacement costs are known to be higher during periods of growth slowdown (Davis and von Watcher 2011). NOTES 1. The bill was already approved in the Chamber of Deputies in November 2017 and, as of this writing, was under discussion in the Senate. 2. World Bank (2015) showed that total factor productivity growth in Argentina averaged 0.4 percent per year from 1961 to 2014, below the average experienced by comparator coun- tries in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), such as Brazil (0.42 percent) and Chile (0.86 percent), as well as Asian economies, such as Hong Kong (1.73 percent), Malaysia (1.10 percent), Singapore (1.99 percent), and South Korea (2.38 percent). 3. Economy-wide, productivity increases as resources move from lower-productivity sectors to higher-productivity sectors (the so-called structural transformation process). Within a sector, productivity increases when (a) firms become more efficient at using resources (within-firm efficiency gains), (b) firms that are more efficient gain market share at the expense of laggards (between-firm efficiency gains), and (c) new and more productive firms enter the market while obsolete ones cease their activities (entry and exit gains). 4. See Altomonte et al. (2013) for an analysis of the patterns of interaction among firm-level internationalization, innovation, and productivity across seven European countries (Austria, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom). 5. Argentina’s import and export values may be underestimated, because reportedly, some of the trade flows became informal during the Kirchner era. 6. Trade in intermediate goods contributed more than trade in final goods did to the growth of total manufacturing trade in 2001–2008 and 2009–14 (World Bank et al. 2017). 7. More recent data points (after 2011) are not available from the OECD TiVA dataset. 8. It is likely that the good performance of Bulgaria, Poland, and Romania is linked to their proximity to a large GVC market, namely the European Union. Similarly, Mexico is rela- tively close to the United States, a market for automotive GVCs. 9. From the 1950s on, the number of active FTAs increased continuously to almost 70 in 1990. Thereafter, FTA activity accelerated noticeably, with the number of FTAs more than doubling over the next five years and more than quadrupling until 2010 to reach close to 300 FTAs in force as of this writing. 10. This is based on a World Bank dataset on the content of preferential trade agreements (https;//data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/deep-trade-agreements), which includes the set of agreements that have been notified to the WTO. In addition to Mercosur, Argentina has in place an agreement with Israel, in force since 2010, that has not been notified to the WTO. Also not counted are partial scope and Economic Complementation Agreements (ACEs). Argentina is a member of five partial scope agreements: Global System of Trade Preferences among Developing Countries, Latin American Integration Association (LAIA), Protocol on Trade Negotiations, MERCOSUR–India, and Mercosur–SACU. A partial scope agreement is not defined or referred to in the WTO agreement, such that the agreement Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 71 covers only certain products. Partial scope agreements are notified under paragraph 4(a) of the Enabling Clause (WTO 2017). Argentina has also signed a series of bilateral ACEs with countries such as Chile, Colombia, and Peru. These agreements fall within the legal frame- work of LAIA and point to a greater opening compared to partial scope agreements. 11. The ECI was originally elaborated in Hidalgo and Hausmann (2009) and assesses the over- all complexity of the export basket. The ECI is based on export data and, in part, captures export complexity. 12. In 2016, Argentina’s ECI was −0.882 (68th in the ranking) 13. The FDI complexity index is a weighted average of the product complexity index associated with industries where there is FDI activity, with the weights being the share of FDI in the sector over total FDI in tradable industries received in Argentina. Just as with ECI, the FDI complexity index is standardized, so that a value of 0 corresponds with the global average for the index. 14. The OECD-WBG PMR data are part of the WBG’s Markets and Competition Policy Database. Each area addressed within the PMR methodology sheds light on specific restrictions of the regulatory framework, both economy-wide and in key sectors of the economy, on 12 topics: electricity; gas; telecommunications; post; transport; water; retail distribution; professional services; other sectors; administrative requirements for business startups; treatment of foreign parties; and other, such as governance of publicly controlled enterprises or antitrust exclusions and exemptions. 15. The program was extended to 151 products in addition to the 325 already in the program. See https://www.elsol.com.ar/extendieron-el-programa-precios-cuidados.html. In January 2018, 50 more products were included under this program. https://www.clarin​ .com/economia/precios-cuidados-productos-incluidos-mayo_0_Sky6i0xEM.html. 16. See Argent and Begazo Gomez (2015) and Licetti et al. (2017) for a comprehensive discussion. 17. This figure includes the summary categories of fruits and vegetables, while only some of those products have been included in the regressions. Discounting those two aggregate categories, the analysis still covers 66 percent of the food consumption basket. 18. Countries outside Latin America, especially those in the OECD, are appropriate compara- tor countries in that they exhibit, arguably, a less distorted regulatory environment, on average, than developing economies. 19. “Numbeo” is an online database of user-contributed data on cost of living. 20. The Latin American comparator countries with available data include Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. 21. In this model, the cost to import does not have the expected effect on the level of prices, which may be due to the fact that the caveats in the methodology for this indicator are more accentuated for these four countries. However, the cost of import does not explain a significant share of the variance in prices, nor does it change the difference in price levels significantly. 22. In countries where the population is concentrated, most of the price information reported to Numbeo is likely to refer to the capital. 23. First, the previous regressions already control for differences in the average income level, measured in PPP. Second, the original unit prices in local currencies were converted into U.S. dollar values using the market exchange rate (which falls between the parallel market rate and the official rate), and therefore account for the exchange rate fluctuations affect- ing prices of traded goods. The parallel exchange rate (blue chip swap rate) was used in around 20 percent of the transactions. 24. The R-squared is less than half in some of the specifications, compared to the ones in table 1.3. 25. The values for the PPP conversion factor, GDP (local currency units per international $), are extrapolated from the 2011 International Comparison Program (ICP) benchmark esti- mates or imputed using a statistical model based on the 2011 ICP. This means that if food prices are higher in Argentina due to lack of competition along the value chain, then the ICP benchmark estimate itself would have been affected by this distortion. 26. See Rabinovich (2013) for more details. 27. See http://www.pregonagropecuario.com/cat.php?txt=8619. 28. The economic characteristics of the production process, the functioning of the supply chain, and the strategic behavior of firms can affect the relationship between market 72 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy concentration and price levels. Furthermore, prices are only one of the variables that firms decide on; they can also compete on price, quality, intangible value, customer service, and other features. When market rigidities impede a firm’s ability to vary prices, the firm may compete by adjusting these nonprice variables. As a result, the level and behavior of prices do not necessarily indicate the intensity of competition, and it becomes necessary to look at market behavior. 29. See, for instance, Aghion et al. (2005) and Aghion, Braun, and Fedderke (2008). 30. See, for instance, World Bank (2013), World Bank (2014), and Iootty and Dauda (2018). 31. See Nickell (1966) for further details. 32. PCMs are measured as the difference between value added and salaries, as a proportion of sales. Results hold for various robustness checks: (1) using sectoral data from national accounts; (2) employing a different proxy for competition intensity; (3) using distinct esti- mation techniques, such as robust regression and quantile regression; and (4) employing different price deflators. Even in the case of an alternative specification that is less conser- vative and does not explain as much of the variance in PCMs, the same change would yield an additional 1.7 percent in annual productivity growth (specifications (3) and (4)). See Goodwin, Dauda, and Gramegna (2017) for further methodological discussion. 33. See Kitzmuller and Licetti (2012) for further discussion. 34. This relation has been demonstrated by Barone and Cingano (2011). 35. This is based on an ex ante simulation of potential impact on value added and associated GDP growth of service sector reforms that would reduce restrictive PMRs, using a sensi- tivity analysis with four alternative simulation methods (appendix E). 36. The tariffs for the 10 most protected sectors in 2015 were footwear (23 percent), furniture (20 percent), textiles and apparel (19 percent), wine (17 percent), sugar (14 percent), biofuels (14 percent), metal products (13 percent), computers (13 percent), machinery and equipment (11 percent), and home appliances (11 percent). Import tariffs for certain com- puter items were brought down to zero in March 2017. 37. This is done given current commitments in the context of Mercosur and the restrictions imposed by the use of national exceptions to CET. 38. In this scenario, a sector with a small number of lines with nonzero tariffs, such as foot- wear, could be fully liberalized (from an average tariff of 23 percent to 0 percent). For a large sector, such as textiles and apparel, however, the average tariff could be reduced from 19 percent to 7 percent at the most. Two other sectors are assumed to open only partially: metal products (from an average tariff of 13 percent to 2 percent) and machinery and equipment (from an average tariff of 11 percent to 5 percent). Overall, the following tariff reductions are assumed for each sector: footwear (from 23 percent to zero), furniture (20 percent to 0 percent), textiles and apparel (19 percent to 7 percent), wine (17 percent to 0 percent), sugar (14 percent to 0 percent), biofuels (14 percent to 0 percent), metal products (13 percent to 1.5 percent), computers (13 percent to 0 percent), machinery and equipment (11 percent to 5.1 percent), and home appliances (11 percent to 0 percent). 39. It is worth stressing that the hypothetical scenario of simultaneous tariff liberalization (of  all high-tariff sectors) goes beyond what can be done while keeping the CET. In other words, this scenario would involve expanding the national exceptions or “leaving” the CET. 40. As highlighted in the executive summary, the elimination of DJAI and introduction of SIMI at the end of 2015 is considered to be a partial reform scenario, since nonautomatic import licenses still cover a share of trade in certain sectors. As of October 2016, about 1,600 tariff lines remained with import licenses not subject to automatic approval. 41. About 27 percent of tariff lines were above the international peak of 15 percent, and about 5 percent of lines were at the WTO bound of 35 percent. 42. The 10 most protected sectors in 2015 were footwear (23 percent), furniture (20 percent), textiles and apparel (19 percent), wine (17 percent), sugar (14 percent), biofuels (14 percent), metal products (13 percent), computers (13 percent), machinery and equipment (11 percent), and home appliances (11 percent). 43. As explained in box 1.6, the long-term baseline reflects a projection of the Argentine and global economies with current policies in place. Starting from 2015 as the base year, the baseline provides “business-as-usual” scenarios for every year through 2030. The impact of a counterfactual policy is assessed by looking at deviations from the baseline. 44. Simultaneous liberalization is not feasible due to CET commitments, suggesting the importance of a Mercosur-wide initiative. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 73 45. As highlighted above, the introduction of the new regime (SIMI), to replace the DJAI, maintained about 1,400 tariff lines subject to nonautomatic licenses, with the remaining 8,600 tariff lines with automatic licenses subject to preregistration for monitoring purposes. 46. Export taxes remained for certain products, including soybeans, soybean products (soybean meals and oil), biodiesel, and scrap metals. This reform reduced to zero nearly 98 percent of tariff lines that had export taxes above zero. The vast majority were products facing an export tax of up to 5 percent. Indeed, a “blanket” export tax rate of 5 percent applied to about 93 percent of lines not subject to a different rate. For soybeans and soybean products, a gradual elimination of their export taxes is expected to take place, starting in 2018. 47. Removal of import tariffs and/or export taxes would have fiscal implications in terms of declining trade tax revenue relative to GDP. Cage and Gadenne (2016) analyze episodes of trade liberalization across 130 countries from 1792 to 2006 and find evidence that trade taxes have fallen by more than 3 percentage points of GDP, on average, and half of the coun- tries that have experienced an episode of trade liberalization have not recovered the lost tax revenues five years after the start of the episode. In this regard, maintaining constant fiscal expenditure levels will depend on specific efforts to safeguard total tax revenue, particu- larly through a domestic tax reform that could broaden tax bases by purging exemptions, simplifying rate structures, and improving revenue administration. 48. The expansion of the soy sectors in this scenario is so large that output of wheat and corn would now be lower relative to the baseline projections to 2020. The rapid expansion of agriculture would, indeed, shift resources from other sectors of the economy, to the extent that most model sectors would produce at lower levels relative to the baseline; however, services—the largest sector in the model—would also expand. 49. The specific scenarios used here are hypothetical because negotiations as of this writing were ongoing and private. 50. In addition, NTMs are streamlined among Mercosur parties—resulting in a 15 percent reduction in the tariff equivalents for goods and services—and export taxes are eliminated among the parties. 51. Also, NTM tariff equivalents are reduced by 15 percent and export taxes are eliminated among Mercosur and EU countries. 52. With “Brexit” underway at this writing, a completed agreement may apply to a EU27 membership. The results with and without the United Kingdom are qualitatively similar, and both are presented for comparison. 53. Under the Mercosur–Pacific Alliance scenario, NTM tariff equivalents are reduced by 15 percent and export taxes are eliminated among the parties. Moreover, bilateral market access is assumed so that existing liberalization among partners remains. Existing tariff barriers with Pacific Alliance countries were lowered by previous bilateral or Mercosur agreements under the framework of the Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración, espe- cially with respect to Chile and Peru. Most tariff liberalization under this scenario would be with respect to Mexico and, to a lesser extent, Colombia. Liberalization with the Pacific Alliance is assumed to take place both more quickly and more comprehensively than with the EU. No products are excluded from liberalization, and all tariffs are either removed or partially reduced for the most sensitive products. 54. This reflects a reduction in import barriers for beef in the EU and the elimination of export restraints in Argentina, which include export taxes on soybean products. 55. Boletin Trimestral de Empleo Registrado is a publication from Ministerio de Trabajo, Empleo y Seguridad Social, available at http://www.trabajo.gob.ar/left/estadisticas/oede​ /­estadisticas_nacionales.asp. 56. The model does not keep track of the number of jobs by sector. To translate proportional changes in labor payments into employment changes, the model’s results are combined with administrative data on formal employment in the private sector (based on the Sistema Integrado Previsional Argentino). This dataset provides detailed data by industry classifica- tion, but it represents only a partial sample of total employment, reflecting 6.5 million jobs in 2015. Nonetheless, these data permit us to obtain a relative scale of employment across sectors. The employment effects are thus best seen as relative, as they take into account the relative labor intensity in the sector, while the levels represent partial numbers only. With this caveat in mind, the notional gradation in the heat map reflects employment losses below 1,000 as relatively small, between 1,000 and 2,000 as relatively moderate, and above 2,000 as relatively large. These bands were defined to keep roughly one-third of cases in each category. 74 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy 57. While all the sectors in the CGE model are included in the heat map, the different aggrega- tions in the model and the employment statistics do not allow us to identify all the sectors separately. Several model sectors related to agriculture and food were combined. To the extent that there are different effects, say, between wheat and soybeans, the aggregation “other agriculture and food” in the table shows the net effect, which is an expansion and absorption of employment. 58. See Constantinescu, Mattoo, and Ruta (2015) for an analysis of the determinants of the decline of trade elasticity in the 2000s. 59. See Evenett and Fritz (2015) for further discussion on this topic. 60. More than 50 percent of agreements include deeper provisions in areas such as antidump- ing and countervailing measures, rules on competition, movement of capital, intellectual property rights (IPRs), and trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights (TRIPs). Moreover, technical barriers to trade, investment disciplines, and sanitary and phytosani- tary measures are often included in FTAs. 61. According to the World Bank dataset on the content of preferential trade agreements (https://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/deep-trade-agreements), which includes the set of agreements that have been notified to the WTO. In addition to Mercosur, Argentina has in place an agreement with Israel that has not been notified to the WTO and five partial scope agreements that are not defined or referred to in the WTO Agreement, as the WTO Agreement covers only certain products. 62. Mercosur covers all 14 WTO+ areas, which include disciplines related to market access, customs, standards, state trading enterprises, antidumping and countervailing measures, and trade-related investment and intellectual property, among others. In addition, it covers three WTO-X provisions: competition policy, movement of capital, and intellectual property rights. 63. For instance, the maximum depth of FTAs is 20 in Chile, 21 in Colombia and Mexico, and 30 in Peru. See Signoret, Rocha, and Molinuevo (2017) for further discussion and results. 64. GVC-related exports to Brazil and Paraguay would increase by US$43 million–$477 million and US$4 million–$46 million, respectively. Figures vary according to the shallowness of current enforceable provisions within Mercosur; the 1 percent effect (with a US$54 million variation) reflects an increase in depth from 17 to 20 provisions, while the 9 percent effect (with a US$480 million variation) reflects an increase in depth from 6 to 20 provisions. 65. The share of service exports increased from around 9 percent in 1970 to around 20 percent in 2014 (Choi et al. 2016). 66. See Gosawmi, Mattoo, and Saez (2012) for further discussion. 67. As defined by OECD (2017), KBS includes activities that make intensive use of high technology or require highly skilled labor to take advantage of technological innovations. KBS encompasses many activities, including accounting and legal services, audiovisual services, design, advertising, software and IT services, research and development, health care, and education. For analytical purposes, it comprises four sectors: (1) software and services; (2) business, professional, and technical services (which includes business pro- cess outsources, as well as engineering, architecture, design, research and development, and so on); (3) services related to intellectual property rights (licenses and royalties); and (4) audiovisual, media, and advertising services. 68. Both in direct value added (value added within the same sector—that is, not involving sectoral linkages) and inputs to other sectors. 69. Nationally, two main laws provide fiscal benefits to IT companies. First, Law No. 25.856 (2003), allows software development companies to receive tax reductions, loans, and other benefits available to other industrial activities. Second, the Software Promotion Law No. 25.922 (2004) created a 10-year special fiscal regime for the software and IT service sector and was extended until 2019 through Law 26.692 (2011). Under the Promotional Regime, compa- nies that develop software or provide information technology services as their core activity can enjoy the following benefits: (1) tax stability for taxpayers registered with the system; (2) tax credits amounting to 70 percent of social security contributions paid for staff working on software development activities, which can be used to offset national tax liabilities (such as the value-added tax, or VAT); (3) a 60 percent reduction in the income tax burden for each fiscal year; and (4) exemption from VAT withholding or reverse withholding. 70. For example, Córdoba’s Technology Cluster supports the development of clusters within the province to help young entrepreneurs grow their businesses without having to move to the capital city. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 75 71. Please see Nahirñak (2016) for further details. 72. The AAICI recently created an initiative, the “Red Federal,” to guarantee coordination in investment promotion and export promotion with subnational entities. The Red Federal aims to partner with the provinces, guarantee standardized services to investors and exporters, and collaborate with provinces in the promotion and facilitation of investment and exports. To date, memoranda of understanding have been signed with 15 provinces: Buenos Aires, Chaco, Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Corrientes, Jujuy, La Rioja, Men- doza, Misiones, Neuquén, Salta, San Juan, Santa Fe, Tierra del Fuego, and Tucumán. 73. According to data from eMarketer. 74. See Blythe (2011) for further discussion. 75. Cámara Argentina de Comercio y Servicios (2017). 76. See Beer (2014) for further discussion. 77. Empirical evidence provided by Hollweg et al.(2014) suggests that, when a trade shock hits a developing country, the costs associated with worker decisions are notably higher than those associated with employer decisions. That is, the mobility costs borne by workers far outweigh the adjustment costs borne by firms. This would, in principle, justify stronger protection of workers, but not necessarily of jobs or employers. 78. See OECD data on public spending on labor markets at https://data.oecd.org/socialexp​ /­public-spending-on-labour-markets.htm. 79. Household income is defined here as the combined gross income of all the members of a household. 80. The TAA’s current structure features four components of trade adjustment assistance, tar- geting workers, firms, farmers, and communities. Each cabinet-level department is tasked with a different sector of the overall TAA program. The program for workers is the largest and administered by the United States Department of Labor. 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Blythe, S. E. 2011. E-Commerce Law Around the World: A Concise Handbook. Bloomington, IN: Xlibris Corporation. 76 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Brambilla, I., N. Depetris Chauvin, and G. Porto. 2016. “Examining the Export Wage Premium in Developing Countries.” Review of International Economics 25: 447–75. Cagé, J., and L. Gadenne. 2016. “Tax Revenues, Development, and the Fiscal Cost of Trade Liberalization, 1792–2006.” Warwick Economics Research Paper Series (TWERPS) 1132, University of Warwick, Department of Economics. Camara Argentina de Comercio y Servicios. 2017. “Informe CAC: Costo Argetnino Agosto de 2017.” http://www.cac.com.ar/data/documentos/11_CAC%20-%20Informe%20Costo%20 Argentino%20-%20Agosto%202017.pdf. Choi, S., D. Furceri, Y. Huang, and P. Loungani. 2016. “Aggregate Uncertainty and Sectoral Productivity Growth: The Role of Credit Constraints.” IMF (International Monetary Fund) Working Paper 16/74. https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WP/Issues/2016/12/31​ /­A ggregate-Uncertainty-and-Sectoral-Productivity-Growth-The-Role-of-Credit​ -Constraints-44189. Constantinescu, C., A. Mattoo, and M. Ruta. 2015. “The Global Trade Slowdown: Cyclical or Structural?” International Monetary Fund, IMF Working Paper 15-6 (15/6). https://www​ .imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2015/wp1506.pdf. Cord, L., and Q. Wodon. 2001. “Do Agricultural Programs in Mexico Alleviate Poverty? Evidence from the Ejido Sector.” Cuadernos de Economía 38 (114): 239–56. D’Amico, R., K. Dunham, A. Goger, M. Mack, R. Kebede, J. Lacoe, and J. Salzman. 2007. Initial Implementation of the 2002 TAA Reform Act: A Report Prepared as Part of the Evaluation of the Trade Adjustment Assistance Program. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor, Social Policy Research Associates. Davis, S., and T. von Watcher. 2011. “Recessions and the Costs of Job Loss.” National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER Working Paper 17638. https://www.nber.org/papers/w17638. Dix-Carneiro, R. 2014. “Trade Liberalization and Labor Market Dynamics.” Econometrica 82 (3): 825–85. Evenett, S. J., and J. Fritz. 2015. “The Tide Turns? Trade, Protectionism, and Slowing Global Growth.” In The 18th Global Trade Alert Report. Geneva: Centre for Economic Policy Research. Felbermayr, G., J. Prat, and H. Schmerer. 2011. “Trade and Unemployment: What Do the Data Say?” European Economic Review 55 (6), 741–58. Goodwin, T., S. Dauda, and S. Gramegna. 2017. “Unlocking Competition in Argentina’s Domestic Markets.” Background paper prepared for this report. Gosawmi, A. G., A. Mattoo, and S. Saez. 2012. Service Exports: Are the Drivers Different for Developing Countries? Washington, DC: World Bank. Hidalgo, C. A., and R. Hausmann. 2009. “The Building Blocks of Economic Complexity.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 (26): 10570–75. Hollweg, C. H., D. Lederman, and D. Mitra. 2014. Structural Reforms and Labor Market Outcomes: International Panel Data Evidence. Washington, DC: World Bank Group. Hollweg, C. H., D. Lederman, D. Rojas, and E. R. Bulmer. 2014. Sticky Feet: How Labor Market Frictions Shape the Impact of International Trade on Jobs and Wages. Washington, DC: World Bank Group. IMF (International Monetary Fund), WBG (World Bank Group), and WTO (World Trade Organization). 2017. Making Trade an Engine of Growth for All: The Case for Trade and for Policies to Facilitate Adjustment. https://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news17_e/wto_imf​ _report_07042017.pdf. INDEC (2016) “Valorización mensual de la Canasta Básica Alimentaria y de la Canasta Básica Total - Gran Buenos Aires - Abril a Agosto de 2016,” available at https://www.indec.gov.ar​ /­uploads/informesdeprensa/canastas_09_16.pdf. INDEC. 2017. Mercado de trabajo: Principales indicadores. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos. http://www.indec.gov.ar/uploads/informesdeprensa​ /­EPH_cont_2trim16.pdf. Iootty, M., and S. Dauda. 