Globalization of the economy
The
formation of NAFTA reshapes the region
The North American Free Trade Area encompasses a market equivalent in
size to that of the European Economic Area. This new common market has a population over
360 million and a GNP of almost US$ 5 trillion.
NAFTA is creating an expansion in intra-regional trade, which in part
replaces imports from outside the region, and an increase in the foreign investment by
non-NAFTA countries into the region. The formation of NAFTA increased Mexico's access to
the U.S. market significantly and to some extent in the Canadian market as well. This
raised the level of foreign investment in Mexico considerably, enabling Mexico to grew at
much faster pace than before.
Japanese investment in North America grew considerably in the 1980s.
Although it has seen a decline in the 1990s, Japanese investments in the U.S. have
succeeded in creating ****** new jobs for the North American workers in the United States
and Canada over the years. The incorporation of Mexico into the NAFTA market made Mexico a
country in which Japanese companies expect to find new opportunities for expansion in the
region.
Trade surplus forces NIEs and Japan to invest in other regions
In the latter half of the 1980s, the number of trade disputes stemming
from the acute growth in trade imbalances between the Asian NIEs countries and U.S. and
Europe increased. The rapid economic growth of the Asian NIEs caused local wages to soar,
making this region less competitive than it had been a decade before.
This situation prompted the Asian NIEs to make foreign investments
outside the region. Foreign direct investment from Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore
grew significantly. Of these four, Korea and Taiwan invested heavily in the United States,
while Hong Kong and Singapore increased their direct investment in ASEAN countries such as
Thailand and Malaysia.
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