The View from Europe
By David Jessop
A little over a week ago China launched a missile into space. It destroyed an ageing Chinese weather satellite and in so doing caused it to become only the third nation ever to have shot down an object in space. Irrespective of Beijing’s tactical reasons for doing so, it confirmed China’s position as a power to rival the United States.
This global ambition is more quietly reflected at a regional level. China’s relationship with the Caribbean continues to grow in carefully differentiated ways depending on Beijing’s assessment of a nation’s strategic importance, its capacity to provide raw materials, it ability through its financial services regime to facilitate investment, or a nation’s willingness to support a one China policy at the UN and elsewhere.
Its approach in the region has been marked by pragmatism and a considered exercise of its economic influence. Thus it has been China, rather than any Commonwealth cricket playing that has built stadia for the cricket world cup. Or in the case of the Dominican Republic - one of the few nations in the region that maintains formal relations with Taiwan - it has continued to increase its trade; up to US$490 m in 2006 compared with just US$180 m with Taiwan.
India too is expanding its global role, albeit at an economic rather than at a political level. In the last few days the huge Indian steel company Tata acquired the Anglo Dutch steel company Corus for US$11.3billion making it the fifth largest steel company in the world.
In the region too, India is beginning to increase its influence. The Confederation of Indian Industry plans to hold a Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) meeting on February 14 in New Delhi. The country’s Essar Group, is building a $1.2 billion steel plant in Trinidad and Tobago. And Manipaul University in India has just announced that it is establishing a campus in Antigua that will offer education in a number of disciplines including communication studies, nursing, pharmacy, and tourism.
Closer to home, Brazil has emerged as a regional and international power. It has begun to offer itself an alternative pole in the Americas to the United States, albeit in a sometimes less than consistent way. Internationally it has become a major international player together with India in determining how far and how fast trade liberalisation moves forward at World Trade Organisation. In the Caribbean it is slowly beginning to make it presence felt through investments such as those shortly to be announced involving Jamaica’s sugar industry. It is also likely to come to be seen as a strategic partner if later this year it begins to jointly promote with Guyana the investment and development opportunities that will flow from the completion of the road from Brazil’s underdeveloped North East to Georgetown.
Russia too is redefining its global role through its ability to control the supply of its vast reserves of oil and gas in a manner that allows it to simultaneously project its power, maintain domestic nationalist sentiment and increase it reserves.
It too is engaged with the region. Guyana’s President, Bharrat Jagdeo has just visited Moscow where he met with Russia’s President, Vladimir Putin, where he discussed a large possible investment by Russian aluminium giant RusAl, the second largest primary producer in the world of aluminium. Its business sector is looking at other opportunities elsewhere, not least in the tourism sector.
What each of these unrelated developments point to from both an international and a regional perspective is the way that the global balance of political and economic power is shifting away from those nations that Caribbean Governments have been historically closest to.
While relations remain positive with the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and the European Union, their international outlook is also in flux.
For example: the European Union, although the region’s largest aid donor has made clear its development and trade priorities are with regions of the world other than the Caribbean. The special relationship with the United Kingdom continues to redefine itself and is trending to drift towards security and governance. And at the same time, new partners in Europe are emerging: Spain, most notably has begun to take a political and economic interest in the English speaking Caribbean and Ireland’s economic engagement is growing rapidly.
In the case of the United States, the present political vacuum in Washington when it comes to think about the region may be coming to an end. Importance is being given to a high level conference on the Caribbean that will take place in Washington from June 19-21. This ambitious event aims to create a new dialogue between the US and that Caribbean and at revitalising US investment. It may well include Caribbean Heads of Government meeting with President Bush and other senior Administration officials. Despite this being overdue, no one should be under any illusion about the need for realism about the limits of US interest or the likelihood of its active involvement in the region.
In a matter of days, Caricom’s Prime Ministerial Sub-Committees on the Caribbean Single Market (CSME) and Economy and External Trade Negotiations will meet in Jamaica.
The prime objective of Caribbean Heads will be to resolve a number of issues that have effectively halted the region’s ability to progress in its trade negotiations with Europe. But central to all of their deliberations will be achieving a consensus on how the pace of progress towards implementing the CSME relates to the rapidly changing world order.
In the short term it may be possible to address the Caribbean’s differences with the EC.
Jamaica’s Foreign Minister, Anthony Hylton, has suggested the region should not be forced by Europe to adhere to a timeline if it is not satisfied that it has negotiated the best possible agreement for Jamaica or Cariforum, given that any new arrangement will fix trade relations with Europe for the foreseeable future.
But in the longer term he and others well know that the global political and economic adjustments now underway make it imperative that any strategic decision about the future of the region needs to achieve a new and better balance between the emerging powers and those with which the region has an historic relationship.
David Jessop is the Director of the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at [log in to unmask]
Previous columns can be found at www.caribbean-council.org
February 2nd, 2007
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