2018. “Assessing Firm Competitive Behavior in China: First Insights into the Manufacturing Industry.” Unpublished memo. Kambourov, G. 2009. “Labour Market Regulations and the Sectoral Reallocation of Workers: The Case of Trade Reforms.” Review of Economic Studies 76 (4): 1321–58. Quo Vadis, Argentina? Context, Outlook, and Possible Scenarios | 77 Kitzmuller, M., and M. Martinez Licetti. 2012. Competition Policy: Encouraging Thriving Markets for Development. Public Policy for the Private Sector; note no. 331. Washington, DC: World  Bank. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/778181468328582034​ /­Competition​-policy-encouraging-thriving-markets-for-development. Licetti, M., G. Pop, S. Nyman, and T. Begazo Gomez. 2017. A Step Ahead: Competition Policy for Shared Prosperity and Inclusive Growth. Washington, DC: World Bank. Manova, K. 2013. “Credit Constraints, Heterogeneous Firms and International Trade.” Review of Economic Studies 80 (2): 711–44. Melitz, M. 2003. “The Impact of Trade on Intra-Industry Reallocations and Aggregate Industry Productivity.” Econometrica 71: 1695–1725. Nahirñak, P. 2016. Informes de cadenas de valor: Software y servicios informáticos (10.13140/ RG.2.2.21708.82567 ed.). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Ministerio de Hacienda y Finanzas Públicas. Nickell, S. J. 1996. “Competition and Corporate Performance.” Journal of Political Economy 104 (4): 724–46. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development). 2017.  OECD Science, Technology and Industry Scoreboard 2017: The Digital Transformation. Paris: OECD Publishing. “http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264268821-en” \t “_blank” \o “http://dx.doi​ .­org/10.1787/9789264268821-en” http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264268821​ -en http://dx​ .­doi.org/10.1787/9789264268821-en. Osnago, A., N. Rocha, and M. Ruta. 2015. “Deep Trade Agreements and Vertical FDI: The Devil Is in the Details.” The World Bank. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper WPS 7464. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/739621468001166726/Deep-trade​ -agreements-and-vertical-FDI-the-devil-is-in-the-details. Park, J. 2012. “Does Occupational Training by the Trade Adjustment Assistance Program Really Help Reemployment? Success Measured as Occupation Matching.” Review of International Economics 20 (5): 999–1016. Rabinovich, J. 2013. Significación y consecuencias de la concentración y extranjerización económica, casos sectoriales: Acero, aluminio y cemento. Buenos Aires: Centro de Investigación y Gestión de la Economía Solidaria. Rosen, H. 2008. “Strengthening Trade Adjustment Assistance.” Peterson Institute for International Economics, policy brief 08-2. https://www.researchgate.net/publication​ /241760390_Strengthening_Trade_Adjustment_Assistance. Schiantarelli, F. 2016. “Do Product Market Reforms Stimulate Employment, Investment, and Innovation?” IZA World of Labor, no. 266. https://wol.iza.org/uploads/articles/266/pdfs​ /­do-product-market-reforms-stimulate-employment-investment-and-innovation.pdf. Signoret, J., N. Rocha, and M. Molinuevo. 2017. “Trade Policy Reform in Argentina.” Background paper prepared for this report. Silva, J. S., and S. Tenreyro. 2006. “The Log of Gravity.” Review of Economics and Statistics 88 (4): 641–58. World Bank. 2013. Turkey—Reform for Competitiveness Technical Assistance: Fostering Open and Efficient Markets through Effective Competition Policies. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2014. The Unfinished Revolution: Bringing Opportunity, Good Jobs and Greater Wealth to All Tunisians. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2015. Argentina: Notas de políticas públicas para el desarrollo. Report no. 106122. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/899411467995396294/Argentina-Notas-de​ -pol%C3%ADticas-p%C3%BAblicas-para-el-desarrollo. World Bank, IDE-JETRO (Institute of Developing Economies–Japan External Trade Organization), OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and WTO (World Trade Organization). 2017. Global Value Chain Development Report: Measuring and Analyzing the Impact of GVCs on Economic Development. Washington, DC: World Bank. WTO (World Trade Organization). 2017. Regional Trade Agreements Information System: User Guide. https://rtais.wto.org/UserGuide/RTAIS_USER_GUIDE_EN.html (accessed August 23, 2017). 2 International Experience with Structural Microeconomic Reforms When integrating into the global economy, governments often face challenges— in particular, the need to stimulate a rapid export response and the need to man- age strategically the timing, sequencing, and costs of reform. Experience with comprehensive reforms to open the economy and integrate into global markets suggests that, in the course of opening, countries often face a short-term increase in imports, while responses in exports tend to be slow (figure 2.1). This asymme- try can trigger a variety of problems, such as growing trade imbalances, less resilience to external shocks, a short- (to medium-) term increase in unemploy- ment, and difficulties in maintaining political support for reforms. Notably, in such cases, growth of trade has accelerated rapidly after the reform period, although this cannot necessarily imply a causal relationship. Reform experiences in Australia, Mexico, Poland, and Sweden are relevant to Argentina for various reasons. All of the selected countries’ economies already had a large and developed manufacturing and service sector. In all cases, the state still participated directly in important sectors. Australia and Sweden both had strong social safety nets that were used to cushion adjustment costs, as dis- cussed in chapter 1. Mexico’s and Poland’s structural reforms were triggered by regional integration efforts, which could be informative for Argentina in terms of the potential gains of enhancing Mercosur and signing further free trade agreements (FTAs). Furthermore, three of the four countries (with Poland being the exception) had strong subnational governments that were part of their reforms’ political economy, as well as competition laws that started being enforced during the reform process (table 2.1). International experience with the design and implementation of microeco- nomic trade, investment, and competition reforms undertaken by these coun- tries offers valuable lessons. Australia, a country rich in resources with a high standard of living, lost productivity during the 1960s and 1970s when its econ- omy was closed and highly protected, and state-owned enterprises (SOEs) were the leading network and public utility service providers. The resulting eco- nomic instability led to structural reforms starting in 1982, based on opening  79 80 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 2.1 Trends in import and export levels among countries that have experienced structural reforms a. Australia 35 30 Constant US$ 1959 (billions) 25 20 15 10 5 0 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 b. Mexico 50 Constant US$ 1959 (billions) 40 30 20 10 0 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 c. New Zealand 6 Constant US$ 1959 (billions) 5 4 3 2 1 0 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Imports Exports continued International Experience with Structural Microeconomic Reforms | 81 FIGURE 2.1, continued d. Poland 30 25 Constant US$ 1959 (billions) 20 15 10 5 0 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Imports Exports Source: Data from World Development Indicators (WDI) dataset (http://wdi.worldbank.org​ /­tables). TABLE 2.1  Country indicators CHARACTERISTICS AUSTRALIA (1982) POLAND (1989) SWEDEN (1990) MEXICO (1994) ARGENTINA (2016) GDP (% change) 0.1 3.8 0.8 4.7 (2.3) GDP per capita 9,213 1,035 16,550 2,776 3,782 (constant US$, 1979 = 100) GDP’s main Manufacturing and Manufacturing, Manufacturing and Manufcturing and Manufacturing and component servicesa mining, and services services services agriculture General government n/a n/a 54.7 n/a 33.7 revenue (% of GDP) Role of subnational ¸ X ¸ ¸ ¸ governments Competition law Trade Practices Act Monopolistic Competition Act Federal Law of Competition Law (1974) Practices Law (1983) Economic (1999) (1987) Competition (1993) Source: Data from IMF World Economic Outlook database, April 2017 (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2017/01/weodata/index.aspx). Note: GDP percentage change with respect to the previous year. For Australia, the GDP percentage change refers to 1982 as compared to 1981. a. Distribution services and public utility services. In the indicator “role of subnational governments” the check mark indicates countries that have a federal system where subnational governments can decide on policies and regulations, whereas the X means that the government is centralized. the economy to trade and investment, as well as implementing competition policy principles at the national level. In 2017, Australia reached 25 years with- out recession, despite recent global economic crises, which is at least partly attributable to its strong post-reform economic foundations. In the 1990s, Mexico negotiated and signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which first triggered domestic economic reforms, and Mexico’s 2013 constitutional reform later opened network sectors (such as energy and tele- communications) to competition and improved the competition law. Sweden, a country with high state participation and a strong welfare system, lost pro- ductivity during the 1980s. However, the country managed to recover in the 1990s following a gradual process of privatization and deregulation in the 82 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy context of regional integration with the European Union (EU). Poland’s transi- tion to a market economy in 1989–91 resulted in abrupt changes that led rapidly to high u­ nemployment. Poland compensated for this trend with a series of active and passive labor market policies implemented in close coordination with unions in industries where the unions were strong. Furthermore, the lib- eralization of professional services in Poland in 2013 serves as a reference for a targeted implementation strategy. The reform processes in these countries have common features, the first of which is that reform measures were anchored in broader national policies. Australia began some reforms in the 1970s, accelerated them sharply in the early 1980s with the reduction of import barriers, and consolidated them over the fol- lowing decades. In 1995, all governments in Australia’s federal system agreed on a national competition policy that exposed previously sheltered activities to competition and promoted the long-term interests of consumers.1 Mexico’s first wave of reforms took place throughout the 1980s and, especially, in the first half of the 1990s. In this period, the overarching objective was to join the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, sending an unambiguous signal that an export- led economy would be the foundation for the new growth strategy. The subse- quent goal was to ratify and implement NAFTA. More recently, Mexico embarked on a bold package of structural reforms. These reforms were organized initially around the 2013 “Pacto por México,” which brought together the three largest parties to agree on a single, multifaceted package of specific reforms. The parties agreed to improve competition, education, energy, the financial sector, labor, infrastructure, telecommunications, and the tax system, among many other aspects of the economy (box 2.1). Second, new and existing institutions worked coherently to lead different segments of the overall microeconomic reform program. In Australia, important political institutions (such as the office of the prime minister, the treasury, and the Ministry of Finance) supported the reform.2 Moreover, Australia built inde- pendent institutions (including the National Competition Policy and Productivity Commission) to provide additional support. The Productivity Commission still serves as the Australian government’s principal review and advisory body on microeconomic policy, regulation, and a range of other social and environmental issues. Sweden achieved coherence across institutions and over time by imple- menting a rotation scheme for public employees. This system helped avoid pol- icy capture and spread technical expertise about reform implementation. Third, efforts to assess the impact of reforms, maintain consistent and correc- tive monitoring and evaluation regimes, and communicate positive results were critical to sustaining the reform process. In Australia, for example, the Productivity Commission developed the “Impact Project” with Monash University. The team assessed the impact of reforms in different sectors and at different levels of the economy (national and regional). These assessments were useful in communicating the successful results achieved by reform, reaching or promoting consensus, and adapting measures that were not contributing as expected.3 Fourth, the sequencing and timing of reforms were as important as their content. For all countries under review here, the trade liberalization process combined “shock” reforms (such as the early elimination of nontariff mea- sures (NTMs) to reduce severe distortions in pricing and supply, as well as tariff reductions) with a more gradual approach in some sensitive sectors. The sensitive sectors usually included manufacturing, particularly labor-intensive International Experience with Structural Microeconomic Reforms | 83 BOX 2.1 Australia’s National Competition Policy and Pacto por México The objective of Australia’s National Competition growth, and generate good-quality jobs to reduce pov- Policy was to promote competitive markets, because erty and social inequality. they best serve the interests of consumers and the The following were its principal economic wider community, and to “achieve and maintain con- components: sistent and complementary competition laws and pol- • Labor reform that increased the flexibility of hir- icies which [would] apply to all businesses in Australia ing substantially regardless of ownership.” • Reform of “Amparos,” which made the legal sys- The following were its principal components: tem more efficient and fair • Extension of anticompetitive conduct legisla- • Introduction of a national code of criminal pro- tion to cover previously exempt government and cedure unincorporated enterprises • Wide-ranging educational reform that intro- • Review of some 1,800 items of anticompetitive duced clearer standards for teachers and schools regulation • Fiscal reform that improved the efficiency of the • Reforms to public monopolies, including “com- tax system petitive neutrality” enforcement mechanisms, • Economy-wide competition reform certain structural reform requirements, and • Reforms to the financial, telecommunications, price regulation where public monopolies per- and energy sectors that opened long-closed sec- sisted tors to competition and strengthened the powers • An open-access regime for network infrastructure of regulators • Reforms allowing politicians to be reelected, The objective of Mexico’s Pacto por México was to giving them a longer-term perspective on policy complete the democratic transition, boost economic sectors (such as textiles, clothing, and footwear), steel, and automobiles. In Australia’s first automotive export facilitation scheme, launched in 1985, the country first turned quantity quotas into tariff quotas, then abolished them and gradually reduced the tariff from 57.5 percent in 1985 to 35 percent in 1992. Subsequent plans included gradual and previously announced reduc- tions, reaching a tariff of 10 percent in 2004 and programmed to fall to 5 ­percent in 2010. This gradualism contrasted with the unilateral tariff reduc- tion programs applied to nonsensitive sectors, in which the tariff reached 5 percent or less by 1996. It is important to highlight that the Australian econ- ­ omy was opened to trade first, which created the need to reduce input costs in labor markets and (nontraded) public utility services. In turn, pressure mounted for the reform of government policies and institutions that were impeding these changes, and an increasingly broad-ranging program of domestic microeconomic reform was hatched (Banks 2005). There is no con- sensus in the economic literature on whether “shock therapy” or gradualism is a better strategy for trade openness and investment liberalization reforms. Countries that have followed a gradualist approach (such as Australia, Mexico, and Sweden) have usually had political incentives to do so, including avoiding excessive costs, especially for the government budget; avoiding excessive downgrades in ­ l iving standards at the start of the reform; allowing 84 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy trial-and-error and mid-course adjustments; and helping the government gain credibility over time (Roland 2012). While trade reforms typically have combined shock measures with gradualism in sensitive sectors, investment and competition reforms have usually followed a steadier path. NOTES 1. See Banks (2005) for further discussion. 2. See Kelly (2000) for further discussion. 3. See Banks (2005) for a detailed discussion on the Australian experience. REFERENCES Banks, G. 2005. Structural Reform Australian-Style: Lessons for Others? Productivity Commission. Based on presentations to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (Washington, DC, May 26–27, 2005) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (Paris, May 31, 2005). https://www.oecd.org/australia/39218531.pdf. Kelly, P. 2000. “The Politics of Economic Change in Australia in the 1980s and 1990s.” In The Australian Economy in the 1990s: Proceedings of a Conference held at the H.C. Coombs Centre for Financial Studies, Kirribillion, 24–25 July 2000, ed. D. Gruen and S. Shrestha, 222–34. http://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2000/pdf/conf-vol-2000.pdf. Roland, G. 2002. “The Political Economy of Transition.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16 (1): 29–50. 3 Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy International experience provides examples of institutional setups that have helped countries implement broad national policies of integration into the global economy. As described in chapter 2, countries such as Australia have set up new commissions and councils to design, monitor, and/or implement medium- and long-term policy programs to reform domestic markets. Such institutions require funding, accountability mechanisms, and high-level endorsement to be effective. A strong, high-level endorsement of a strategic objective, action plan, or road- map can give institutions the space they need to coordinate effectively around an overarching goal and to implement changes on a day-to-day basis. Institutions in charge of trade, investment, and competition policy are key to implementing these reforms and should thus be structured efficiently with a view to allowing complementarity and coordination among them. INVESTMENT: BEST GOVERNMENT PRACTICES FOR JUMP-SHIFTING INVESTMENT PROMOTION POLICY According to international experience, successful institutions in charge of pro- moting foreign direct investment (FDI) have certain best practices in common, regardless of their institutional structure. In March 2016, Argentina set up its investment promotion agency (IPA) through the transformation of Fundación Exportar, a private entity dedicated exclusively to export promotion. The new Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional (AAICI) is now also dedicated to investment promotion and facilitation. The AAICI benefited from the record of Fundación Exportar and from its established governance and over- all structure. The internal organizational structure was adjusted, with trade pro- motion and investment promotion operating as independent business units, with distinct performance indicators but sharing a series of administrative “back office” services. Activities related to trade promotion and investment pro- motion have, by nature, different needs in terms of staff expertise, skills,  85 86 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy target audiences, clients, and stakeholders.1 Best practices point, in general, to the split of trade promotion and investment promotion, although some IPAs with joint mandates have been successful in attracting FDI. Table 3.1 displays the pros and cons of joint promotion. Successful IPAs with joint mandates have some commonalities: they tend to follow an umbrella structure, pool together administration and overseas office infrastructure, invest in market intelligence and image building, and operate a separate technical team for each promotion stream, leading to greater efficiency.2 Another best practice is to separate regulatory and promotional functions. The most effective investment promotion agencies focus on promoting specific locations (table 3.2). They do not have regulatory roles to allow or deny applica- tions for registration or grant incentives (box 3.1). Functions such as granting TABLE 3.1  Pros and cons of joint export and FDI promotion PROS CONS One umbrella for investment and trade promotion policy Different functions and objectives. Loss of accountability and loss of focus in the agency Shared support services: information technology (IT), human Possible problems in coordinating investment and trade sources, accounting, legal services, public relations, research re­­ promotion activities and managing staff with different skills and analysis, shared office accommodation and perspectives Knowledge sharing to benefit strategy development Different time frames, with generally a longer time perspective in investment promotion Potentially more continuity in service delivery. A single point of Often different clients and contact points in companies contact in government—for example, for export-­ oriented investors TABLE 3.2  IPA best practices MAY DO SHOULDN’T DO (AS ADDITIONAL MUST DO (INCOMPATIBLE WITH FUNCTIONS, BUT (CORE MANDATES) INVESTMENT REQUIRING INDEPENDENT PROMOTION) SETUP AND RESOURCES) Investment Marketing X promotion Information provision X Facilitation of meetings, site visits, X and government procedures Advocacy X General promo- Exports X tion Outward investment X SME linkages to FDI X SME development X Administration/ Administration of government X Regulation procedures (such as one-stop shops, licenses, incentives) Management of state land or assets X Administration/negotiation of X government concessions (for example, infrastructure or extractive industries) Administration of public–private X partnerships Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 87 BOX 3.1 Separation of promotion and regulation functions: The case of Canada • The origins of Canada’s IPA, Invest in Canada, and began promotional functions as part of the go back to the Foreign Investment Review Ministry of Industry. Agency. The Foreign Investment Review • In 2003, the government split promotion and Agency was established in 1973 as a purely regulation functions by establishing a new unit regulatory agency, prompted by a surge of with a stronger FDI mandate, Invest in Canada, acquisitions of Canadian firms by corporations under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and in the United States. International Trade. It left investment review • Investment Canada, a promoter-regulator, under the Ministry of Industry. replaced the Foreign Investment Review Agency • Today, Invest in Canada is devoted to investment in 1985. It continued to screen investments promotion, ranking among the top national IPAs.a a. See World Bank (2011) for further details. permits, issuing licenses, or administering and negotiating government conces- sions or public–private partnerships can create conflicts of interest and send confusing signals to investors. They can denaturalize the IPA, diverting resources from its core function of promoting and attracting investment. An IPA’s institutional mandate and organization should allow for effective interaction with investors. In conducive investment climates, IPAs can interact effectively with investors at all stages of the investment life cycle: (1) vision and strategy; (2) investment attraction; (3) investment entry and establishment; (4)  investment protection, expansion, and retention; and (5) linkages and spillovers. It is crucial to ensure that the IPA has a clear mandate, an efficient organizational structure, and sufficient resources (box 3.2). The mandate to serve investors should be precise and focus not only on domestic investors, but in particular on foreign investors. The mandate should define the range, depth, and quality of services that will be provided to different types of FDI and inves- tors along the investment life cycle, a time-phased approach to delivering marketing, information, facilitation, and policy advocacy services. Among investment promotion efforts, policy advocacy is a vital activity with high returns. Although the particularities and strengths of each country should be taken into account, best practices and empirical results3 highlight that, among other key functions such as image building and investor services, advocacy is the function most closely associated with higher levels of investment. IPAs’ budget allocations do not often reflect this prioritization. IPAs might benefit from investing more resources in advocacy activities, such as surveys of the private sector, participation in task forces, policy and legal proposals, and lobbying activities. Empirical analysis suggests that Argentina may achieve greater gains from directing investment promotion activities at foreign investment and the specific characteristics of a few sectors. When IPAs target foreign investment (as opposed to domestic investment), the likelihood increases of attracting the type of foreign investment that can yield substantial benefits for the local economy. Using a sample of 105 countries, Harding and Javorcik (2012) found that FDI 88 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 3.2 Highlights of some best-practice IPAs The following examples highlight some best practices budget. Its board of directors builds on private of IDA Ireland, EDB Singapore, Korea’s KOTRA, and sector representation, but board members are UKTI United Kingdom, which are considered clearly appointed to represent public interests successful IPAs. instead of private ones. IDA Ireland: Incorporated as an autonomous EDB Singapore: EDB Singapore was established in state-sponsored body in 1969, the Irish government’s 1961 as a centralized agency for investment promotion Industrial Development Agency, also known as IDA and has since been the agency responsible for Ireland, has a track record of consistent achievement. Singapore’s success in attracting FDI and promoting Founded at a time when Ireland was not regarded as the country’s economic development. Since 1993, it an attractive investment destination (due to economic has also supported the regionalization initiatives of stagnation, limited natural resources, one of the low- companies in Singapore, administered the FDI incen- est per-capita incomes in Europe, and a small popula- tives regime, administered grants/loans to promote tion), IDA Ireland changed global perceptions and the internationalization of local companies, and sup- helped transform Ireland into a powerhouse of FDI ported inward and outward investment. Some attraction. Some highlights: highlights: • Clear mandate and sector strategy. With the • High-level support: EDB enjoys support from the single mandate of attracting FDI, IDA Ireland highest level of government, with credibility and has developed a focused strategy to promote visibility. industrial development by targeting industries • Four key strategic areas: (1) investment attraction: in which Ireland could achieve a competitive a “single window” promotes, attracts, facilitates, advantage. Today, these are life sciences; infor- and supports investors in the manufacturing mation and communications technology; and and service sector; (2) support for the retention, international and financial services. expansion, and vertical integration of existing • Collaboration with other entities at the national/ industries; (3) improvement of the investment subnational levels. Ireland created a combina- climate: policy advocacy to improve the tion of well-funded state agencies and advisory investment climate; and (4) toward the future: councils that work together and collaborate serving as a “guiding compass” in preparing with IDA Ireland and have specialized func- Singapore for the future. tions. These include Forfas (focused on strate- gic planning); Enterprise Ireland (promoting Korea’s KOTRA: Korea transformed from one of small and medium enterprises [SMEs], domes- the poorest agrarian economies into an industrialized tic industry, and export development); and the country, mainly through an export-based industrial- Science Foundation Ireland (focusing on inno- ization strategy. In the early 1960s, it abandoned the vation). In addition to their own synergies, import-substitution strategy and adopted the “Export these agencies have good working relation- First” policy. KOTRA was founded in 1962 to assist ships with key regulatory agencies at national businesses in exploring foreign markets, basically as a and local levels, as well as with private sector trade promotion organization. FDI promotion was organizations. They all employ professional and included as one of KOTRA’s functions in 1997. KOTRA permanent staff who do not change when the currently carries out trade promotion and investment government changes. promotion under one roof. Regarding investment pro- • Adequate institutional and financial autonomy. motion, it facilitates the entry and successful estab- IDA Ireland has a separate legal mandate that lishment of foreign businesses in Korea and provides grants it a substantial degree of institutional and aftercare services designed to retain and expand financial autonomy and a sufficient and sustained foreign investment in Korea. continued Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 89 Box 3.2, continued UKTI United Kingdom: Named British Trade all UKTI clients, both local exporters and poten- International until 2003, United Kingdom Trade and tial investors, is the UKTI brand. Investment (UKTI) is a joint government agency of • A strong brand: The brand has global reach and the Department for Business, Innovation, and Skills impact. It is recognizable, and the addition of a and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Although crest identifies it as a body of the government UKTI has its own objectives, it also contributes to the of the United Kingdom—in other words, as objectives of both parent ministries. Some highlights: trustworthy. It also clearly brands the United • Great flexibility: The model allows for great flex- Kingdom and is positioned to be the natural ibility in terms of how UKTI presents business choice for companies interested in either trading offers and targets clients. The common factor for with or investing in the country. TABLE 3.3  IPAs and their focus in strategic sectors IPA NO. OF STRATEGIC SECTORS SOME STRATEGIC SECTOR EXAMPLES Invest in France 9 Aerospace, IT, health, agribusiness Invest HK 9 Financial services, IT corporate (Hong Kong) services CINDE 4 Life sciences (medical devices (Costa Rica) manufacturing), IT, advanced manufacturing Note: IT = information technology. TABLE 3.4  Strategic focus of Argentina’s IPA 1. Oil and gas 2. Telecommunications 3. Machinery and equipment 4. Agroindustry 5. Renewable energies 6. Knowledge-based services Source: AAICI’s website: http://www.inversionycomercio.org.ar/en/invest_argentina.php. targeting by investment promotion agencies can be key in attracting efficiency-seeking FDI. It can also raise the quality of exports from the host economy. The cross-country analysis found an increase in the unit values of exports from sectors that are considered priorities in efforts to attract FDI. The top 33 IPAs (25 national, 8 subnational) have targeted specific priority sectors and prominently display them on their websites (table 3.3).4 In the case of AAICI and its website, six sectors are listed as core to the agency (table 3.4). Keeping a restricted list of sectors for investment promotion is expected to yield gains to Argentina. Because not all foreign investment is homogeneous, and in some sec- tors efforts to attract investors are less relevant since the main drivers of invest- ments are available natural resources or the size of the market, focusing marketing services on a few sectors seem to be a more efficient way to use the 90 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 3.3 Main institutional recommendations for fostering IPAs Most successful IPAs have focused mandates and helps to preserve a private sector-like clarity of functions. Giving IPAs responsibilities for several mission and means: other economic mandates different from those of investment promotion can lead to investment promo- • Provide an institutional outlet for addressing tion officials’ lacking the resources, policy support, investment problems before they escalate into or  strategic freedom necessary to achieve these investor–state disputes. substantial goals: • Foster a private-sector-minded culture by hiring staff with private sector experience, offering per- • Ensure clarity on the tasks to be carried out as formance bonuses, and prioritizing competency part of investment promotion (including promo- in English and other foreign languages. tional but not regulatory functions, independent • Reallocate and prioritize tasks with a view to from export promotion). maximizing efficiency. • Focus investment promotion strategies on a few • Develop deep business knowledge through sectors, including knowledge-based services (KBS). research capacity, account managers, and knowl- • Achieve the appropriate balance in promoting edge and relationship management systems. domestic versus foreign investment. • Establish a stronger network with provinces and • Redefine the range, depth, and quality of services at subnational levels of investment and trade provided along the investment life cycle, from promotion units to guarantee investors an ade- marketing information to investment facilitation quate level of service that is homogeneous across and policy advocacy. subnational entities. An autonomous organization with freedom to allo- • Prioritize investment facilitation through internal cate resources according to a results-oriented strategy systems and improved accessibility.a a.  See World Bank (2009) for further details. agency’s limited promotional efforts and resources. Top-performing agencies have some good practices in common that can be adapted and implemented by agencies seeking to increase their share of the market for foreign invest- ment (box 3.3). COMPETITION: ENABLING IMPACTFUL AND INDEPENDENT COMPETITION POLICY IMPLEMENTATION The institution in charge of promoting competition could benefit from addi- tional resources and more functional autonomy. To implement the proposed substantial procompetition reforms, Argentina’s competition authority, the Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia (CNDC) would benefit from more technical and functional autonomy, which would help shield it from poten- tial political pressure. On the operational side, the CNDC will require more resources and will need to dedicate these resources toward more impactful com- petition policy instruments. Currently, Argentina has fewer public officials than countries of comparable size, and this aggravates the procedural workload gen- erated by an ineffective legal framework, especially regarding merger control. Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 91 A bill already approved in the Chamber of Deputies for a new competition law addresses some of these challenges effectively. A new and more autonomous competition authority could increase the like- lihood of overcoming potential pressure by interest groups when opening mar- kets to competition and breaking up cartels. National regulatory authorities are generally considered independent when they are able to implement regula- tions and policies without intrusion from the executive, but they are still obliged to follow general government policy.5 In Argentina, the CNDC’s deci- sions on sanctions for cartels or remedies for proposed merger transactions are reviewed and signed by officials outside the agency and within the Ministry of Production. While some established competition authorities are part of minis- tries or governmental departments and still exhibit a high level of autonomy— in Chile, the European Union (EU), and the United States, for example—it is more common to find an administratively independent competition agency in charge of investigating and adjudicating restrictions on competition. More than half of the 120 competition agencies in the world are institutionally inde- pendent from ministerial control. Of these, 22 are in developing and transition economies.6 The bill for a new competition law, approved in the Camara de Diputados in November 2017,7 proposes the establishment of a new authority with technical and functional autonomy.8 This would be an important step toward ensuring that political pressures by interest groups do not interfere with technical decisions by the agency. The competition authority should be well resourced to conduct sophisticated and procedurally consistent investigations and to implement advocacy initia- tives proactively. The CNDC employs fewer public officials than agencies in comparator countries (figure 3.1). While agency size differs substantially across FIGURE 3.1 Number of public officials in competition authorities 800 780 Number of public officials 599 600 546 464 424 400 384 349 313 200 188 209 114 120 123 78 86 0 a nd a Fi e nd Ze a d ia il o Un th nd ng s Au m lia nd az in bi ric il ic an an do ra Ch la So nla la ex nt om Br Ne Af ite erla al st m Ire Po ge M Ro l h Co Ki Ar ut w Ne d Overall size (2015) Total average Source: Data from Global Competition Review’s (GCR) Rating Enforcement dataset. (https://globalcompetitionreview.com/series/rating-enforcement). Note: The data reflect overall staff, not necessarily those involved directly in competition enforcement. Agencies such as Australia’s have other mandates, but even if only half the staff worked on competition enforcement, Argentina would have a comparatively small staff group. Data for Colombia correspond only to competition enforcement staff, given that the institution is the Superintendence of Industry and Commerce, with 1,200 staff in total. 92 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy countries, larger economies tend to have more staff. To undertake enforcement actions (which can involve, for example, simultaneous onsite inspections of alleged cartel members on multiple premises), the agency needs a minimum cadre of well-trained, full-time officials who are knowledgeable in cartel inves- tigation techniques and procedural matters, such as confidentiality guarantees. The ability to procure modern investigation equipment, such as special IT foren- sics equipment, is critical to tackling sophisticated cartel agreements. For Argentina to boost its anticartel enforcement, tackle government interventions that limit competition through proactive advocacy initiatives, and effectively review merger notifications, the agency requires significantly more staff. Merger notification thresholds in Argentina should be adjusted to currency fluctuations and to ensure effective use of ex ante merger review.9 Thresholds for merger transactions that trigger a review by the CNDC need to be set low enough that they do not exclude a large volume of transactions that may have negative effects on competition, but high enough that they do not unduly burden the competition authority and hamper the progress of (efficient) mergers. International benchmarking suggests that these thresholds are relatively higher in countries with larger economies (figure 3.2). Strong currency devaluations are typically followed by an adjustment of the notification thresholds, as seen in recent reforms in Norway and Turkey. In Argentina, owing to currency devalu- ation, the threshold is now low relative to the size of its economy. As a result, the procedural workload that is generated aggravates the scarcity in staff and resources. A much-needed reform of merger review provisions would introduce further improvements (such as individual thresholds10 and a fast-track proce- dure for mergers that are unlikely to reduce competition). An increase in staff and a reform to streamline the merger control system would allow the agency to strengthen anticartel enforcement. Cartels can raise the prices of affected goods and services by 49 percent on average (Connor 2014). FIGURE 3.2 Merger notification thresholds and size of the economy 7 Denmark Italy 6 India Switzerland Canada China Spain Log notification threshold Portugal 5 Sweden Belgium Brazil Czech Republic Norway 4 Hungary Israel Poland Austria Uruguay Turkey Greece Colombia 3 Costa Rica Albania Serbia Argentina Tunisia Bulgaria South 2 Armenia Africa Cyprus Montenegro 1 Macedonia, FYR Malta 0 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 Log GDP in current US$ 2016 Source: Data from International Merger Law Database and updates by World Bank Group based on methodology from Argent and Begazo Gomez (2015). Note: The values of the notification threshold reflect the status as of 2013, except for Norway and Turkey, which have raised their thresholds since 2013. All values are expressed in US dollars using the exchange rate in 2016. Any threshold increase not captured here would take Argentina farther away from international practice. Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 93 FIGURE 3.3 Number of cartel investigations started and concluded before and after 2007 60 52 50 Number of investigations 43 40 30 21 18 19 19 18 20 16 17 11 12 12 13 10 9 10 7 7 7 8 4 3 4 4 3 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Before After Before After Before After Before After Before After Before After Before After Before After 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 Argentina Brazil Chile Colombia El Salvador Honduras Panama Peru Investigations started Investigations concluded Source: Data from World Bank Anti-Cartel Enforcement database, as of April 2017. Given their harmful effects, agencies are focusing their resources increasingly on anticartel enforcement. Among Latin American agencies, detection of cartels has increased threefold over the last decade in comparison to the decade before (figure 3.3). Agencies in Latin America now detect two cartel cases per year, on average, while the most mature agencies can detect five or more cases each year.  Argentina sanctioned only two cases between 2007 and 2016. The CNDC’s new leadership has already organized capacity-building sessions for staff and quickly upgraded investigation techniques. In September 2017, it suc- cessfully detected and fined a number of health clinics in the Province of Salta for price fixing. Building an effective anticartel program that deters collusive agreements will require continued efforts to strengthen capacities and implementation. In addition to detecting and deterring anticompetitive business practices, the CNDC should devote a substantial portion of its resources to tackling govern- ment restrictions that facilitate anticompetitive business practices in the first place. The Argentine legal framework does not provide for exemptions of any sector or type of firm, and regulatory protection of incumbents is driven instead by legal barriers to market entry by domestic or foreign firms, as well as barriers to network sectors (figure 3.4). These restrictions can be addressed by the com- petition advocacy unit in the CNDC, which could increasingly influence policy decisions and regulatory design. This change would not necessarily require a change in the legal framework; international evidence suggests that the compul- siveness of opinions issued in advocacy initiatives is not a necessary condition for successful advocacy (figure 3.5), and that the specific strategy in advocating for procompetition solutions is more important. The competition authority and sector regulators can collaborate more effectively to strengthen competition principles in network regulation. While comparator countries such as Mexico and South Africa exhibit even 94 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 3.4 Contribution of “legal barriers” to restrictiveness of product market regulation subindicator “regulatory protection of incumbents” Index 0 to 6 from least to most restrictive 3.0 2.7 2.7 2.5 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.9 1.6 1.5 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.0 1.1 1.0 1.0 0.6 0.5 0 m nd ia nd d s ru ia d 16 13 il lia a ca o nd az ric ic an an ar an do Pe ra Ri 20 20 la la ex Br Af lg la nl al st m Po Ire ng a er M Ze Bu Fi Au st Ro h a a th Ki Co ut in in w Ne nt nt So d Ne ite ge ge Un Ar Ar Legal barriers Antitrust exemptions Barriers in network sectors Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http://www.oecd.org/eco/growth​ indicatorsofproductmarketregulation​ /­ homepage.htm). The OECD-WBG PMR data are part of the WBG’s Markets and Competition Policy Database. FIGURE 3.5 Compulsiveness of opinions issued in advocacy initiatives 100 90 80 70 60 Percent 50 40 30 20 10 0 ie e ie e ie e ie r s om d/o er om m om m om m s s s s n on co on co on co in on n ec -in ec e-in ec e-in ec e a W w D m dl dl Lo EC co id id O -in -m m r- h er pe ig w H Up Lo They are nonbinding and can be issued only They are nonbinding, and public bodies with regulation already in place do not need to justify ignoring them Public bodies must justify if they deviate from them They are binding Source: Goodwin and Licetti (2016). Note: Based on review of all winners of the annual WBG-ICN (World Bank Group–International Competition Network) International Advocacy Contest. Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 95 FIGURE 3.6 Restrictiveness of network sector regulation in telecommunications, electricity, gas, post, and rail, air, and road transport, 2013 4.0 3.8 Index 0 to 6 from least to most restrictive 3.5 3.0 3.0 3.0 2.7 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.3 2.2 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.0 0.8 0.5 0 m ru lia s ia il nd nd ia d d a o ca a nd az in ric ic an an an ar do Pe ra Ri la la ex nt Br Af lg la al nl st m Ire Po ng a ge er M Ze Bu Fi Au st Ro h th Ki Co Ar ut w Ne So d Ne ite Un Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation /­ database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http://www.oecd.org​ eco/growth​ /­indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm). BOX 3.4 Main institutional recommendations to foster competition in Argentina Competition law enforcement and advocacy can • Continue expanding staff capabilities in volume become more effective if the Argentine Competition and technical profile. Authority is granted greater autonomy, especially in • Reorient staff and resources according to pri- the decision-making process. The government of orities for competition policy in Argentina (for Argentina can further enhance institutional effective- example, cartel enforcement). ness by taking the following measures with respect to • Strengthen advocacy program and resources to organization and resources: engage with sector regulators. greater  restrictiveness in the regulation of network sectors (figure 3.6), Argentina’s restrictiveness score in the road and air transport sectors is the high- est among comparators. In the case of railway networks, and given the vertical connections between majority shareholders and cargo rail transport end-users, regulators and the competition authority could, for example, collaborate to ensure effective third-party access regulations are in place where appropriate (figure 3.7). The competition authority and sector regulators could sign a mem- orandum of understanding to ensure coherent regulatory implementation. In the telecommunications sector, this could increase procedural predictability in merger reviews, where both the telecommunications regulator and the com- petition authority would have specific regulatory functions. 96 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 3.7 Extension of rail networks in Argentina, majority shareholders of each network, and their main product market, 2017 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Nuevo Central FerroExpreso Ferrosur Roca Belgrano Cargas Belgrano Cargas Belgrano Cargas Argentino S.A. Pampeano S.A. S.A. y Logística - y Logística - Logística - San Martin Urquiza Belgrano Majority AGD S.A. Techint S.A. Loma Negra National Government shareholders (oilseeds, grains) (steel) (cement) Operational network (km) Tons/km (in millons) Income (millons of AR$) Source: Data from Comisión Nacional de Regulación de Transporte, 2017 (https://www.cnrt.gob.ar/estad%C3%ADsticas-del -transporte-ferroviario). TRADE: BEST INSTITUTIONAL PROCESSES FOR TRADE POLICY FORMULATION AND IMPLEMENTATION The preparation and conduct of negotiations, together with the implementation of trade policy, are the core responsibilities of trade institutions.11 Mandates and institutional arrangements for trade policy vary from one country to another. In some countries, a single entity is in charge of trade (for example, the Ministry of Trade). In other countries, trade policy is the purview of an institution housed within another institution (such as a ministry of foreign affairs, economy, or trea- sury). In still others, a special trade policymaking body brings together represen- tatives from different ministries. Regardless of the institutional setup, three tasks need to be performed to ensure effective participation in the trade system: anal- ysis, communication and coordination, and representation (box 3.5). Interagency coordination is an especially important feature in trade policy, which involves several government agencies. Coordination might entail resis- tance to the transfer of authority from governmental bodies with trade-related issues to the responsible ministry of trade or equivalent; hence, the establish- ment of mechanisms of information sharing is paramount. The United States model, while not easily replicable in other countries because of the idiosyncrasy of its constitutional arrangement and the amount of resources it requires, offers some good examples of interagency coordination through the Trade Policy Review Group and the Trade Policy Staff Committee (box 3.6). Secondment of personnel to the Office of the United States Trade Representative from other departments, such as state, agriculture, and the treasury, for instance, are another way of fostering cooperation. In the case of the European Union, coordination takes place among its different institutions and those of its member states, Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 97 BOX 3.5 Main responsibilities for effective trade negotiation Effective efforts in negotiating and implementing • Foster high level of interagency coordination to trade agreements involve several key activities, manage the complexity of trade matters nowa- including those related to analysis, communication days and coordination, and representation. • Promote stakeholder consultations and outreach Activities on analysis include to: efforts on trade agreements to maximize opportunities for all involved stakeholders, • Build institutional capacity to collect, analyze, including SMEs and civil society utilize, and disseminate trade-related informa- tion, including statistical data on the domestic Responsibilities related to representation should: and international economy, tariff and nontariff • Represent the interests and positions of the coun- barriers, treaties and other legal instruments, try to foreign counterparts and international national laws and regulations, and academic and organizations and include permanent presence own analyses to support negotiations in foreign missions, participation in ministerial • Conduct independent assessment of negotiated meetings, hosting of international gatherings, agreements to allow public scrutiny and ensure and so on legitimacy • Be carried out by someone with a formal dip- lomatic title or an official government official. Communication and coordination responsibilities Trade representatives should be fully trained in include those to: trade policy and negotiation techniques, active, • Implement mechanisms that facilitate communi- informed, and involved (at home and abroad), cation among the ministry in charge of trade (or and able to cover “a wide range of issues in a equivalent), other government agencies, and civil shifting array of bilateral, regional, and multilat- society—before, during, and after negotiations eral negotiations.”a a.  See Van Grasstek (2008) for further discussion. BOX 3.6 Interagency coordination in the United States This box describes the mechanisms for coordina- Two subcabinet committees, each chaired by the tion and consensus building among government USTR and made up of 20 agencies, complement the agencies of the United States on matters of trade interagency coordination system. One, the Trade Policy policy. This interagency process in the United States Staff Committee (TPSC), is composed of more than 80 is often held up as an example of best practices. The subcommittees. The USTR solicits inputs from the United States Trade Representative (USTR) devel- appropriate subcommittees, which in turn provide rec- ops its responsibilities in consultation with an inter- ommendations to the full TPSC as the basis for reaching agency policy organization established under the interagency consensus. The Trade Policy Review Group Trade Expansion Act of 1962. The National is composed of representatives at the undersecretary Economic Council, a cabinet-level committee level and is advised by the Trade Policy Staff Committee. chaired by the president, deals only with issues of The United States International Trade Commission high importance. is a nonvoting member of these communities. 98 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy adding a layer of coordination at the supranational level. International trade agreements are negotiated through the Council of the European Union and the European Commission, and member states participate independently where the agreement involves mixed responsibilities. The Directorate General for Trade of the European Commission develops specific trade policies. Domestic trade falls under the competency of each member state. Specialized trade units are the best places to conduct consultations and legit- imize internal negotiations with the private sector during trade negotiations. Countries like Mexico have established a recognized consultation process through which to channel the participation of the private sector and strategic social groups. The Coordinating Body of Foreign Trade Business Associations (Coordinadora de Organismos Empresariales de Comercio Exterior, in Spanish) is the private sector coordinating body for North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) negotiations and an advisory body to the government. It comprises business organizations that are involved in foreign trade and international matters. Another consultation body is the Advisory Council, which integrates representatives of the private sector (which constitutes the majority), the gov- ernment, academia, labor, and the agricultural sector. Consultations take place throughout the trade policymaking process, including the ratification and imple- mentation of trade agreements. Many countries in Latin America have opted for trade negotiation institu- tions with functions that are separate from international diplomatic matters, while others have chosen to concentrate these functions under one ministry. While institutional setups vary, countries like Colombia, Costa Rica, and Peru have arguably benefited from dividing economic and political advisory roles across different ministries—the Ministry of Trade (or equivalent) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, respectively. Costa Rica created its Ministry of Foreign Trade in 1996 and to date has signed 14 regional trade agreements. On the other hand, Chile, which participates in 30 regional trade agreements, is an example of how trade responsibilities can also be handled under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Well-defined functions and close interagency coordination seem to be more important than the specific institutional loca- tion of responsibilities. Chile’s Directorate General for International Economic Relations (Dirección General de Relaciones Económicas Internacionales in Spanish), under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is the pub- lic entity in charge of executing and coordinating international economic relations. The directorate coordinates all government agencies that are involved in foreign trade. In this sense, trade negotiations are coordinated with other ministries through the Interministerial Commission for International Economic Relations, chaired by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and integrating the ministries of finance, economy, and agriculture, as well as the secretary general of the presidency. Several recommendations can be advanced on the institutional aspects of trade policy (see also box 3.7). Assessing the technical capacity and skills needed to prepare, conduct, and implement trade policy, in light of recent international experience, can help streamline roles, support effective coordination, and ulti- mately contribute to boosting trade. Trade policy is technical, and trade agree- ments must guarantee predictability. It is important, therefore, to assess which resources and skills are necessary for implementing and negotiating trade policies—and coordinating with stakeholders, including the private sector— ­ among other matters. Strengthening Institutions for Effective Integration into the Global Economy | 99 BOX 3.7 Main recommendations for effective trade policy making and implementation Main recommendations on trade policy institutional • Reassess resource gaps regarding the specific aspects center on improving interagency processes and expertise needed to prepare, negotiate, and stakeholder participation, as well as on building techni- implement trade agreements effectively. Key cal capacity on trade agreements. These include to: capabilities to consider include expertise in technical areas of deep agreements, such as • Reassess the trade policy formulation process competition, service trade, intellectual property, and compare it with practices in other countries. e-commerce, and so on; region-specific expertise, This should consider, in particular, the coor- such as analytical units focused on regional areas dination and consensus-building mechanisms (for example, Asia or China); and resources to among government agencies and processes to conduct independent assessments of negotiated maintain active consultations with private sector agreements. and social groups, as well as other stakeholders, before and after negotiations NOTES 1. See Llobet et al. (2017) for a detailed discussion of common elements of the governance structures of best-in-class IPAs. 2. See UNCTAD (2013) for further discussion. 3. See Morisset and Andrews-Johnson (2004) for further details. 4. See World Bank (2009). 5. See Lavrijssen and Ottow (2012) for further discussion. 6. See UNCTAD (2011). 7. The bill (“Ley de Defensa de la Competencia”) was pending approval by Argentina’s Senate at the time of this writing. 8. The bill could be strengthened further by clarifying the rules for designation and removal of board members to avoid undue discretion and political pressure or even the risk of judicial prosecution for the due exercise of their functions. 9. For a full discussion, see Argent and Begazo Gomez (2015). 10. This means that a notification would be needed only if the combined volume of sales (or assets) and the individual volume of sales (or assets) of each company, or at least one of the companies (in some cases, for example, the company being acquired), exceeded the thresholds. 11. See Van Grasstek (2008) for further details. REFERENCES Argent, J. T., and T. P. Begazo Gomez. 2015. International Benchmarking of Merger Notification Thresholds. Unpublished memo. Connor, J. M. 2014. Price-Fixing Overcharges: Revised 3rd Edition. https://ssrn.com​ abstract=2400780 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2400780. /­ Goodwin, T., and M. Licetti. 2016. Transforming Markets through Competition. Washington, DC: World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/640191467990945906​ /­pdf/104806-REPF-Transforming-Markets-Through-Competition.pdf. Harding, T., and B. Javorcik. 2012. “Foreign Direct Investment and Export Upgrading.” Review of Economics and Statistics 94 (4): 964–80. 100 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Llobet, G., V. di Fiori, E. von Uexkull, J. Ramon Perea, D. Gomez Altamirano, and R. Echandi. 2017. “Leveraging Foreign Direct Investment to Transform Argentina’s Export to the World:  Considerations for the Modernization of Argentina’s Investment Policies and Promotion Efforts.” Background paper prepared for this report. Morisset, J., and K. Andrews-Johnson. 2004. “The Effectiveness of Promotion Agencies at Attracting Foreign Direct Investment.” Foreign Investment Advisory Services, Occasional Paper 16. World Bank, Washington, DC. Lavrijssen, S., and A. Ottow. 2012. “Independent Supervisory Authorities: A Fragile Concept” Legal Issues of Economic Integration 39 (4): 419–31. UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development). 2011. Foundations of an Effective Competition Agency. Geneva: UNCTAD. UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development). 2013. “Optimizing Government Services: A Case for Joint Investment and Trade Promotion?” The IPA Observer, no. 1. http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/webdiaepcb2013d1_en.pdf. Van Grasstek, C. 2008. “The Challenges of Trade Policymaking: Analysis, Communication and Representation.” Policy Issues in International Trade and Commodity Series, no. 36. https:// www.peacepalacelibrary.nl/ebooks/files/UNCTAD_VanGrasstek_Challenges-Trade​ -Policymaking_e.pdf. World Bank. 2009. “Investment Promotion Essentials: What Sets the World’s Best Investment Facilitators Apart from the Rest.” Investment Climate in Practice, no. 6. https:// openknowledge.worldbank.org/ bitstream/handle/10986​ / 10526/503560BRI0​Box31​ actice1GIPB01PUBLIC1.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y. World Bank. 2011. “Investment Regulation and Promotion: Can They Coexist in One Body?” Investment Climate in Practice, no. 16. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en​ /832851474483734837/pdf/802530BRI0Inpr00Box0379802B00OUO-90.pdf. 4 A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy Trade, investment, and competition policies are closely interlinked. In an open economy, trade and investment policies are complementary, not interchangeable. Enhancing trade openness spurs foreign investment. Foreign direct investment (FDI), in turn, increases trade flows, as multinational corporations can help host countries overcome fixed costs and barriers to entry into international markets by importing new inputs, expanding networks of suppliers in the host economy, and exporting inputs or final goods.1 Easing output tariffs and entry of foreign companies tighten competition in the domestic market, while competitive national markets create opportunities for investment and trade.2 These three policies also determine the conditions that firms face as they attempt to integrate into the global economy. Successful integration into the global economy relies on the following conditions faced by firms: (1) the opportunity to enter and invest in the domestic market—either as domestic firms or foreign firms; (2) access to efficient input markets (beyond labor and finance) through compet- itively priced inputs and services of adequate quality and variety; (3) the ability to compete on a level playing field through nondiscriminatory access to essential facilities and undistorted market conditions; and (4) the capacity to thrive in global markets (figure 4.1). All of these factors are influenced directly by trade, investment, and competition policies and are elaborated below. 1. Opportunities to enter and invest. Firms (domestic or foreign) can enter and invest in one market through various means: setting up a production plant, importing their products that have been produced elsewhere and developing retail and distribution activities for those products, or acquiring/merging with a local firm that is already established in the domestic market. Trade, investment, and competition policies directly influence these individual entry steps. For instance, the entry process may require licenses (which might be general or sec- tor-specific), approval from a competition authority to acquire or merge with a local company, potentially an incentive from investment promotion agencies to  101 102 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 4.1 Essential conditions for successful integration into global markets For Argentina to become more competitive and integrate into the global economy, firms need to have… …opportunities to enter 1 and/or invest as domestic or foreign firms into new domestic markets …access to efficient input markets 2 (besides labor and capital) through competitively priced inputs and services of quality and variety …ability to compete on a level 3 playing field through nondiscriminatory access to essential facilities and nondistorted market conditions 4 …capacity to expand and thrive in global markets cover the risk and cost of investment (especially for foreign companies), approval to import inputs (import licenses and tariffs), and so on. 2. Access to efficient input markets. Once settled in, firms must implement their production strategies. It is then essential to access competitively priced inputs and services (besides labor and capital) of adequate quality and variety. Trade, competition, and investment policies directly affect the conditions under which inputs and services are offered in the economy. For instance, the existence of tariff barriers or nontariff measures (NTMs) influences the cost and availability of intermediate inputs. Similarly, the price, availability, and quality of infrastructure services (such as energy, telecommunications, transport, and logistics) are influ- enced by market regulation, while specific government policies might impose certain requirements regarding the use of domestic inputs and services in allow- ing firms to operate in the economy. 3. Ability to compete on a level playing field. Firms cannot implement their pro- duction strategies efficiently if they cannot compete on a level playing field. Having nondiscriminatory access to essential facilities and undistorted market conditions is necessary to ensure that firms thrive based on merit. Trade, compe- tition, and investment policies can protect—but also distort—the level playing field. For instance, regulations that discriminate or allow for discretionary appli- cation distort the level playing field and therefore reduce incentives for firms to invest, compete, and become more productive. Similarly, the lack of nondiscrimi- natory access conditions in infrastructure for all players can affect service standards and ultimately influence the ability of firms to compete in the market. Moreover, the absence of proper rules that guarantee competitive neutrality in A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 103 markets with state-owned enterprises (SOEs) can prevent firms from expanding their activities based on merit. 4. Capacity to expand and thrive in global markets. The capacity of firms to expand their activities, first domestically and then abroad, as (domestic or foreign) exporters of goods and services or by opening production plants abroad, is influenced by government interventions. Here again, trade, competition, and investment policies play a critical role. For instance, expansion and growth of firms in the domestic market can be impaired if merger control policies are lengthy and costly. In addition, high costs of export inspection and inefficient border management can ultimately influence the ability of firms to sell their products abroad. Similarly, export taxes and export bans influence the actual and potential volumes of exports sold by any firm. Moreover, the absence of invest- ment protection and grievance policies can negatively affect FDI retention, which then reduces the propensity of foreign-owned companies both to expand their activities in domestic markets and to sell their products abroad. When taken together and implemented in a coherent way, trade, investment, and competition policies can bring large, long-term payoffs. Figure 4.2 illustrates how specific measures designed under these three policy areas are associated with each of the conditions and highlight the positive effects on productivity dynamics and shared prosperity that would stem from coherent policy imple- mentation in these three areas. A recent strand of the empirical literature finds that structural reforms combining trade, investment, and competition reforms (among others) bring positive impacts on economic growth and other outcome variables, such as productivity, capital intensity, and employment.3 Coherent design and implementation of these three policies relies on insti- tutional coordination and interaction. Although, in Argentina, different institu- tions hold the primary mandate in each of these three policy domains, they can inform each other to ensure consistent policies that achieve the objectives of integrating Argentina into the world economy. Trade policy is under the aus- pices of the Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade (Subsecretaría de Comercio Exterior) and the Cancillería, which are under the Ministry of Production (Secretariat of Trade) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Worship, respec- tively. Competition policy is managed by the Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia (CNDC) and sector regulators, and investment policy by the Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional (AAICI). These institutions define the objectives of each policy area independently; but imple- menting their respective policy programs can sometimes obstruct policy objectives defined under the other two areas, which can ultimately hamper the overall objective of integrating Argentina into global markets. For instance, the AAICI’s objective of promoting FDI in global value chains (GVCs) can be impeded if trade policy institutions issue nonautomatic import licenses for intermediate products along those GVCs. By the same token, the CNDC’s objec- tive of keeping a level playing field among domestic and foreign competitors can be truncated by discretionary and selective investment incentives employed by the AAICI. Similarly, the Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade’s objective of accessing new markets for exports can be impaired by distortionary regulation of input services (such as logistics, telecommunications, and energy) that ham- pers efficiency. In this context, institutional cooperation and interaction are essential to achieving the overall objective of integrating Argentina into the world economy. Box 4.1 shows some successful examples of interinstitu- tional cooperation. 104 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 4.2 Associations between trade, investment, and competition policy areas and conditions for successful integration into global markets For Argentina to become more competitive in the global economy… …which requires adequate …generating the implementation of trade, …firms need to have following effects on ...and boosting shared competition, and investment policy the following… instruments at the national and market and productivity prosperity. dynamics… subnational levels… Investor entry regimes …opportunities to enter Incentive regimes Consumer welfare: and/or invest Investment promotion policies and capacity More product variety as domestic or foreign firms Market access to domestic markets into new domestic markets (import output tariffs and NTMs) Better jobs: With Custom procedures/border management international standards Merger control policies and potential for Exclusive rights/monopolies knowledge transfer Knowledge spillovers from from FDI Favorable labor and FDI (especially vertical, capital markets and through backward and innovation infrastructure forward linkages) Reduced exercise of market Access to efficient input power Conducive environment for linkages with markets local suppliers Between-firm/sector through competitively priced Consumer welfare: productivity improvements inputs and services of Import input tariffs and NTMs Better deals and more (Reallocation of market good quality and variety variety for essential shares toward higher productivity firms) consumer products in domestic markets, too Ability to compete on a Within-firm productivity (with distributional level playing field Competitive neutrality improvements effects) through nondiscriminatory Market regulation in key sectors (incentives to invest in access to essential facilities (access, nondiscrimination) new technologies, cut and undistorted market Antitrust enforcement managerial slack, adopt conditions new management practices, change input variety, improve production Investment protection processes, change the Investment grievance management output mix, and diversify) Investment aftercare (retention, expansion, Better Jobs: More and diversification) productive jobs Capacity to thrive in global markets Export taxes and border management (learning by exporting, deepening linkages Merger control policies with local suppliers) Antitrust enforcement (cartels and abuse of dominance) Note: Purple-colored policy instruments refer to trade instruments, blue to competition policy instruments, and green to investment policy instruments. BOX 4.1 Successful examples of interinstitutional cooperation The current administration in Argentina has been work- First, the AAICI has been facilitating and address- ing to strengthen cooperation among key policy institu- ing specific bureaucratic hurdles faced by investors in tions. As a successful example, the AAICI—through its key areas, including: Facilitation Unit (Gerencia de Facilitacion)—has been • Production (encompassing coordination with coordinating with other government institutions to ease the Ministry of Production, particularly the the investment process in two main ways. Trade Secretariat) continued A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 105 Box 4.1, continued • Customs and fiscal duties (which includes coor- Tierras Rurales) more flexible to promote for- dination with the Federal Administration of eign investment. Decree No. 820 was approved Public Revenues, including the customs depart- in June 2016. ment, and the Secretariat of Public Revenue • Personal Data Law (Ley de Datos Personales): under the Treasury) The National Directorate for the Protection of • Subnational government (including coordination Personal Data (Dirección Nactional de Protección with provincial authorities for investment and de Datos Personales, or DNPDP) has recently export promotion) elaborated a proposal to modify Law No. 25326, which is perceived to obstruct innovation and Second, the AAICI has been presenting proposals investment in the sector. The AAICI conducted to streamline laws and regulations that affect the busi- working groups with key players in the sector ness environment, including key interventions such as (including Cabase, Google, Facebook, Amazon, these, so far managed by the AAICI : BT, Microsoft, and Nosis) to collect suggestions • Land Law (Ley de Tierras): The AAICI has for potential changes to the proposal. A technical coordinated efforts with the national land reg- note was then elaborated and sent to the DNPDP, istry to draft a decree aimed at making the among other authorities, with proposed modifi- framework under the Rural Lands Law (Ley de cations to the law. OPPORTUNITIES TO ENTER AND INVEST Entrepreneurs in Argentina generally have difficulties in starting a business, reg- istering property, and paying taxes. The country’s overall investment climate is not conducive to the entry and establishment of new firms, whether they are domestic or foreign-owned. As reported in Doing Business 2018 (World Bank Group 2018), Argentina ranks in the bottom third of countries on ease of doing business, at 117th out of 190 countries.4 Overall, Argentina underperforms in areas related to entering the market, such as the ease of starting a business, deal- ing with construction permits, registering property, and paying taxes (figure 4.3; figure 4.4). According to Doing Business 2018, starting a business requires 13 pro- cedures, takes 24 days, and costs 10.4 percent of per-capita income for men and women. Dealing with construction permits requires 22 procedures, takes 347 days, and costs 3.1 percent of the warehouse value. In addition to the general obstacles that exist to opening a business, some firms cannot enter or invest in specific markets, which affects market competi- tion. Barriers to entry in certain markets are so high that they can effectively prevent entry of new players. For example, professional bodies license lawyers, accountants, engineers, and architects. Membership in the association is manda- tory for lawyers and accountants to practice, and the number of tasks that can be offered only by licensed professionals is higher than in other countries (figure 4.5). As discussed above, legal barriers to entry in Argentina are higher than in comparator countries and a main driver of overall regulatory protection of incumbents. Entry regulation in the air transport sector, for example, increases the sector’s overall regulatory restrictiveness (figure 4.6). Only national carriers may serve the domestic air transportation market, and before new air carrier 106 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 4.3 Distance to frontier scores on Doing Business topics, Argentina, 2018 100 Scores from 0 (lowest performance) 80 75 70 to 100 (= frontier) 63 65 60 57 55 56 49 49 41 40 20 0 s its ty ty it s s rs s cy es or xe ct ed de ci er en rm tra st in ta tri op cr r lv ve s pe bo n ec ng bu so ng pr co in el n ss yi in ti a g ity io g Pa ro g et in g g in ct tin or ac tin in G er rc tru in lv et st fo ar g so m ns gi G in St En Re Re co ad g tin Tr ith ec w ot g Pr lin ea D Source: Data from World Bank Group Doing Business 2018 dataset (http://www​ .­doingbusiness.org​/­data). FIGURE 4.4 Argentina’s ranking on Doing Business topics, 2018 Ranks range from 1st at center to 190th at outer edge Starting a business (157) Resolving insolvency Dealing with construction (101) permits (171) Enforcing contracts (102) Getting electricity (95) Trading across borders Registering property (117) (116) Paying taxes (169) Getting credit (77) Protecting minority investors (43) Source: Data from World Bank Group Doing Business 2018 dataset (http://www.doingbusiness.org​ /­data). licenses can be granted, the executive government conducts a public hearing to determine whether granting the license would be convenient and serve the “public purpose” of airlines’ services. In the media sector, Law No. 25750 estab- lishes a limit on foreign ownership of newspapers, magazines, publishing com- panies, and television and radio companies. Article 2 allows foreign companies to hold up to a 30 percent stake in the capital and voting rights of such companies. Where firms consider entering and investing, the incentives to do so are inef- fectively designed and discretionary. As part of a complex fiscal regime, A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 107 FIGURE 4.5 Number of professional tasks with exclusive or shared exclusive rights, 2013 12 11 10 8 8 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 5 4 5 4 4 2 0 Accountancy Legal Engineering Architecture Argentina Average OECD Average comparator countries Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http://www​ .oecd.org/eco/growth/indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm) Note: Comparator countries include Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Finland, Ireland, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Peru, Poland, Romania, South Africa, and the United Kingdom. FIGURE 4.6 Contribution of “entry barriers” to restrictiveness of nonmanufacturing regulation subindicator “air transport,” 2013 Index 0 to 6 from least to most restrictive 6 5 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 lia Bu il a ca ng u m s nd d Ze o d Ro nd Ar nia ut ina a nd az Co ari ric r c an an Ne do Pe ra Ri i la la ex a So nt Br Af lg la nl al st m Ire Po a ge er M Fi Au st h th Ki w d Ne ite Un Entry barriers Public ownership Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http:// www.oecd.org​/­eco/growth/indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm). Argentina’s federal, provincial, and municipal governments offer incentives to promote investment in certain sectors and localities. While this intervention can advance public objectives and correct market failures caused by informa- tion asymmetries, externalities, economies of scale, and other circumstances, it can also impose costs and create distortions that might outweigh their benefits. 108 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Investment incentives offered by the federal and local levels of Argentina’s gov- ernment promote specific business decisions, such as expansion or hiring, rather than a firm’s establishment in the respective territory (that is, behavioral rather than locational incentives) and are not targeted precisely. This lack of precise targeting entails significant costs for the country and results that are not neces- sarily effective. Moreover, there is neither an assessment of the effectiveness of incentives nor an inventory of incentives or mapping of procedures to adjudicate incentives. This can result in discretionary application of those incentives. Provincial governors often negotiate incentive packages bilaterally with large companies, in some instances to cover office rent costs and subsidize salaries and other benefits. A firm that aims to enter a domestic market through trade (imports) rather than investment faces significant barriers to trade, especially NTMs. Beyond tar- iffs, NTMs and procedural obstacles in Argentina are widespread. According to NTM data by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), over 600 measures affected essentially all tariff lines in Argentina in 2015.5 Coverage ratios—the percentage of imports subject to at least one NTM— were close to 100 percent.6 Prior to 2016, import licenses were the main NTMs. Even after excluding these horizontal measures, a large percentage of imports is subject to standards (such as sanitary and phytosanitary measures and technical barriers to trade) and quantity controls.7 Quantity control measures reflected in the database, aside from import licenses that are not subject to automatic approval, include import restrictions for used machinery, equipment, instru- ments, and devices and their parts (figure 4.7).8 The coverage ratio for these NTMs is higher than for other countries.9 The restrictiveness of NTMs is also high, as measured by the ad valorem equivalents (AVEs) of NTMs.10 According to estimated AVEs, NTMs during the years 2012–14 were, on average, at least twice as restrictive as tariff barriers; the estimated average NTM AVE for FIGURE 4.7 Coverage ratios of NTMs in Argentina and other countries, 2015 100 80 60 Percent 40 20 0 SPS TBT Quantity Price controls Controls Argentina Other countries Source: Data from UNCTAD TRAINS dataset (http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DITC/Trade- Analysis​ Non-Tariff-Measures/NTMs-trains.aspx) and UN COMTRADE dataset (https:// /­ comtrade.un.org/data). Note: Coverage ratios capture how much trade is subject to an NTM measure. They do not reflect the restrictiveness of the NTM, only the incidence. They do not include local content requirements. SPS = Sanitary and Phytosanitary; TBT = Technical barriers to trade. A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 109 FIGURE 4.8 Estimated AVEs of goods NTMs in Argentina, 2012–14 30 25 20 Percent 15 10 5 0 Argentina Agri and food Manufacturing Natural resources and energy Source: Data from UNCTAD TRAINS dataset (http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DITC /­ /Trade-Analysis​ Non-Tariff-Measures/NTMs-trains.aspx) and UN COMTRADE dataset (https://comtrade.un.org/data). Argentina was 22 percent, as compared to a (simple) average tariff of 12 percent in 2015. The largest restrictions were for manufacturing, where the AVE is about 26 percent, followed by agriculture and food (16 percent) and natural resources and energy products (less than 8 percent) (figure 4.8). Foreign firms struggle with various procedures when they seek to enter the Argentine economy, either by investing or importing. In 2016, the AAICI man- aged 305 inquiries to facilitate investment; 195 cases were successfully resolved. Of these resolved cases, 64 percent were related to foreign trade issues (mainly import and export procedures and import duties), while 4 percent dealt with the Industry Secretariat and the tax authorities. Most of the facilitation cases (79 percent) related to facilitating procedures before governmental authorities, which suggests that the AAICI has acted as intermediary with different author- ities to remove red tape that hampers business operations. The government is already improving opportunities for foreign and domestic firms to enter and invest. Argentina introduced Sistema Integral de Monitoreo de Importaciones (SIMI), a new licensing system for importing, reducing the time required for documentary compliance. Paying taxes is now less costly due to the increase in the threshold for the 5 percent turnover tax, and easier due to improvements in the online portal for filing taxes. The CNDC has conducted 12 market studies to identify barriers to entry and competition in specific markets. It has supported the opening of the payment services sector to competition. The AAICI has already resolved at least 195 cases in which investors have encoun- tered obstacles to entry and investment, while the Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade has advanced with multiple bilateral trade negotiations to open markets. There is room for further improvement to help firms enter and invest. There are four main areas of potential reform (box 4.2). The first would be to address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles that affect the ease of doing business, particu- larly in the entry phase and in trading across borders. The second would be to open major sectors for investment and eliminate barriers that limit market entry. The third would be to improve the incentive framework so that it is effective in attracting FDI. The fourth would be to lower tariffs and NTMs in priority sec- tors. To ensure effective implementation of these suggested reforms, and to 110 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 4.2 Main policy recommendations for opening up opportunities to enter and invest Potential reforms to boost opportunities for firms to • Conduct a systematic inventory of incentives. enter and invest in Argentina would include the • Complete a procedural mapping of steps to following: adjudicate incentives. Address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles that • Design incentives to avoid the risk of anticom- affect the ease of doing business, particularly in petitive behavior (potential area of cooperation the  entry phase and in trading across borders. with the CNDC). For example: • Continuously assess the effectiveness of investment incentives. • Create “one-stop shops” to provide all necessary information on the notifications and licenses Lower tariffs and NTMs in priority sectors and required to open a business. pursue multilateral tariff reductions through free • Broadly apply the “silence is consent” rule. trade agreements (FTAs). For example: • Introduce a general procedure for regulatory • Unilateral tariff reduction for final goods: Start simplification. with the sectors with the lowest labor adjustment Open key sectors for investment and eliminate costs (computer central processing units, furni- barriers that limit market entry. For example: ture, home appliances) or the highest impact on GDP (furniture, textiles and apparel). • In the air transport sector, eliminate the “public • Unilateral NTM reforms: Harmonize standards hearing” requirement for granting new licenses, among Mercosur parties; minimize use of nonau- and open the domestic air transport market to tomatic licenses. foreign carriers. • Multilateral tariff reduction: Pursue “community Improve the incentive framework to boost effective- reforms” at Mercosur and FTA with the ness in attracting efficiency-seeking FDI. For example: European Union (EU). prevent the introduction of new policies or regulations that obstruct opportuni- ties for entry and investment, cooperation and interaction among the major institutions in the trade, investment, and competition policy domains are import- ant. The evidence shows that the same barrier can reduce investment, competi- tion, and trade. The CNDC, AAICI, and Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade can collaborate to ensure that incentives, standards, statutory requirements, and licenses do not unduly obstruct entry and investment overall. ACCESS TO EFFICIENT INPUT MARKETS Domestic and foreign firms do not have access to efficiently priced and reliable energy services. Successive government interventions in all segments of the energy industry have contracted energy supply and affected the reliability and prices of energy services. In the electricity generation segment, the definition of an administrative price that was lower than the marginal cost, together with price caps, in 2001 and the associated introduction of a compensatory mecha- nism for inefficient plants gradually eliminated the long-term signals in energy and power prices, which contributed to lowering the reserve margin and dis- couraging more efficient, lower-cost investments. Until 2007, there were A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 111 practically no new generation plants. In the transmission and distribution seg- ment of the energy industry, the administrative freezing of prices has affected the short-term and long-term sustainability of several enterprises, reducing investment and lowering service quality. In 2004, Argentina created an SOE to provide all electricity services and to exploit and commercialize oil and natural gas resources, which has created additional distortions in potentially competi- tive segments. As an overall consequence of the government’s persistent inter- ventions in electricity markets, the energy sector’s commercial balance has changed dramatically. Subsidies to compensate for differences between internal and external prices amounted to 3.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2014 (Castro, Szenkman, and Lotito, 2015). Investors face similar challenges in the telecommunications service sector. Telecommunications penetration is high. In 2015, 69 percent of inhabitants had Internet access, and mobile subscriptions were high, at 67.3 per 100 inhabitants.11 Argentina lags in infrastructure and quality of Internet service, however, ranking 36th of 50 countries on the 2017 Global Connectivity Index.12 Broadband speed, measured as the proportion of connections above 4 megabits per second, is low (40 percent) compared to the best performers in Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) (67 percent) and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries (87 percent) (figure 4.9).13 This outcome is mostly the result of inefficient regulatory design, which has delayed or pre- vented efficient firms from entering and thriving in the market. For instance, regulatory asymmetries explicitly prohibit participation in certain segments of the telecommunications industry, preventing the provision of converged and better-quality services. Specifically, companies that offer pay television by sub- scription can offer telecommunications services, but telecommunications com- panies cannot offer television services. Also, delays in spectrum assignment processes and the absence of rules to protect competitive neutrality have  prevented mobile operators from connecting more people at faster speeds. Between 2000 and 2015, there were no auctions for assigning spectrum. FIGURE 4.9 Broadband speed, April 2017 OECD 88 Global 84 LAC leaders 81 Argentina 60 Percentage of connections above 4 mbps Source: Data from Akamai (2017). Note: LAC (Latin American) leaders comprise Uruguay (86 percent), Chile (78 percent), and Mexico (78 percent). OECD is an average of OECD member countries (except Iceland). 112 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 4.10 Logistics Performance Index vs. GDP per capita (2014–16 average) 4.5 4.0 Logistics performance index avg. 2014 and 2016 3.5 3.0 Argentina 2.5 2.0 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 Log of GDP per capita (PPP avg. 2014 and 2016) LPI Fitted values Source: Data from World Bank Logistics Performance Index dataset (https://lpi​ worldbank.org/) and WDI dataset (http://wdi.worldbank.org/tables). .­ In 2015, 700MHZ spectrum (for 4G) was assigned to Empresa Argentina de Soluciones Satelitales Sociedad Anónima (ARSAT), an SOE that will also admin- ister the fiber optic network and provide it to other mobile network operators. Rules for assuring competitive neutrality are not yet in place. ARSAT is exempt from rules of infrastructure interconnection and sharing. Firms struggle with high-cost, low-quality transport and logistics services, owing in part to rules that do not induce local providers to operate efficiently. Argentina has a poorer Logistics Performance Index score than would be expected from its per-capita income (figure 4.10). It also underperforms on spe- cific logistic indicators compared to regional peers. For example, the average lead time to import or export in Argentina is seven days, compared to four days for the average LAC country. Logistics costs, adjusted for inflation, have increased by 40 percent since 2003 (Castro, Szenkman, and Lotitto, 2015). In part, the underperformance and high costs of logistics services reflect inappropriate sec- toral regulations. For instance, road cargo transport regulations allow truck driv- ers (represented by the Federación Nacional de Trabajadores Camioneros, or FEDCAM) and transporters (associated through the Federación Argentina de Entidades Empresarias del Autotransporte de Cargas, or FADEEAC) to negoti- ate jointly salaries applicable to all market participants, including those unaffili- ated with FADEEAC or FEDCAM.14 Such joint negotiation may facilitate or even constitute collusive behavior. In addition, private road freight services (carga propia) that want to enter the market and exert competitive pressure on public road freight services must deal with distortive rules: they receive only a 30 per- cent discount on tolls, while public road freight providers receive a 100 percent exemption. International evidence suggests that intermediate goods are prone to price-fixing and market-sharing agreements; such cartels have been detected in Argentina in the past and dampen firms’ competitiveness. Over the last decade, competition agencies all over the world have been uncovering dozens of cartel A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 113 agreements in auto parts. In the United States, the Department of Justice, in charge of tackling cartels, has called its efforts in this area the “largest criminal investigation ever,” having already issued US$2.9 billion in fines. The turnover of cartels sanctioned in Europe over the last 15 years in products that are typi- cally classified as part of electronics GVCs was US$1.9 trillion.15 Cement firms have been prosecuted for explicit collusion in at least 14 countries, including Argentina. Factors that are common to standard input products, such as interna- tional markets where a few market players have multimarket contact and homo- geneous product characteristics, make cartel agreements stable and profitable. Their anticompetitive overcharges, in turn, reduce competitiveness along the value chain. Firms in Argentina cannot access all input products at competitive prices due to tariff protection and NTMs. The restrictiveness of tariffs and NTMs protects not only final goods manufacturers but also intermediate goods producers. For example, tariffs on aluminum products are as high as 13 percent in an industry that also has a concentrated market structure, which facilitates the exercise of pricing power in domestic markets. In addition, with a tariff equivalence of 17 percent, NTMs in the steel sector reinforce the market dominance of national steel producers and have led to substantially higher prices for producers in the past. Overall, evidence shows that the incidence of NTMs in industrial input-­ related sectors is particularly high (table 4.1). Even if tariffs and NTMs were low and products were available at competitive prices, local content rules would potentially hinder investors from sourcing from the most competitive offer. In recent years, the use of local content requirement TABLE 4.1  Incidence of NTMs in Argentina NUMBER OF NTMS NUMBER OF NTMS WITS CATEGORY APPLIED BY CATEGORY THAT AFFECT (OUT OF 670 NTMS) INDUSTRIAL INPUTS Processed 314 62 Mainly for industry 219 3 Primary 219 11 Mainly for household consumption 216 7 Nondurable 162 13 Capital goods (except for transport equipment) 129 37 Semidurable 97 20 Parts and accessories 67 27 Durable 64 15 Nonindustrial 28 4 Industrial 27 11 Other 21 3 Motor spirit 16 4 Goods not elsewhere specified 16 2 Passenger motor cars 13 2 N/A 5 0 Source: Data from UNCTAD TRAINS dataset (http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DITC/Trade-Analysis​ Non-Tariff-Measures/NTMs-trains.aspx) and UN COMTRADE dataset (https://comtrade.un.org/data). /­ 114 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy (LCR) policies has increased substantially, part of a trend toward less transpar- ent protectionist measures, including bailouts, tax concessions, and export sub- sidies.16 While the use of LCRs may help achieve certain development objectives in the short term, it undermines long-term industrial competitiveness. Investors forced to buy inputs from local sources who do not yet produce the necessary quality and quantity cannot tap into potential efficiency gains that could be avail- able from GVCs. From an overall economic standpoint, the ultimate effect of this type of policy is a negative impact on export competitiveness—not only in those sectors that are targeted directly by the LCR, but in the overall economy. A recent OECD analysis examined a subset of trade-related LCR measures in several countries, including Argentina, and found that LCRs have caused a decline in global imports and total exports in every region. Two LCR measures in Argentina were assessed: one affecting the reinsurance market, introduced in 2011, and the other affecting transportation services in the mining industry, introduced in 2012. The estimated permanent reduction in total exports from Argentina result- ing from these measures amounts to 0.3 percent.17 Against this backdrop, there is ample space for reforms to streamline firms’ access to efficient input markets for firms. Four potential reform areas can be emphasized (box 4.3). The first would be to reinforce procompetition sector reg- ulation in essential input services. The second would be to strengthen anticartel enforcement, especially in homogeneous input products. The third would be to BOX 4.3 Main policy recommendations to enhance access to efficient input markets for firms Potential reforms to enhance access to efficient input of alleged cartel members (dawn raids) and IT markets for firms include the following: forensic investigative capacities. Reinforce procompetition sector regulation in • Increase fines for cartel infringements to essential input services. For example: effectively deter collusive agreements among competitors. • Telecommunications: Fully implement Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) framework to Introduce effective policies to promote linkages allow MVNOs to provide 4G services and enforce with domestic firms. For example: infrastructure access regulation. Implement rules to protect competitive neutrality (ARSAT). Allow pay • Create an online database of national suppliers. TV companies to offer telecommunications services. • Eliminate discriminatory performance require- • Transport: Guarantee effective nondiscriminatory ments and carefully assess existing local content access in rail freight (particularly on tracks incentives and policies. operated by bulk users). Review toll exemption • Introduce behavioral incentives aimed at rules for public and private providers. promoting technical training, skill building, and • Strengthen anticartel enforcement, especially in attainment of international certifications. homogeneous input products. Impose unilateral NTM reduction: • Introduce a leniency program, under which car- tel members can report their infringement to the • Remove import ban on used machinery, equip- competition authority in exchange for exemp- ment, instruments, devices, and parts, and elim- tion from fines for the first applicant. inate NTMs for basic industrial inputs (such • Further develop and apply techniques for as plastics, fertilizers, steel, cement, paper and conducting surprise inspections at premises board, and ceramics, among others). A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 115 introduce effective policies to promote linkages with domestic firms. The fourth would be to promote a unilateral reduction in NTMs. Ensuring cooperation and interaction among the major existing institutions in the trade, investment, and competition policy domains would be critical in promoting the successful imple- mentation of these suggested reforms. A single NTM, local content rule, or prod- uct market regulation can simultaneously reduce competition, export competitiveness, and the opportunity to integrate into GVCs. Consequently, the CNDC, AAICI, and Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade must collaborate to ensure that network regulation, NTMs, and investment requirements do not unduly obstruct firms’ ability to compete at home and abroad. ABILITY TO COMPETE ON A LEVEL PLAYING FIELD Investors in some important sectors (such as air transport and energy) face com- petition from SOEs that may benefit from undue competitive advantages. SOEs participate in numerous key sectors in Argentina (17, according to product mar- ket regulation, or PMR, data), above several regional peers (figure 4.11). While SOE participation is not necessarily distortionary per se, the lack of competitive neutrality principles poses risk to investors of competing operators. Although SOEs and private enterprises receive equal treatment in rules about anticompet- itive practices and merger review procedures, in practice the SOEs benefit from advantages compared to their private competitors. For example, Law No. 20,705 provides a special regime to SOEs (“Sociedades del Estado”) that does not apply to companies of exclusively private capital (“Sociedades Anónimas”), allowing SOEs to obtain financing that is not available to private competitors. In addition, the government (national, state, provincial, or local) assumes liabilities for the losses of airline and railway SOEs. FIGURE 4.11 Sectors with state-owned enterprises (SOEs), 2013 25 Number of sectors with SOEs 20 17 15 10 5 0 om Bu d ia ca ru Au zil lia Co and a Ar ico na Ro ca ia nd bi n ar an Pe a ra Ri ri So nti la la ex m d Br Af lg nl st m Ire Po ng a lo ge M Fi st h Ki Co ut d ite Un Source: OECD Product Market Regulation database, and OECD-World Bank Group Product Market Regulation database for non-OECD countries 2013, 2016, as of March 2018. (http:// www.oecd.org​/­eco/growth/indicatorsofproductmarketregulationhomepage.htm). 116 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Foreign investors face differential treatment in certain sectors. In principle, the legal regime for investment in Argentina does not discriminate between domestic and foreign investors. Important investment protection provisions are included in the Foreign Investment Law (Law 21.382), including nondiscrimina- tion, expropriation, transparency, and due process of law.18 However, foreign suppliers receive less favorable treatment regarding taxes and eligibility for sub- sidies in several sectors, including computers, construction, and telecommuni- cations and business services. In addition, foreign parties and domestic firms do not have equal access to appeal procedures. Unlike in most other economies, foreign firms face unequal chances of winning competitive tenders. Several laws preclude tenders altogether, either by establishing that certain SOEs (such as Repsol, an energy company) are to provide goods and services to public bodies and companies or by favoring Argentine companies even if their prices remain as much as 5–7 percent above those of foreign tenderers. Argentina has discontinued some policies that could have reduced firms’ ability to compete on a level playing field. Overall, the perception of business risk in Argentina has declined, but it is still above levels recorded in comparator countries (figure 4.12). For example, the government of Argentina is phasing out the program “Precios Cuidados,” which set prices for a selected list of goods from certain producers. As an alternative measure, it created the website “preciosclaros.gob.ar,” which aims to boost transparency for consumers. However, Law 1974 (Ley de Abastecimiento) is still in place and grants the gov- ernment ample powers to intervene in the economy, including by setting minimum and maximum prices, return margins, and production quotas. There is space for improvement to level the playing field effectively. There are three main areas for potential reform (box 4.4). The first would be to implement competitive neutrality principles. The second would be to ensure that laws, reg- ulations, and policies apply in a nondiscriminatory way to foreign and domestic firms. The third would be to modify laws that, even though no longer applied, can become a source of limitations to competition. Deploying effective reforms in these areas will depend on how the main institutions in charge of trade, FIGURE 4.12 Business risks related to weak competition policies by component, June 2017 16 14 14 Number of business risks 12 10 9 8 6 4 2 0 s d d lia a il o nd a ia ia nd 17 15 ru m nd az c ric ic an an ar an tra Ri do Pe 20 20 la la ex Br Af lg la al nl m Ire Po a s er M ng Ze Bu Fi Au st a a Ro h in in th Co ut Ki w nt nt Ne So Ne d ge ge ite Ar Ar Un Vested interests/cronyism Unfair competitive practices Price controls Discrimination against foreign companies Source: Data from The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) Risk tracker dataset (https://www.eiu.com/landing/risk _analysis). A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 117 BOX 4.4 Main policy recommendations to enhance predictability and level the playing field Potential reforms to boost predictability and level the firms. For example: playing field include the following: • Ensure equal treatment for foreign suppliers Implement competitive neutrality principles. For regarding taxes and eligibility for subsidies in example: several sectors, as well as equal access to appeal • Incorporate SOEs under the same regime as pri- procedures. vate joint-stock companies. • Modify laws that can become a source of • Introduce regulatory and tax-neutrality principles limitations to competition. For example, reform for SOEs to avoid undue comparative advantages. or eliminate the 1974 Supply Law that grants the government ample powers to intervene in firms’ Ensure that laws, regulations, and policies apply in business decisions. a nondiscriminatory way to foreign and domestic investment, and competition policy cooperate and interact. Evidence presented here suggests that policies or government interventions that distort the level playing field can not only reduce competition, but also reduce attraction of FDI. To avoid this, the CNDC, AAICI, and Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade could collaborate to ensure that SOE participation in markets and command-and-­ control regulation do not put global economic integration at risk. CAPACITY TO EXPAND AND THRIVE IN GLOBAL MARKETS Investors have not expanded and have often not even been retained, owing to exposure to discretionary or unpredictable government interventions. Investment decisions are influenced largely by transparency, predictability, and stability with respect to government actions. In Argentina, investors’ percep- tions of the overall quality of regulatory governance are not favorable (figure 4.13), driven essentially by the perception that there is limited transparency in rulemaking.19 In addition, Argentina’s reputation among investors has been com- promised by the significant number of investor–state dispute settlement cases triggered after the economic crisis in the early 2000s; at least 57 known trea- ty-based claims were brought against Argentina in response, all but four of which were lodged under the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes rules (figure 4.14).20 Since 2009, Argentina has had six cases under the center, with claims focusing mostly on breach of contract, expropriation, and revocation of licenses within the provinces. Although domestic investment dis- pute adjudication is available through local courts or administrative procedures, the judicial process is lengthy and backlogged. Many foreign investors prefer to rely on private or international arbitration when those options are available in individual contracts. 118 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE 4.13 Regulatory Governance Index, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2016 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 a ru Ro zil ia nd Bu ca a ca t h nd s nd Ze ia Au d lia Ki ico m nd in C o a ri an an ys do Pe a ra ri Ri la Ne inla la x nt Br Af lg la Ne ala al ite Me st m Ire Po ng a ge er st F h M Ar ut w So d Un Source: Data from World Bank Global Indicators of Regulatory Governance dataset (http:// rulemaking​.worldbank.org/data/explorecountries/argentina). FIGURE 4.14 Investor–state disputes, Argentina vs. selected peers, 2000–17 Argentina Mexico Poland Romania Peru Costa Rica Bulgaria South Africa United Kingdom Malaysia Australia Netherlands Ireland Finland 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Number of disputes Source: Data from UNCTAD, Investment Policy Hub (http://investment​ hub​ policy​ .unctad.org/ISDS) and ITAlaw (https://www.italaw.com/browse/international​ -investment-agreement-name). These types of barriers have negative effects on retention and expansion of all types of FDI, but in particular the “efficiency-seeking” type. Several factors influence foreign investment decisions, often representing a blend among effi- ciency-, market-, and natural resource-seeking goals. The “efficiency-seeking” investor aims to increase the cost efficiency of the production process by taking advantage of factors that improve the competitiveness of the enterprise. The “market-seeking” investor is almost entirely motivated by the size and charac- teristics of the domestic market. The “resource-seeking” investor aims to secure access to natural resources in the host country. Market size and the availability A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 119 of natural resources pull in resource-seeking and market-seeking FDI. By con- trast, local authorities need to actively attract efficiency-seeking FDI because the production stages are generally internationally mobile and can thus be located elsewhere.21 That said, while the existence of barriers triggered by the low pre- dictability of government actions—combined with an investment climate that is not conducive, overall, to the entry and establishment of new firms—tends to hinder the retention and expansion of all types of foreign investments, such bar- riers are particularly burdensome for efficiency-seeking FDI. In Argentina, the pull factors—mostly the availability of resources and the size of the domestic market—help to counterbalance the burden for “resource-seeking” and “market-seeking” investors, but they are not advantageous enough for “efficiency-seeking” investors. Firms that are willing to integrate into GVCs continue to face administrative, procedural, and regulatory risks when importing critical inputs. To become full- fledged participants in international production networks, it is essential for firms to be able to import inputs so they can be processed and exported in the form of goods, parts, components, and services.22 Despite the recent replacement of the Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Importación (DJAI) with the SIMI, as of October 2016, around 1,600 tariff lines remained with import licenses that were not subject to automatic approval, amounting to 25 percent of all imports.23 Products with licenses not subject to automatic approval included polypropyl- ene, polyethylene and other plastics, and paper and board—all critical for pack- aging and inputs for typical exporter activities, such as food products and agribusiness. The government of Argentina has recently improved the consistency and effi- ciency of procedures that could otherwise delay firms’ expansion and growth— notably, by improving the merger review process. The CNDC has reduced the time a merger spends under review by a significant amount. Although the aver- age time for merger review remains high, at 21 months (owing in large part to the many old cases inherited by the new administration), for new cases that have been notified over the last year or so, the average review time is only 4 to 5 months. As in other policy areas, there is ample space for improvement here, too. Five reforms would be particularly important in enhancing the capacity of firms to expand and thrive in global markets (box 4.5). The first would be reducing reg- ulatory and legal uncertainty through regulatory improvement mechanisms. The second would be overhauling the merger control framework. The third would be to limit the use of licenses that are not subject to automatic approval. The fourth would be to develop a targeted, proactive investment promotion approach by prioritizing a few sectors—potentially the “efficiency-seeking” type of FDI, as it needs a push to be attracted to Argentina. Finally, the fifth key reform would be to enhance investor grievance mechanisms to improve inves- tor protection and confidence. Overall, the evidence shows that policies that generate regulatory risk reduce attractiveness to FDI and limit the potential benefits of trade. This illustrates the need for policy coherence among the trade, investment, and competition policy fronts, which, in turn, depends on effective institutional cooperation and interaction among respective policy actors. For example, the CNDC, AAICI, and Undersecretariat for Foreign Trade could usefully collaborate to minimize regulatory risk through coherent and standardized procedures. 120 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy BOX 4.5 Main policy recommendations to enhance the capacity of firms to thrive and expand Potential reforms to boost the capacity of firms to • Introduce fast-track procedures for mergers that thrive and expand include the following: are unlikely to have anticompetitive effects. Reduce regulatory and legal uncertainty through • Improve procedural effectiveness in reviewing regulatory improvement mechanisms. For example: mergers. • Introduce a legal obligation for regulatory Remove nonautomatic licenses. For example: agencies to publish text or proposed regulations • Limit licenses not subject to automatic approval before enactment. to the minimum (such as in the case of hazardous • Establish a clear procedural protocol to enforce imports). problems faced by foreign investors and arising from regulatory conduct (federal or Take a targeted, proactive investment promotion subnational). approach: Overhaul merger control framework. For example: • Prioritize efficiency-seeking FDI. Enhance investor grievance mechanisms. For • Revise notification threshold for companies example: merging or acquiring another party. • Clearly define transactions that classify as • Establish a systemic investor response mergers for the purpose of notification. mechanism. NOTES 1. There is substantial empirical evidence on the synergies between trade and investment policies. For instance, Harding and Javorcik (2012) show that attracting FDI inflows can raise the quality of exports in developing countries. Similarly, Halpern, Koren, and Szeidl (2015) and Ahn et al. (2016) show that trade liberalization has a larger impact when com- bined with pro-FDI measures. 2. Topalova and Khandelwal (2011) show that competition in an industry also influences the payoffs of trade liberalization measures. 3. See, for instance, Gal and Hijzen (2016) and Egert and Gal (2016) for recent empirical evi- dence on Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. 4. For more details, see IFC and WBG (2018). 5. Not all NTM information is collected for Argentina in this database. For instance, informa- tion on temporary barriers such as antidumping and countervailing measures is not col- lected, although it is available from other sources. Here we focused on two types of mea- sures included in the UNCTAD database: technical measures related to sanitary and phytosanitary and technical barriers to trade and nontechnical barriers in the form of quantity or price controls. The latter are often called “hard” NTMs. 6. In part, this reflects two measures that apply universally or nearly universally across all tariff lines: (1) import licenses that are not subject to automatic approval and (2) a manifest documentation fee, which is a relatively shallow measure that imposes a fee of 90 pesos (less than US$10 at current exchange rates) for air cargo (resolution 3244/2012), which is not likely to affect large commercial shipments in any meaningful way. 7. These measures, and others, could overlap across products, with multiple NTMs affecting the same good. 8. Argentina generally restricts or prohibits the importation of used and remanufactured goods, including agricultural machinery, auto parts, and medical equipment. Capital goods A Step-by-Step Reform Agenda That Will Allow Companies to Integrate into the Global Economy | 121 that may be imported are subject to higher duties than new ones. Recently, in December 2016, the government introduced a program to facilitate imports of used production lines as part of investment projects, subject to approval under certain conditions, including that these production lines are complete and autonomous (decree 1174/2016). 9. These other countries include 50 countries for which NTM data is available in the UNCT- AD database for 2015, or for which the latest available year is within the period 2009–15. In the large majority of cases, data are for 2015. 10. The NTM ad valorem equivalent measurement for Argentina follows a price-based approach. This analysis estimates NTM tariff equivalents for goods by looking at detailed, bilateral product price gaps. In practice, international price data are often not very detailed or comprehensive and are often observed at different points of the supply chain. This motivates the use of trade unit values to approximate prices, as they are widely available across imported products (around 5,000 categories at the HS 6-digit level) and many coun- tries. They are also observed before tariffs and behind-border distribution markups, avoid- ing the need to adjust or proxy for these factors. See Signoret, Rocha, and Molinuevo (2017) for further details. 11. Figures according to International Telecommunications Union database, available at the World Bank WITS website (https://wits.worldbank.org/analyticaldata/e-trade/country​ ARG). Internet access numbers for Brazil and Mexico are 59 percent and 57.1 percent, /­ respectively. For mobile subscriptions, Brazil has 88.6 subscriptions per 100 inhabitants, while Mexico has 50.4. 12. The Global Connectivity Index captures adoption of IT (including e-commerce and app downloads), quality (download speeds and affordability), and tech enablers, such as the Internet of things, cloud services, and data centers. 13. According to Akamai (2017). 14. Since 2016, the government has set these rates only if associations of transporters and producers do not come to an agreement in negotiations. 15. Author’s calculation based on Global Competition Review data. 16. See Evenett and Fritz (2015) for documentation of the worldwide resort to protectionism in the past decade. 17. See Stone et al. (2015) for further details. 18. The main provisions in the Foreign Investment Law (Law 21.382) are that foreign investors have the same rights and obligations as local investors: (1) foreign investors may transfer abroad-realized profits coming from their investments, as well as repatriate their invest- ments; (2) foreign investors may use any of the legal forms or organization provided within the national legislation; (3) domestic foreign-capital companies may use local credit with the same rights and under the same conditions as domestic national-capital companies; and (4) section 17 of the Argentine constitution affirms the right to private property and states that any expropriation must be authorized by law, and compensation must be provided. See Llobet et al. (2017) for further discussion. 19. According to the World Bank Global Indicators of Regulatory Governance dataset for 2016 (http://rulemaking.worldbank.org/data/explorecountries/argentina), Argentina ranks extremely low in the transparency of rulemaking. There is no legal obligation for regulatory agencies to publish text on proposed regulations before enactment, nor are they required to solicit comments on proposed regulations from the public. Ministries and regulatory agencies do not conduct an impact assessment of proposed regulations. Legislation is not available in one single place for access by the public, and affected parties do not have the right to request reconsideration or appeal to the relevant administrative agency on adopted regulations. See Llobet et al. (2017) for further discussion. 20. Utility operators alone brought 29 cases; the water and sanitation service sector initiated 9; and electricity and gas distributors brought 20 cases. A handful of cases were brought against Argentina in the years preceding the crisis, which revealed to state officials the extent to which the country was ill prepared to address investor claims. See Llobet et al. (2017) for further discussion. 21. See Llobet et al. (2017) for a typology of motivations for FDI. 22. Baldwin and Lopez-Gonzalez (2015) call this process “import to export.” 23. As already mentioned, on January 2018, the Ministry of Production issued a resolution that eliminates 314 products from the list of nonautomatic import licenses. 122 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy REFERENCES Ahn, J., E. D. Norris, R. Duval, B. Hu, and L. Njie. 2016. Reassessing the Productivity Gains from Trade Liberalization. IMF (International Monetary Fund) Working Paper WP/16/77. https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2016/wp1677.pdf. Akamai. 2017. Akamai’s [State of the Internet] Q1 2017 Report. https://www.akamai.com/us/en​ /­multimedia/documents/state-of-the-internet/q1-2017-state-of-the-internet-connectivity​ -report.pdf. Baldwin, R., and J. Lopez-Gonzalez. 2015. “Supply-Chain Trade: A Portrait of Global Patterns and Several Testable Hypotheses.” World Economy 38 (11): 1682–1721. Castro, L., P. Szenkman, and E. Lotitto. 2015. “¿Cómo puede cerrar el próximo gobierno la brecha de infraestructura?” Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento. Documento de políticas públicas no. 148. https://www.cippec.org/wp​ -content/uploads/2017/03/1241.pdf. Égert, B., and P. Gal. 2016. “The Quantification of Structural Reforms in OECD Countries: A New Framework.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 1354. https://www.oecd.org/economy/growth​ /The-quantification-of-structural-reforms-in-OECD-countries-a-new-framework.pdf. Evenett, S. J., and J. Fritz 2015. The Tide Turns? Trade, Protectionism, and Slowing Global Growth: The 18th Global Trade Alert Report. Geneva: Centre for Economic Policy Research. Gal, P., and A. Hijzen. 2016. “The Short-Term Impact of Product Market Reforms: A Cross- Country Firm-Level Analysis.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 1311. http://www.oecd-ilibrary​ .org/economics/the-short-term-impact-of-product-market-reforms_5jlv2jm07djl-en. Halpern, L., M. Koren, and A. Szeidl. 2015. “Imported Inputs and Productivity.” American Economic Review 105 (12): 3660–3703. Harding, T., and B. Javorcik. 2012. “Foreign Direct Investment and Export Upgrading”. Review of Economics and Statistics 94 (4): 964–80. World Bank Group. 2018. Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs. Economy Profile: Argentina. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/899411467995396294​ /­pdf/106122-WP-P156046-PUBLIC-SPANISH-NotasdePol%C3%ADticas-ARGENTINA​ .pdf. Llobet, G., V. di Fiori, E. von Uexkull, J. Ramon Perea, D. Gomez Altamirano, and R. Echandi. 2017. “Leveraging Foreign Direct Investment to Transform Argentina’s Export to the World: Considerations for the Modernization of Argentina’s Investment Policies and Promotion Efforts.” Background paper prepared for this report. Signoret, J., N. Rocha, and M. Molinuevo. 2017. “Trade Policy Reform in Argentina.” Background paper prepared for this report. Stone, S., J. Messent, and D. Flaig. 2015. “Emerging Policy Issues: Localisation Barriers to Trade,” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Trade Policy Papers, no. 180, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/5js1m6v5qd5j-en. Topalova, P., and A. Khandelwal. 2011. “Trade Liberalization and Firm Productivity: The Case of India.” Review of Economics and Statistics 93 (3): 995–1009. World Bank Group. 2018. Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs. Economy Profile: Argentina. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/899411467995396294​ /­p df​ /106122-WP-P156046-PUBLIC-SPANISH-NotasdePol%C3%ADticas-ARGENTINA.pdf. 5 Conclusions Strengthening integration of the Argentine economy into global markets is a ­ primary objective of the new administration. Recently adopted measures have begun to bear fruit. The government has replaced the previous import licensing system, which is expected to boost gross domestic product (GDP) by at least 0.14 percent above baseline projections to 2020. A renewed investment promotion agency, the Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional (AAICI), has facilitated investment in at least 539 cases, contributing to 778 new future investment projects announced in the first 24 months of this administration, amounting to a total investment of US$102 billion.1 The new head and staff at the competition authority, the Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia (CNDC), have already reduced the time spent on merger reviews by almost 50 percent, presented a new bill to Argentina’s Congress, and promoted changes in the card payment market to strengthen competition. There is still ample space for further reforms, and empirical analyses pre- sented in this report show that both unilateral and multilateral trade liberaliza- tion reforms would have the potential to bring substantial payoffs. For example, a comprehensive opening by all Mercosur members to the world could boost Argentina’s GDP by at least 1 percent above baseline projections to 2020, and a free trade agreement (FTA) between Mercosur and the European Union (EU) would boost Argentina’s exports to the EU by 80 percent above the baseline. Eliminating the remaining nonautomatic import licenses could boost the GDP gains already achieved through the replacement of the Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Importación (DJAI) system from 0.14 to 0.22 over baseline projec- tions to 2020; and eliminating all export taxes would boost GDP by at least 1 percent. The effects of trade liberalization on employment would differ across sectors. Simulations drawn from the computable general equilibrium (CGE) model sug- gest that certain sectors would be more susceptible to losing jobs in response to trade reforms. Overall, simulations suggest that sugar, metal products, footwear, auto parts, and other manufacturing sectors would be more susceptible to experiencing large or moderate losses in employment for most of the trade inte- ­ gration scenarios modeled relative to the baseline projections. On the other  123 124 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy hand, some sectors emerge as formal employment generators relative to the baseline, regardless of the trade integration scenario under consideration; these include meats, other agriculture, and overall services. Implementing complementary reforms that tackle anticompetitive busi- ness practices and product market regulations that restrict competition could bring further gains to Argentina. Boosting competition in Argentina could gen- erate additional annual labor productivity growth in manufacturing sectors by around 7 percent, on average, and by over 10 percent in the wood, basic metals, and paper products sectors. Simulated scenarios in which Argentina reduces regulatory restrictiveness on competition in service sectors would translate into an additional 0.1 percent to 0.6 percent growth in annual GDP, all else being equal. The current trade scenario offers opportunities that Argentina could seize. This report highlighted three main opportunities. First, trade in intermediate goods grows faster than trade in final goods, and foreign direct investment (FDI) often plays a crucial role in such global value chains (GVCs). Argentina could thus connect to regional and global value chains by facilitating trade in interme- diate goods, attracting strategic FDI, and building on existing capabilities in spe- cific industries. Second, services can be traded by virtually connecting provider and consumer, or by either one moving across borders. Argentina could leverage its comparative advantage in services to increase FDI and exports. Third, infor- mation and communications technology (ICT) tools can facilitate cross-border e-commerce and the participation of smaller and new entrants in global markets by boosting their ability to reach a sufficient scale. Argentina could, therefore, foster inclusive trade by facilitating cross-border e-commerce for small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Argentina could implement key mitigation measures to countervail the tran- sition effects of opening up and integrating into the global economy. International experience suggests that there is no one-size-fits-all strategy for effective miti- gation, but that protecting workers instead of jobs is good practice. Both active and passive labor market policies have proved to be effective. Complementary policies and reforms in other markets (such as housing, credit, and infrastruc- ­ ture) play a crucial role in facilitating mobility, thereby reducing adjustment frictions. Argentina’s ability to take advantage of opportunities that have emerged under the new trade landscape will depend on how reforms are designed, sequenced, and managed. International experience with the implementation of reforms in trade, investment, and competition brings valuable lessons. The expe- rience of Australia, Mexico, Poland, and Sweden, for example, highlighted four main lessons. First, reform measures were anchored in broader national policies, and their effective implementation was gradual and took a decade or more. Second, new and existing institutions worked coherently to lead different seg- ments of the overall microeconomic reform program. Third, assessing the impact of reforms, having consistent and corrective monitoring and evaluation regimes, and communicating positive results were critical to sustaining the reform ­ process. Fourth, sequencing and timing were as important as the content of the reforms; in this regard, trade reforms typically combined shock measures with gradualism in sensitive sectors, while investment and competition reforms usu- ally followed a steadier path. The success and sustainability of reforms will depend on the strength of rel- evant institutions. This report highlighted international best practices in terms Conclusions | 125 of institutional setup and policy implementation. Three main aspects are note- worthy. First, successful institutions in charge of promoting FDI have certain good practices in common: separate regulatory and promotional functions, a precise mandate that allows effective interaction with investors, and a clear sec- tor strategy. Second, effective competition agencies design and implement enforcement and advocacy tools to ensure the greatest impact on market out- comes; they operate under technical and functional autonomy and work to embed competition principles in broader public policies. Third, the preparation and conduct of negotiations, as well as the implementation of their outcomes, are the core responsibilities of trade institutions. If properly equipped and supported, these institutions could design and implement specific reforms in the areas of trade, investment, and competition that would bear fruit at the microeconomic level by allowing firms to become more competitive and better integrated into the global economy. This report laid out potential reforms that could be structured around the conditions that firms typically face as they attempt to integrate into the global economy, including (1) opportunities to enter and invest, (2) access to efficient input markets, (3) ability to compete on a level playing field, and (4) capacity to expand and thrive in global markets. To open up opportunities for firms to enter and invest, Argentina could address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles, open key sectors for investment while improv- ing the incentive framework, and facilitate the entry of foreign providers in prior- ity sectors. Argentina could address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles by setting up one-stop shops, introducing general procedures for regulatory simplification, and introducing a broad application of the silence-is-consent rule. The govern- ment could further open key sectors for investment and eliminate barriers that limit market entry (for example, in the air transport sector) and improve the incentive framework by setting up inventories, mapping procedural steps for adju- dication, and improving the monitoring and evaluation of incentive schemes. Finally, the government could facilitate entry of firms that organize their activities around imports of final goods, rather than investment in production, by lowering tariffs and nontariff measures (NTMs) in protected sectors, such as furniture and home appliances, and as done recently for computers.2 To ensure access to efficient input markets, Argentina could strengthen pro- competition regulation in key network sectors, strengthen anticartel enforce- ment, and promote linkages with domestic firms. Argentina could strengthen procompetition regulation in key network sectors such as transport, electricity, and telecommunications by ensuring effective and nondiscriminatory access to inputs, as well as stimulating competitive outcomes while providing incentives for firms to operate efficiently. It could further strengthen anticartel enforce- ment, in particular in homogeneous input markets, and simultaneously reduce NTMs, including nonautomatic licenses in input products. Finally, Argentina could actively promote linkages with domestic firms by setting up online data- bases of national suppliers and redesigning performance requirements. To strengthen the level playing field and ensure undistorted market condi- tions, so as to allow the most productive and efficient firms to grow, Argentina could streamline its treatment of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and remove instruments that distort competition. Argentina could incorporate SOEs under the same regime as joint-stock companies and introduce tax and regulatory neu- trality principles for SOEs. It could further eliminate instruments that limit competition, such as the supply law that allows for price controls. 126 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Finally, to help firms expand and thrive in global markets, Argentina could reduce the number of nonautomatic licenses required to import, while also ­creating transparent procedures for addressing problems faced by foreign inves- tors, overhauling the framework for mergers and acquisitions, and updating the e-commerce framework. By minimizing the use of nonautomatic licenses, Argentina could increase production predictability for exporters. It could also establish clear procedure protocols for addressing problems faced by foreign investors and proactively create a legal obligation for regulatory agencies to pub- lish texts or proposed regulations before enactment. A systematic investor response mechanism would also increase investor confidence. Argentina could further overhaul the framework for reviewing mergers and acquisitions to ­accelerate efficient firm consolidation. To facilitate e-commerce, it could update the  legal framework on e-signatures and strengthen protection for electronic consumers. All of the above reforms need to be implemented in a coherent way if Argentina is to reap the self-reinforcing benefits of stronger trade, investment, and compe- tition policy. Achieving this objective in any of the policy areas will require effec- tive institutional cooperation and interaction among main policy actors. NOTES 1. Based on AAICI (2017) and Télam (2018). 2. Import tariffs for certain computer items were brought down to zero in March 2017. Appendix A Theoretical and Empirical Links among Trade, Investment, and Competition from the Literature Among the many policies that can shape the dynamics of resource allocation in the economy, this report focuses on a particular set: product market policies related to foreign direct investment (FDI), trade, and competition. In principle, these three policies share a common attribute: the capacity to shape the incen- tives of firms to improve resource allocation and to strengthen productivity while integrating into international markets. While foreign investment policy encourages or discourages investment decisions, trade policy shapes the size of the output market and the range of input sources available to firms, and compe- tition policy affects market entry and contestability, as well as incentives to inno- vate and increase productivity. The literature identifies several channels through which trade liberalization can boost resource allocation and productivity. The effects of trade policy shocks on productivity can be classified broadly into two main categories: (1) changes within firms that affect firm-level components of productivity and (2) changes that induce intra-industry reallocations of resources toward more productive firms, thereby increasing average industry productivity. Endogenous improvements in firm-level productivity caused by within-firm changes can be triggered by exposure to competition stemming from output tariff reductions and are associated with (observable) actions, such as investment in new technol- ogies, adoption of new management practices, and the decision to export.1 Within-firm improvements can be also triggered by input tariff reductions and are associated with changes in the level of input expenditures and/or the variety and quality of inputs imported.2 In the case of multiproduct firms, improvements in firm-level productivity might come from changes in output mix, when firms drop their lowest-expertise products, raise the average productivity of products that survive, and, therefore, raise overall firm productivity.3 As regards the real- location (aggregate) effects, trade shocks are expected to reshuffle market shares toward the more productive firms, therefore increasing aggregate productivity; and the extent to which this reallocation process affects aggregate productivity depends on the productivity dispersion of firms prior to the reforms.4  127 128 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Lowering FDI barriers is also expected to bring positive effects to domestic resource allocation and productivity, especially through vertical spillovers. Conceptually, there are two main ways through which lower FDI barriers can affect the allocation of productive resources and productivity (of indigenous firms and of the country as a whole). First, this effect can occur through compet- itive externalities, which refers to an increase in the competition level of the domestic market. This can affect productivity by inducing within-firm changes  in  a manner similar to output trade liberalization, as described above, when indigenous firms are pushed to take actions to improve productiv- ity, or by inducing resource reallocation across domestic firms, where less effi- cient firms are forced to leave and the survivors upgrade their production (or lower their cost base), and, as a result, the average productivity of indigenous firms increases. Second, lower FDI barriers can affect resource allocation through knowledge spillovers, which occur when knowledge created by a for- eign firm is used by a domestic company, and this company does not (fully) com- pensate the multinational firm.5 This type of spillover typically happens through: (1) the demonstration effect, when local companies obtain knowledge of new products, technologies, and marketing/management strategies by observing for- eign competitors; (2) labor turnover, when indigenous firms hire workers trained by multinationals; and (3) knowledge transfer, when foreign affiliates transfer knowledge to their customers or suppliers (and are not compensated for that). The way in which FDI affects the productivity of local firms and the economy as a whole has been studied exhaustively. As regards the effect of FDI on recipi- ent firms, there is supportive evidence of knowledge transfer taking place between headquarters and foreign affiliates, at least in the context of developing countries.6 When it comes to the horizontal spillovers (effects of FDI on compet- ing firms within the same sector—the so-called intra-industry spillovers), the empirical evidence is not conclusive, and results are strongly dependent on host country conditions.7 As for the interindustry (vertical) spillovers, there seems to be stronger evidence about the positive effects of FDI. This can happen through backward linkages, when domestic firms act as suppliers to multinational firms, or mainly through forward linkages, when foreign companies (especially in the service sectors) benefit from local downstream firms.8 From the competition side, theoretical and empirical studies provide evi- dence that greater market competition boosts productivity and economic growth. This evidence falls into two large groups. First, there is a wide variety of empirical studies—on an industry-by-industry or even firm-by-firm basis—­ providing strong evidence that industries where competition intensity is stron- ger experience faster productivity growth.9 The second group of studies uses direct information on the level of competitive pressure faced by firms, rather than the degree of competition itself, to assess the correlation between the level of (or changes in) competitive pressure on productivity (growth). In this regard, see, for instance, Nicoletti and Scarpeta (2003), Conway et al. (2006) and Alesina et al. (2005) for empirical results on the impact of procompetitive regulation on productivity growth.10 Strengthening competition might drive productivity growth in three main ways: improving allocative efficiency, enhancing produc- tive efficiency, and boosting innovation. First, competition leads to an improve- ment in allocative efficiency by allowing more efficient firms to enter and gain market share, at the expense of less efficient firms (the so-called between-firms effect). Several studies have attempted to quantify the importance of this market-sorting effect; see, for instance, Syverson (2004) and Arnold, Nicoletti, ­ Theoretical and Empirical Links among Trade, Investment, and Competition from the Literature | 129 and Scarpetta (2011). Second, competition leads to an improvement in produc- tive efficiency; it acts as a disciplining device within firms, placing pres- sure  on  the managers of firms to become more efficient, which decreases “x-­inefficiency”—that is, the difference between the most efficient behavior of which the firm is capable and its observed behavior in practice (the so-called within-firm effect). Bloom and Reenen (2010) examine links between product market competition and quality of management and find evidence that compe- tition is robustly and positively associated with higher management practice scores. Third, competition pushes firms to innovate, which increases dynamic efficiency through technological improvements in production processes, or through the creation of new products and services. Once properly combined, (foreign direct) investment, trade, and competition polices have mutually reinforcing relationships, in the sense that growth divi- dends stemming from reforms in one policy area are reinforced when properly combined with reforms in the other two. There are specific mechanisms through which investment, trade, and competition policies can be integrated; see Guasch and Rajapatirana (1994) and Bartok and Miroudot (2008) for an introductory discussion about the three sets of forces at play. In principle, (static and dynamic) gains from trade—from either output or input markets—and FDI reforms rely on price signs that require competitive markets. For example, gains from trade lib- eralization in terms of lower prices for domestic consumers can be canceled by anticompetitive practices in markets that allow firms to exercise market power. By the same token, opening the market to foreign investors will not benefit con- sumers if a domestic monopoly is replaced by a foreign monopoly. It is only when domestic markets are competitive and foreign companies have market access that a higher degree of competition can lead to higher productivity and higher income (OECD 2008). The synergies between trade and investment pol- icies, on the one hand, and trade and competition policies, on the other hand, have been widely documented by the empirical literature. For instance, trade liberalization appears to have a larger impact when combined with pro-FDI measures.11 There is also evidence that the degree of competition in a given industry influences the payoff of trade liberalization measures.12 More recently, a new research trend in the literature has been to seek to explain the combined impact of reforms in all three of these policy areas.13 NOTES 1. See De Loecker (2013) for the case of Slovenia, Lileeva and Trefler (2010) for Canada, and Bustos (2011) for Argentina as examples of studies covering this type of effect. 2. For empirical evidence of these input effects, see Fernandes and Paunov (2012) for the case of Chile; Topalova and Khandelwal (2011) for India; and Halpern, Koren, and Szeidl (2015) for Hungary. 3. See Bernard, Redding, and Schott (2010) for empirical evidence. 4. See Melitz (2003) and Melitz and Ottaviano (2008) for a theoretical and empirical investi- gation on this aspect and Pavcnik (2002) for empirical evidence on the productivity divi- dends coming from the reallocation effects caused by trade liberalization in Chile. 5. The idea that FDI inflows are likely to bring new technologies and know-how to the host country is grounded on the argument that multinationals are knowledge producers. Mul- tinationals tend to come from the upper part of the productivity distribution of firms in their countries of origin, since only the most productive establishments can afford the ex- tra cost of setting up production facilities in a foreign country (Helpman, Melitz, and Yeaple 2004). They are able to compete successfully in foreign markets due to their ­ 130 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy “­ownership advantages” (Dunning 1988), which are strongly determined by their heavy engagement in research and development (R&D), and that are not necessarily codified in proprietary technologies as, for instance, tacit knowledge, know-how, management tech- niques, and marketing strategies. 6. For instance, Arnold and Javorcik (2009) control for the possible endogeneity of FDI ­ decisions and present results for Indonesia that indicate that foreign ownership leads to significant productivity improvements in the acquired plants. 7. See Javorcik and Spatareanu (2005) for a brief discussion about the countervailing forces stemming from the presence of multinationals within a given sector. A plausible explana- tion for these mixed conclusions has been proposed by Aitken and Harrison (1999). They postulate that, on the one hand, foreign entry leads to dissipation of knowledge, thus po- tentially facilitating productivity growth in indigenous firms. On the other hand, increased competition from firms with foreign capital may drive up the average costs of domestic producers in the short run, resulting in lower observed productivity. Since most studies do not include comprehensive controls for the competition effect, they observe the sum of the two forces and, depending on their relative strength, find positive, negative, or no effect. 8. For empirical evidence of the former effect, see Javorcik (2004) and Blalock and Gertler (2004). As regards the forward linkage effects, see, for instance, Arnold, Javorcik, and Mat- too (2011) for the Czech Republic, Arnold et al. (2015) for India, and Fernandes and Paunov (2012) for Chile. 9. See Nickell (1996); Blundell, Griffith, and Van Reenen (1995); Ahn (2002); and Disney, Haskel, and Heden (2003), among many others. 10. In this second group, there are also studies seeking to relate the degree of competition in upstream sectors to productivity performance in downstream sectors. See Barone and Cin- gano (2011) and Bourles et al. (2013) for OECD countries. 11. See Ramondo and Rodriguez-Clare (2013), Halpern, Koren, and Szeidl (2015) and Ahn et al. (2016). 12. See Topalova and Khandelwal (2011). In this respect, De Loecker et al. (2016) sheds light on how cost reductions and productivity improvements stemming from trade liberaliza- tion are passed on to prices (and consumers). They analyze a period of Indian trade liber- alization and find that reductions in input tariffs and, therefore, marginal costs are actually offset by firms by raising markups by 11 percent, on average. The incomplete pass-through might be linked with uncompetitive market conditions. Demand conditions could also play a role on this process. 13. Conway et al. (2006), Andrews and Cingano (2014), and Gal and Hijzen (2016), among many others, present evidence of substantial productivity gains from reducing competition-restraining regulations, cutting tariff barriers, and easing restrictions on FDI ­ to “best practice” levels. REFERENCES Ahn, S. (2002). “Competition, Innovation and Productivity Growth: A Review of Theory and Evidence.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 317. http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver​ /download/182144868160.pdf ?expires=1520446788&id=id&accname=​ g uest​ &checksum=F3302E6D9F7825A4D44CC3D5365F772B. Ahn, J., E. D. Norris, R. Duval, B. Hu, and L. Njie. 2016. “Reassessing the Productivity Gains from Trade Liberalization.” IMF (International Monetary Fund) Working Paper WP/16/77. https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2016/wp1677.pdf. Aitken, B., and A. Harrison. 1999. “Do Domestic Firms Benefit from Direct Foreign Investment? Evidence from Venezuela.” American Economic Review 89 (3): 605–18. Alesina, A., G. Ardagna, G. Nicoletti, and F. Schiantarelli. 2005. “Regulation and Investment.” Journal of the European Economic Association 3 (4): 791–25. Andrews, D., and F. Cingano. 2014. “Public Policy and Resource Allocation: Evidence from Firms in OECD Countries.” Economic Policy 29 (78): 253–96. Arnold, J., and B. Javorcik. 2009. “Gifted Kids or Pushy Parents? Foreign Direct Investment and Firm Productivity in Indonesia.” Journal of International Economics 79 (1): 42–53. Theoretical and Empirical Links among Trade, Investment, and Competition from the Literature | 131 Arnold, J., B. Javorcik, M. Lipscomb, and A. Mattoo. 2015. “Services Reform and Manufacturing Performance: Evidence from India.” Economic Journal 126: 1–39. Arnold, J., B. Javorcik, and A. Mattoo. 2011. “Does Services Liberalization Benefit Manufacturing Firms? Evidence from the Czech Republic.” Journal of International Economics 85 (1): 136–46. Arnold, J., G. Nicoletti, and S. Scarpetta. 2011. “Regulation, Resource Reallocation, and Productivity Growth.” European Investment Bank Papers 16 (1): 90–115. Barone, G., and F. Cingano. 2011. “Service Regulation and Growth: Evidence from OECD Countries.” Economic Journal 121 (555): 931–57. Bartók, C., and S. Miroudot. 2008. “The Interaction amongst Trade, Investment and Competition Policies.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Trade Policy Papers, no. 60. http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/241467172568 ​ . pdf ?expires=1520447096&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=94823E6890236​ B71B711E89FA210CABA. Bernard, A., S. Redding, and P. Schott. 2010. “Multiple-Product Firms and Product Switching.” American Economic Review 100: 70–97. Blalock, G., and P. Gertler. 2004. “Welfare Gains from Foreign Direct Investment through Technology Transfer to Local Suppliers.” Journal of International Economics 74: 402–21. Bloom, N., and J. V. Reenen. 2010. “Why Do Management Practices Differ across Firms and Countries?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 24 (1): 203–24. Bourles, R., G. Cette, J. Lopez, J. Mairesse, and G. Nicoletti. 2013. “Do Product Market Regulations In Upstream Sectors Curb Productivity Growth? Panel Data Evidence for OECD Countries.” Review of Economics and Statistics 95 (5): 1750–68. Blundell, R., R. Griffith, and J. van Reenen. 1995. “Dynamic Count Data Models of Technological Innovation.” Economic Journal 105 (429): 333–44. Bustos, P. 2011. “Trade Liberalization, Export, and Technology Upgrading: Evidence on the Impact of Mercosur on Argentinian Firms.” Amercian Economic Review 101 (1): 304–40. Conway, P., D. de Rosa, G. Nicoletti, and F. Steiner. 2006. “Regulation, Competition and Productivity Convergence.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 509. http://www.oecd-ilibrary. org/docserver/download/431383770805.pdf?expires=1520446942&id=id&accname=guest​ &checksum=2CA976F54702B6B8DAEDCD3D6DD61139. De Loecker, J. 2013. “Detecting Learning by Exporting.” American Economic Journal 5: 1–21. De Loecker, J., P. Goldberg, A. Khandelwal, and N. Pavcink. 2016. “Prices, Markups and Trade Reform.” Econometrica 84 (2): 445–510. Disney, R., J. Haskel, and Y. Heden. 2003. “Restructuring and Productivity Growth in UK Manufacturing.” Economic Journal 113: 666–94. Dunning, J. 1988. “The Eclectic Paradigm of International Production: A Restatement and Some Possible Extensions.” Journal of International Business Studies 19 (1): 1–31. Fernandes, A. M., and C. Paunov. 2012. “Foreign Direct Investment in Services and Manufacturing Productivity: Evidence for Chile.” Journal of Development Economics 97 (2): 305–21. Gal, P., and A. Hijzen. 2016. “The Short-Term Impact of Product Market Reforms: A Cross-Country Firm-Level Analysis.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 1311. http://www.oecd-ilibrary​ .org/economics​ /the-short-term-impact-of-product-market-reforms_5jlv2jm07djl-en. Guasch, J., and S. Rajapatirana. 1994. “The Interface of Trade, Investment, and Competition Policies. Issues and Challenges for Latin America.” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 1393. World Bank, Washington, DC. Halpern, L., M. Koren, and A. Szeidl. 2015. “Imported Inputs and Productivity.” American Economic Review 105 (12): 3660–3703. Helpman, E., M. J. Melitz, and S. R. Yeaple. 2004. “Export versus FDI with Heterogeneous Firms.” American Economic Review 94 (1): 300–316. Javorcik, B. 2004. “Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms? In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages.” American Economic Review 94 (3): 605–27. 132 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy Javorcik, B., and M. Spatareanu. 2005. “Disentangling FDI Spillover Effects: What Do Firm Perceptions Tell Us?” In Does Foreign Direct Investment Promote Development? ed. T. Moran, E. Graham, and M. Blomstrom. Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics. Lileeva, A., and D. Trefler. 2010. “Improved Access to Foreign Markets Raises Plant-Level Productivity . . . for Some Plants.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 125: 1051–99. Melitz, M. 2003. “The Impact of Trade on Intra-Industry Reallocations and Aggregate Industry Productivity.” Econometrica 71: 1695–1725. Melitz, M., and G. Ottaviano. 2008. “Market Size, Trade, and Productivity.” Review of Economic Studies 75: 295–316. Nickell, S. J. 1996. “Competition and Corporate Performance.” Journal of Political Economy 104 (4): 724–46. Nicoletti, G., and S. Scarpetta. 2003. “Regulation, Productivity and Growth: OECD Evidence.” Economic Policy 18 (36): 1–7. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development). 2008. “Making Trade Work for Developing Countries.” Policy Brief. May. https://www.oecd.org/trade/40672245.pdf. Pavcnik, N. 2002. “Trade Liberalization, Exit, and Productivity Improvement: Evidence from Chilean Plants.” Review of Economic Studies 69: 245–76. Ramondo, N., and A. Rodriguez-Clare. 2013. “Trade, Multinational Production, and the Gains from Openness.” Journal of Political Economy 121 (2): 273–322. Syverson, C. 2004. “Market Structure and Productivity: A Concrete Example.” Journal of Political Economy 112 (6): 1181–1222. Topalova, P., and A. Khandelwal. 2011. “Trade Liberalization and Firm Productivity: The Case of India.” Review of Economics and Statistics 93 (3): 995–1009. Appendix B Links between Macroeconomic and Factor Market Policies for Integration This report discusses microeconomic structural reforms in product markets, and this appendix briefly discusses other complementary policy areas that can be important for success in integrating into the global economy. An adequate macroeconomic policy also matters because it can help set the right incentives for economic agents. A sound macroeconomic policy—with sta- bilized inflation and a flexible exchange rate not grossly out of equilibrium— helps bring stability and predictability to economic agents so they can better formulate their production strategies. Macroeconomic stability and appropriate exchange rates matter even more when opening the economy, especially to elicit a robust and strong export response, because imports tend to rise faster than exports in reaction to trade tariff reductions. Labor market policies must also be favorable to facilitate the resource reallo- cation movement triggered by pro-opening reforms. Underneath the process of integration into global markets is a turbulent labor reallocation and churning movement. Absent labor market rigidities, opening the economy would cause a smooth reallocation of workers toward more productive activities. This realloca- tion process does not work automatically, however, owing in part to stringencies created by labor market institutions, such as rigid hiring and firing practices. Evidence suggests that less stringent labor market institutions facilitate the movement of labor to more productive firms and foster firm entry and exit.1 Impediments to the movement of labor between heterogeneous firms and sec- tors could undermine both aggregate productivity growth and the benefits from opening the economy. Country-specific studies find that excessive regulation can slow down job creation in global value chains (GVCs), causing countries to miss job-supporting agglomeration effects and knowledge spillovers.2 The same applies to credit and financial policies. Allocation of capital across firms (and activities) is another important determinant of aggregate productivity and can shape the effects of international integration. Financial restrictions on the price or quantity of credit can slow down, or even limit, the reallocation process following the economy’s opening, because it takes time for productive but  133 134 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy low-net-worth firms to accumulate enough assets to operate at full scale. 3 Distortive financial policies can affect misallocation of resources, additional entry, technology adoption,4 and the ability to cover fixed costs of entry into export activities.5 Also instrumental is the combination of significant absorptive capacity and an effective innovation policy to ensure the proper functioning of the “diffusion machine.” The gains from further integration into the global economy are condi- tional on the “absorptive capacity” (for example, human capital) to capture the spillover benefits from trade.6 In addition, connecting with global markets via trade, FDI, and participation in GVCs provides scope for knowledge diffusion between global frontier companies and national frontier firms. In this regard, the capacity of a country to absorb, adapt, and reap the full benefits of knowledge produced at the frontier depends on strategic investments in research and devel- opment (R&D), organizational know-how, and other forms of knowledge-based capital.7 Efficient business regulations are another important factor in seizing new opportunities that arise from foreign economic integration while boosting alloc- ative efficiency. Integration into the global economy brings new business oppor- tunities to domestic companies and pushes the reallocation of resources across sectors and firms. The time and financial costs of compliance with business reg- ulations strongly condition the ability of firms to respond to emerging prospects in new sectors. Entry and exit regulations are important. Restrictive entry rules can penalize experimentation, a cost that is disproportionately higher for areas such as information and communications technology (ICT)–intensive indus- tries.8 Restrictive regulations damage employment growth heavily because young firms are the primary drivers of job creation. Exit regulations (such as bankruptcy legislation) affect how quickly an economy can reallocate resources that are trapped in nonviable firms to more efficient uses. NOTES 1. See, for instance, Henrekson and Johansson (2010) for an empirical analysis of the role of institutions that encourage the creation of high-growth firms and promote structural transformation. 2. See World Bank (2013) for a detailed discussion on how excessive labor market regulations can offset job creation within value chains. 3. See Buera and Shin (2011) for empirical analysis on the role of financial frictions and re- source misallocation in explaining development dynamics. 4. See Midrigan and Xu (2014) for a compelling theoretical and empirical analysis on the impact of financial frictions on total factor productivity (TFP) growth via entry and tech- nology adoption decisions and resource misallocation. 5. See Manova (2013) for a theoretical model and empirical analysis about the detrimental impacts of financial market imperfections for international trade. 6. See Borensztein, De Gregorio, and Lee (1998) for a theoretical discussion. 7. See OECD (2015) for a theoretical and empirical discussion on the role of technology dif- fusion as a channel to boost productivity growth. 8. See Andrews and Cingano (2014) for empirical evidence. REFERENCES Andrews, D., and F. Cingano. 2014. “Public Policy and Resource Allocation: Evidence from Firms in OECD Countries.” Economic Policy 29 (78): 253–96. Links between Macroeconomic and Factor Market Policies for Integration | 135 Borensztein, E., J. De Gregorio, and J. W. Lee. 1998. “How Does Foreign Direct Investment Affect Economic Growth?” Journal of international Economics 45: 115–35. Buera, F., and Y. Shin. 2011. “Self-Insurance vs. Self-Financing: A Welfare Analysis of the Persistence of Shocks.” Journal of Economic Theory 146 (3): 845–62. Henrekson, M., and D. Johansson. 2010. “Gazelles as Job Creators: A Survey and Interpretation of the Evidence.” Small Business Economics 35: 227–44. Manova, K. 2013. “Credit Constraints, Heterogeneous Firms and International Trade.” Review of Economic Studies 80 (2): 711–44. Midrigan, V., and D. Xu. 2014. “Finance and Misallocation: Evidence from Plant-Level Data.” American Economic Review 104 (2): 422–58. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development). 2015. The Future of Productivity. https://www.oecd.org/eco/growth/OECD-2015-The-future-of-productivity​ -book.pdf. World Bank. 2013. Turkey—Reform for Competitiveness Technical Assistance: Fostering Open and Efficient Markets through Effective Competition Policies. Washington, DC: World Bank. Appendix C The CGE Framework A computable general equilibrium (CGE) model uses economic data and a set of behavioral equations to estimate how an economy might react to changes in pol- icy, technology, or other factors. The model is benchmarked to a starting year dataset that covers the whole economy, tracking the linkages among sectors through input–output or interindustry transaction flow tables, as well as various sources of demand, such as the intermediate demand of enterprises and the final demand of households, government, and investment. It also models the behavior of producers according to the principle of profit maximization and their produc- tion functions. Finally, it simulates foreign demand and supply by including equations that explain bilateral trade flows. The analysis using a CGE model starts from the development of a long-term baseline with a set of exogenous vari- ables and parameters (population, productivity growth, and elasticities). Then the counterfactual policy scenario is formulated by changing some exogenous variables or policy parameters. Finally, the impact of a counterfactual policy is assessed by looking at deviations of endogenous variables (that is, those variables that are not fixed or user specified) from their baseline levels—for example, for gross domestic product (GDP), investment, savings, trade flows, sectoral output, employment, wages, household consumption, welfare, relative prices, and so on. This report presents medium- and long-term scenarios to assess several implications for Argentina of trade liberalization on both unilateral and multilat- eral ­integration fronts. These scenarios are based on the World Bank’s LINKAGE model—a recursive global dynamic CGE model. This appendix covers the main features of LINKAGE. A full description is pro- vided by Van der Mensbrugghe (2011). The version of the LINKAGE model applied to Argentina relies on release 9.1 of the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) database. This dataset was customized for Argentina as follows. First, the input– output structure for Argentina was updated from 1997 to 2004 (the latest official tables from Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos de la República Argentina, or INDEC). Second, the base year in GTAP (2011) was updated to 2015. Third, 26 regions were identified, including each Mercosur country; the European Union (EU27 + UK); the members of the Pacific Alliance; and other regions with poten- tial for integration, such as Canada, China, the European Free Trade Association,  137 138 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE C.1  Sectors identified in the model NATURAL RESOURCES AND AGRICULTURE/FOOD MANUFACTURING SERVICES ENERGY Wine Biodiesel Pharma Communications, financial, and business Beef Fuels and fuel products Computers Other services Poultry and swine Steel Electronics Dairy Other natural resources Metal products Soybean Furniture Soy meals and oil Footwear Sugar Vehicles Fruits and vegetables Auto parts Corn Agricultural machinery Wheat Home appliances Other food and agricultural Other machinery and products ­equipment Textiles and apparel Other manufacturing Japan, Korea, and the United States. Fourth, the sectoral dimension in GTAP was expanded to include several new sectors of interest for the Argentine economy (see table C.1 for a final list of sectors). The core specification of the LINKAGE model replicates largely a standard global CGE model, where production is specified as a series of nested constant elasticity of substitution (CES) functions for the various inputs—unskilled and skilled labor, capital, land, natural resources (sector specific), energy, and other material inputs. The structure of the CES nest characterizes the substitution and complementary relations across inputs.1 In the labor market at the baseline, the model assumes full employment and allows for internal migration, even though there is no international migration. The model also allows for market segmenta- tion by allowing rural–urban migration of unskilled labor to be a function of rel- ative wages. Demand on the part of each domestic agent is specified at the so-called Armington level—that is, demand for a bundle of domestically produced and imported goods. Armington demand is aggregated across all agents and allocated at the national level between domestic production and imports by region of ori- gin.2 Each bilateral flow is associated with three price wedges: the first distin- guishes producer prices from the free-on-board price (an export tax and/or subsidy); the second distinguishes the free-on-board price from the cost, insur- ance, and freight price (an international trade and transportation margin); and the third distinguishes the cost, insurance, and freight price from the user price (an import tariff ). Government income is derived from various taxes: sales, excise, import duties, export, production, factors, and direct taxes. Investment revenues come from household, government, and net foreign savings. Government and investment expenditure are based on CES functions. Three closure rules are incorporated into the standard scenario. First, govern- ment expenditures are held constant as a share of GDP, and fiscal balance is exog- enous, while direct taxes adjust to cover any changes in the revenues to keep the The CGE Framework | 139 fiscal balance at the exogenous level. The second closure rule determines the investment/savings balance. Households save a portion of their income, with the average propensity to save influenced by demographics and economic growth. Government savings and foreign savings are exogenous in the current specifica- tion. As a result, investment is savings driven, and the total amount of savings depends on household savings, with the price of investment goods being deter- mined also by demand for investment. The third closure rule determines the external balance. In the current model specification, the foreign savings—and therefore the trade balance—are assumed to be fixed. Changes in trade flows will therefore result in shifts in the real exchange rate. The LINKAGE model incorporates a few key dynamics in terms of popula- tion growth, savings versus investment, capital accumulation, and productivity growth. Population growth is based on the medium fertility variant of the United Nations’ population projections. Labor force growth is equated to the growth of the working-age population—defined here as the demographic cohort between 15 and 64 years of age. Investment is equated to savings. Savings are a function of income growth and demographic dependency ratios, with savings rising as incomes rise and dependency ratios decline.3 Capital accumulation is then equated to the previous period’s (depreciated) capital stock plus investment. Productivity growth in the baseline is “calibrated” to achieve a given trend in long-term growth in line with historical growth rates (that is, up to 2015), and then productivity growth remains fixed up to medium- and long-term scenarios (2020 and 2030). For the baseline scenario of this report, the GDP growth rates assumed for Argentine economy are shown in figure C.1. Some caveats of the LINKAGE model are worth highlighting. The model does not include some of the features typical for increasing returns to scale with product variety, so the liberalization does not cause dynamic productivity gains and variety effects. However, empirical work supporting this approach is still underdeveloped, and there are no country-specific estimates of elasticity param- eters to be applied in global models. The LINKAGE approach is, therefore, based FIGURE ­C.1 Annualized real GDP growth in Argentina under the baseline 3.0 2.5 2.0 Percent 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 2015–20 2020–25 2025–30 2015–30 140 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy on intersectoral specialization effects alone. In addition, the model does not include other dynamic factors proposed in the literature, such as productivity increases from endogenous growth effects via technological spillovers, “learning by doing,” or inflows of foreign technology and investment induced by liberaliza- tion. These effects, while possible, are difficult to measure and incorporate in this type of analysis. Moreover, certain policy changes that are often difficult to quantify—such as reforms related to nontariff measures (NTMs) in goods and services and restrictions to investment—present analytical challenges that may affect the estimated economic effects. Owing to these limitations, CGE results presented in the report are likely to be conservative. NOTES 1. LINKAGE uses a vintage structure of production that allows for putty to semi-putty capi- tal. This means that capital can be either old or new, with new capital being more substi- tutable with other factors. In addition, it is assumed that old capital is less flexible than new capital. 2. A top-level CES nest first allocates aggregate (or Armington) demand between domestic production and an aggregate import bundle. A second-level nest then allocates aggregate imports across the model’s different regions, thus generating a bilateral trade flow matrix. 3. Therefore, countries that have declining youth dependency rates tend to see a rise in sav- ings. This will eventually be offset by countries where the share of the elderly in the popu- lation is rising, which will result in a fall of savings. REFERENCE Van der Mensbrugghe, D. 2011. Linkage Technical Reference Document, Version 7.1. Washington, DC: http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPROSPECTS/Resources/334934​ -1314986341738/TechRef7.1_01Mar2011.pdf. Appendix D The OECD PMR Methodology The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) economy-wide and sectoral product market regulation (PMR) indicators measure regulatory restrictiveness with regard to competition. While the economy-wide PMR is a single indicator that summarizes information by regulatory domain, the latter indicators do so by sector. The economy-wide indicator is calculated using a bottom-up approach in which data on regula- tory structures and policies are used to assign numeric values to eighteen low-level regulatory domains. These values, or low-level indicators, are then aggregated “up the tree” (figure D.1) to derive seven mid-level indicators, which are, in turn, aggregated to derive three high-level indicators: state c ontrol, barriers to entrepreneurship, and barriers to trade and ­ i nvestment.  Finally, these three indicators are aggregated to yield the ­ ­economy-wide PMR. Sectoral indicators aggregate information by sector. They are based on the same underlying dataset as the economy-wide PMR indicator, and their cal- culation utilizes a similar bottom-up approach, but the tree structure aggregates numeric values to derive sector-specific indicators. 1 There are ­ three sectoral indicators, corresponding to three sector groups: (1) energy, transport, and communications (ETCR); (2) professional services; and (3) retail distribution. For each group, computing the corresponding sectoral PMR indicator aggregates lower-level scores into an indicator for each sector in the group. For example, in computing the ETCR, we obtain indicators for the electricity, communications, and transport sectors. These are finally aggregated to obtain the ETCR indicator. Figure D.2 shows the tree structure of the ETCR and professional services nonmanufacturing regulation indicators.  141 142 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy FIGURE ­D.1 OECD PMR indicator Product market regulation Barriers to trade State control Barriers to enterpreneurship and investment Complexity Regulatory Explicit Other Involvement Administrative Public of protection barriers to barriers to in business burdens on ownership regulatory of trade and trade and operations startups procedures incumbents investment investment Scope of Price Licenses Administrative Legal Barriers Differential SOEs controls and permits burdens for barriers to FDI treatment system corporations to entry of foreign Government Command Tariff suppliers involvement and control Communication Administrative Antitrust barriers in network regulation and burdens for exemptions Barriers to sectors simplification sole-proprietor trade of rules and firms Barriers in facilitation Direct procedures network control over Barriers in sectors enterprises service sectors Governance of SOEs Source: Koske et al. (2015). Note: SOE = state-owned enterprise; FDI = foreign direct investment. FIGURE ­D.2 OECD Nonmanufacturing indicators in energy, transport, and communication sectors ETCR Energy Transport Communication Electricity Gas Air Rail Road Post Telecom Entry Entry Entry Entry Entry Entry Entry regulation regulation regulation regulation regulation regulation regulation Public Public Public Public Price Public Public ownership ownership ownership ownership controls ownership ownership Vertical Vertical Vertical Market Market integration integration integration structure structure Market Market Market structure structure structure Source: Koske et al. (2015). The OECD PMR Methodology | 143 NOTE 1. For example, data on the requirement of membership in a professional organization enter the calculation of the economy-wide PMR indicator via the “barriers in service sectors” subcategory within the “administrative burdens on startups” category. However, the same data enter the calculation of the professional services PMR indicator via the “compulsory chamber membership” subcategories within the “entry-regulation” categories for each of the four professional services. REFERENCE Koske, I., I. Wanner, R. Bitetti, and O. Barbiero. 2015. “The 2013 Update of the OECD’s Database on Product Market Regulation: Policy Insights for OECD and Non-OECD Countries.” OECD  (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 1200. http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver /download/5js3f5d3n2vl​-en.pdf?expires=1520448144&id=id&accname=guest&checksum​ =C9B7289FC51F2C4DBED4AC5E9320994A. Appendix E Calculation of the Potential Impact of Reforms Associated with Less Restrictive Service Regulations This appendix presents an ex ante calculation of the potential impact of service sector reforms that would reduce restrictive product market regulations on value added and associated gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The exercise follows the existing literature on the effects of restrictive product market regu- lation reforms on growth,1 notably Barone and Cingano (2011), Conway et al. (2006), and Arnold, Nicoletti, and Scarpetta (2011). Based on the World Bank Group’s Markets and Competition Policy Assessment Tool, four scenarios are calculated: • Scenario 1: The simulation is based on the differential of the reform effect between service-intensive and non-service-intensive sectors as a proxy of the size of the reform effect for only above-average service-intensive sec- tors.2 The analysis identifies Argentine sectors with above-average technical coefficients of service inputs based on the input–output tables for Argentina (for 2011)3 as intensive in all services combined (telecommunications, trans- port and storage, electricity, gas and water supply, and other business activi- ties that capture professional services).4 In this scenario, additional value added is calculated using data on 2011 value added in sectors intensive in ser- vices,5 and the additional GDP growth is calculated based on the share of additional value added in 2017 GDP. • Scenario 2: Includes the same assumptions as in Scenario 1 and takes into account the reform effect for only above-average service-intensive sectors. In this scenario, additional value added is calculated using data on 2011 value added in sectors intensive in services, and the additional GDP growth is calculated based on the share of additional value added in 2011 GDP. ­ • Scenario 3: Includes the same assumptions as in Scenario 1 and takes into account the reform effect for only above-average service-intensive sectors. In this scenario, additional value added is calculated using 2011 value added in  145 146 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy sectors intensive in services, and the additional GDP growth is calculated based on the share of gross value added in 2011 GDP. • Scenario 4: Takes into account the reform effect for  highly intensive ­ service sectors. Highly intensive sectors are those whose technical coeffi- cients for services inputs exceed the 75th percentile of the technical coeffi- cients for services across all sectors. In this scenario, additional value added is calculated using data on 2011 value added in sectors that are highly inten- sive in services, and the additional GDP growth is calculated based on the share of additional value added in 2017 GDP. Table E.1 presents the results of the sensitivity analysis using these four alter- native calculation methods. The results are robust to the assumptions presented above and suggest that if Argentina undergoes reforms that decrease the regula- tory restrictiveness of the service sector, growth in value added in service-­ intensive industries would translate into an additional 0.1 percent to 0.6 percent growth in annual GDP, all else being equal. TABLE E.1  Sensitivity analysis of impact calculation CALCULATION METHOD ADDITIONAL VALUE ADDITIONAL ADDED (US$ GROWTH OF ADDITIONAL VALUE ADDED ADDITIONAL GROWTH OF ANNUAL GDP MILLIONS) ANNUAL GDP (%) Scenario 1. Calculated using data on 201 1 value Based on the share of additional value 1,394.8 0.26 added in sectors intensive in gas, electricity and added in 2017 GDP water supply, telecom, transport, and other business services Scenario 2. Calculated using data on 201 1 value Based on the share of additional value 1,394.8 0.35 added in sectors intensive in gas, electricity and added in 2011 GDP water supply, telecom, transport, and other business services Scenario 3. Calculated using data on 201 1 value Based on the share of additional value 1,394.8 0.59 added in sectors intensive in gas, electricity and added in 2011 gross value added water supply, telecom, transport, and other business services Scenario 4. Calculated using data on 201 1 value Based on the share of additional value 607.9 0.097 added in sectors that are highly intensivea in gas, added in 2017 GDP electricity and water supply, telecom, transport, and other business services Source: Data from OECD Input-Output table for Argentina (https://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=IOTS) and IMF World Economic Outlook database, April 2017 (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2017/01/weodata/index.aspx) a Highly intensive sectors are those whose technical coefficients for service inputs exceed the 75th percentile of the technical coeffi- cients for services across all sectors. NOTES 1. See Kitzmuller and Licetti (2012) for a literature review. 2. Based on Barone and Cingano (2011), the differential of growth in value added of industries at the 75th and 25th percentiles of intensity in services was calculated to be approximately 0.75 percentage points higher in a country at the 25th percentile than a country at the 75th percentile of regulatory restrictiveness. Fixed prices and no supply constraints are as- sumed. 3. All calculations presented here are conservative, as the input–output table is endogenous to the current restrictive service-sector regulation, and, as a result, the contribution of service-intensive industries in the current economy is likely to be biased downward. ­ Calculation of the Potential Impact of Reforms Associated with Less Restrictive Service Regulations | 147 4. In the case of Argentina’s 2011 input–output table, available from OECD, the industries C73 (R&D) and C74 (other business activities) are reported jointly. Excluding this sector entirely does not change the re- sults substantially. 5. The sectors that use services intensively in Argentina are the following: food products, beverages, and tobacco; pulp, paper, paper products, printing, and publishing; chemicals and chemical products; other nonmetallic mineral products; basic metals; computer, electronic, and optical equipment; electricity, gas, and water supply; wholesale and retail trade; repairs; transport and storage; post and telecommunications; financial intermediation; computer and related activities; R&D and other business activities; and other community, social, and personal services. REFERENCES Arnold, J., G. Nicoletti, and S. Scarpetta. 2011. “Regulation, Resource Reallocation, and Productivity Growth.” European Investment Bank Papers 16 (1): 90–115. Barone, G., and F. Cingano. 2011. “Service Regulation and Growth: Evidence from OECD Countries.” Economic Journal 121 (555): 931–57. Conway, P., D. de Rosa, G. Nicoletti, and F. Steiner. 2006. “Regulation, Competition and Productivity Convergence.” OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), Economics Department Working Papers, no. 509. http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download​ /431383770805.pdf?expires=1520446942&id=​id&accname=guest&checksum​=2CA976F54702B6B8D​ AEDCD3D6DD61139. Kitzmuller, M., and M. Licetti. 2012. Competition Policy: Encouraging Thriving Markets for Development. Public  Policy for the Private Sector; note no. 331. Washington, DC: World Bank. http://documents ​.worldbank.org/curated/en/778181468328582034​/Competition-policy-encouraging-thriving-markets​ -for-development. Appendix F Specifications of the Price Regressions TABLE F.1  Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. cities in all other countries (with Numbeo data) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Argentina 0.138*** 0.141*** 0.330*** 0.323*** 0.319*** (0.022) (0.024) (0.022) (0.032) (0.040) Log of GDP per capita PPP (2011 — — 0.409*** 0.410*** 0.416*** international $) (0.026) (0.026) (0.034) Log of cost of import — — — 0.014 0.011 (0.046) (0.046) Tariff rate, applied — — — — 0.003 (0.010) No. of observations 17,724 17,724 17,542 17,542 17,482 R-squared 0.615 0.616 0.756 0.756 0.756 Product fixed effects Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Year fixed effects No Yes Yes Yes Yes Source: An elaboration using Numbeo data. Notes: Results are from an OLS regression using data from Numbeo. The dependent variable is the logarithm of market prices (US$/kg) of the following products: milk (regular, 1 liter), loaf of fresh white bread (500 g), rice (white, 1 kg), eggs (12), local cheese (1 kg), chicken breasts (boneless, skinless, 1 kg), beef round (1 kg, or equivalent back leg red meat), apples (1 kg), bananas (1 kg), oranges (1 kg), tomatoes (1 kg), potatoes (1 kg), onions (1 kg), lettuce (1 head). Standard errors clustered at the city level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively.  149 150 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy TABLE F.2  Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. comparator cities in Latin America (using the prevailing EIU market exchange rate to convert local currencies into US$) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Argentina 0.231*** 0.231*** 0.196*** 0.164*** 0.165*** (0.040) (0.040) (0.034) (0.029) (0.028) Log of GDP per capita PPP (2011 — — 0.272* 0.290* 0.272* international $) (0.143) (0.142) (0.137) Log of cost of import — — — 0.114** 0.090 (0.049) (0.093) Tariff rate, applied — — — — 0.006 (0.018) No. of observations 1,176 1,176 1,176 1,176 1,176 R-squared 0.782 0.786 0.795 0.798 0.798 Product fixed effects Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Year fixed effects No Yes Yes Yes Yes Source: An elaboration using EIU data. Notes: Results are from an OLS regression using data from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) dataset (http://www.eiu.com/site_info.asp?info_name​ =EIUcityData&entry1=DataServicesNav&entry2=DataServicesNav2&infositelayout=site_info_nav). The dependent variable is the logarithm of market prices (US$/kg) of the following products: apples (1 kg), bananas (1 kg), beef (roast, 1 kg), cheese (imported, 500 g), chicken (fresh, 1 kg), eggs (12), lettuce (1 head), milk (pasteurized, 1 liter), onions (1 kg), oranges (1 kg), potatoes (2 kg), tomatoes (1 kg), white bread (1 kg), and white rice (1 kg). Standard errors clustered at the city level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. The comparator countries in Latin America with available data include Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. TABLE F.3  Price comparisons analysis: Buenos Aires, Argentina, vs. comparator cities in Latin America, using PPP conversion factor (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Argentina 0.137** 0.136** 0.139* 0.084 0.090 (0.059) (0.059) (0.070) (0.118) (0.114) Log of GDP per capita PPP (2011 — — −0.023 0.008 −0.054 international $) (0.182) (0.202) (0.179) Log of cost of import — — — 0.183 0.096 (0.201) (0.165) Tariff rate, applied — — — — 0.021 (0.020) No. of observations 1,162 1,162 1,162 1,162 1,162 R-squared 0.783 0.787 0.787 0.794 0.795 Product fixed effects Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Year fixed effects No Yes Yes Yes Yes Source: An elaboration using EIU data. Notes: Results are from an OLS regression using data from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) dataset (http://www.eiu.com/site_info.asp?info_name​ =EIUcityData&entry1=DataServicesNav&entry2=DataServicesNav2&infositelayout=site_info_nav). The dependent variable is the logarithm of market prices (US$/kg) of the following products: apples (1 kg), bananas (1 kg), beef (roast, 1 kg), cheese (imported, 500 g), chicken (fresh, 1 kg), eggs (12), lettuce (1 head), milk (pasteurized, 1 liter), onions (1 kg), oranges (1 kg), potatoes (2 kg), tomatoes (1 kg), white bread (1 kg), and white rice (1 kg). Standard errors clustered at the city level are in parentheses. Significance is indicated by ***, **, and * at 1 percent, 5 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. The comparator countries in Latin America with available data include Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. — = not available. Appendix G Detailed Matrix of Policy Recommendations  151 152 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy SHORT TERM MEDIUM TERM LONG TERM CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE REQUIRES REQUIRES REQUIRES REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION Open up further opportunities to enter and invest Lower tariffs and NTMs in priority sectors Limit nonautomatic ComEx New decree  Unilateral tariff ComEx New decree Harmonize Foreign Affairs, Negotiations licenses to the reduction for high standards ComEx, CNDC within minimum (hazard­ protected sectors among Mercosur Mercosur  ous imports) parties Pursue FTA with Foreign Affairs, International Pursue “com­ Foreign Affairs, International EU ComEx agreement munity reforms” ComEx agreement at Mercosur Improve incentive framework to attract efficiency seeking more effectively Introduce a system­ AAICI Coordination Procedural AAICI Coordination atic inventory of federal–state mapping of steps federal–state incentives to adjudicate incentives Strengthening AAICI New program monitoring and evaluation of incentives Open key sectors for investment and eliminate barriers that limit market entry Limit GoA’s liability Advocacy by Change in law Eliminate “public Advocacy by Change in law Open domestic Advocacy by Change in law for losses of CNDC, AAICI (Ley 26466, hearing” for CNDC, AAICI (Ley 17285, Art. air transport CNDC, AAICI (Ley 19030, Aerolineas Art. 3) granting new 102) market to Art. 3) Argentinas licenses for air foreign carriers transport services Address red tape and bureaucratic hurdles that affect ease of doing business; particularly in the entry phase Better regulation Advocacy by New law and Broad application Advocacy by Change in law General Advocacy by New law and efforts to improve in AAICI, CNDC institution of AAICI, CNDC (Código Civil, Art. procedure for AAICI, CNDC institution the areas of doing “silence-is- 919) regulatory business consent” rule simplification Enhance access to more efficient input markets for firms Unilateral NTM reduction in input products Remove import ban ComEx New decree  Reduce NTMs for ComEx  New decree on used machinery, key industrial equipment, inputs instruments, devices, and their parts continued SHORT TERM MEDIUM TERM LONG TERM CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE REQUIRES REQUIRES REQUIRES REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION Introduce effective policies to promote linkages with domestic firms Develop a central AAICI New program Redesign perfor­ Advocacy by AAICI Change in law (online) database of mance require­ (Ley 27263)  national suppliers ments and local content rules, e.g., revise tax benefits in auto industry Introduce behav­ AAICI New program ioral incentives for firms to enhance capacities Strengthen anticartel enforcement, especially in homogeneous input products Strengthen cartel CNDC Increase in budget Elevate sanctions CNDC Change in law investigation and training for cartels (Ley 25156, techniques (IT Capítulo VII) forensic capabilities) Introduce leniency CNDC Change in law program (Ley 25156) Strengthen procompetition sector regulation in key input services Implement rules to Advocacy by Change in law Fully enforce Advocacy by Implementation Allow pay-TV Advocacy by Change in protect competitive CNDC (Ley 26092) MVNO framework CNDC companies to CNDC decree neutrality in the offer telecom-­ (Decreto 267) telecom sector munication Detailed Matrix of Policy Recommendations | 153 services Guarantee effective Advocacy by New policy  Review toll-­ Advocacy by Change in       non-discriminatory CNDC exemption rules CNDC Decree (Decree access in rail freight for private (‘self’-) 455/2007, Art. 1 cargo transport and Joint and public cargo Resolution transport (to third 111/2011) parties) Enhance predictability and a level playing field for the private sector Implement competitive neutrality principles and eliminate instruments that can limit competition Eliminate the Advocacy by Change in law Incorporate SOEs Advocacy by Implementation/ Introduce Advocacy by New law government’s ability CNDC (1974 Supply Law) under the same CNDC potential change regulatory and CNDC to control prices regime as private in Ley 20705 and tax-neutrality joint-stock company-specific principles for companies laws SOEs continued 154 | Strengthening Argentina's Integration into the Global Economy SHORT TERM MEDIUM TERM LONG TERM CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE CONTENT OF RESPONSIBLE REQUIRES REQUIRES REQUIRES REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION REFORM INSTITUTION Enhance the capacity of firms to thrive and expand Remove nonautomatic licenses to increase predictability Ensure that ComEx  New decree nonautomatic licenses are set to the minimum Reduce regulatory and legal uncertainty through broad regulatory improvement mechanisms Introduce a clear AAICI New secondary Legal obligation AAICI New legal Establishment AAICI New law and procedural protocol legislation/ for regulatory provision of a systemic institution to solve problems guideline agencies to investor faced by foreign publish text or response investors and arising proposed regula­ mechanism from regulatory tions before conduct enactment Strengthen the legal framework for e-commerce Remove exemptions AAICI and ComEx Change in law Strengthen AAICI and ComEx New law       to e-signatures and (Ley 25506) consumer e-documents; give protection specific validity to all types to electronics of e-signature consumers Overhaul merger control framework Raise notification CNDC Change in law Introduce fast- CNDC Change in law threshold for (Ley 25156, Art. 8) track procedures (Ley 25156, mergers for mergers Capítulo III) unlikely to have anticompetitive effects Improve procedur­ CNDC Secondary al effectiveness in legislation reviewing mergers Notes: ComEx = Sub-Secretaría Comercio Exterior; CNDC = Comisión Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia; FTA = free trade agreement; EU = European Union; AAICI = Agencia Argentina de Inversiones y Comercio Internacional; MVNO = Mobile Virtual Network Operator; SOE = state-owned enterprise. ECO-AUDIT Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank Group is committed to reducing its environmental footprint. In support of this commitment, we leverage electronic publishing options and print- on-demand technology, which is located in regional hubs worldwide. Together, these initiatives enable print runs to be lowered and shipping distances decreased, resulting in reduced paper consumption, chemical use, greenhouse gas emissions, and waste. We follow the recommended standards for paper use set by the Green Press Initiative. The majority of our books are printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)–certified paper, with nearly all containing 50–100 percent recycled content. The recycled fiber in our book paper is either unbleached or bleached using totally chlorine-free (TCF), processed chlorine–free (PCF), or enhanced elemental chlo- rine–free (EECF) processes. More information about the Bank’s environmental philosophy can be found at http://www.worldbank.org/corporateresponsibility. I ntegration into global markets can improve the efficiency of the Argentine economy, providing opportunities for private investment to flourish and for the associated benefits to accrue to consumers. Trade, investment, and competition policies are particularly relevant to this integration, and share a common attribute: they can motivate firms to improve resource allocation and productivity while they integrate into international markets. When combined properly, trade, investment, and competition policies can reinforce each other to generate growth dividends. It is only when implemented in a coherent way that reforms to the three areas can bring positive effects to the economy as a whole, including better jobs and variety of goods and services at lower prices for consumers. Strengthening Argentina’s Integration into the Global Economy follows a three-pronged approach. First, it gives a robust set of empirical results that draw from both general and partial equilibrium exercises to assess the potential impacts from trade, competition, and investment policy reforms. Second, it offers a new comparative review of international experience with structural microeconomic reform programs to bring insights for Argentina’s design and sequencing of such reforms. Finally, it offers individual reform recommendations for each institution in charge of the three respective policy areas. It does this in an integrated step-by-step framework from the perspective of a firm to illustrate the critical challenges Argentine companies face in investment and internationalization. ISBN 978-1-4648-1275-0 SKU 211275