Colombia FOREIGN ECONOMIC RELATIONS
El Dorado International Airport at Bogotá
Courtesy Embassy of Colombia, Washington
In the late 1980s, because its economy remained highly
dependent on the outside world, Colombia conducted its
foreign
economic relations on several levels. In addition to the
dynamic
trade links long established with the developed world,
Colombia
also sought foreign investment and economic assistance. To
achieve
these goals, Colombia gradually opened its economy to the
outside
world, particularly after 1967, in order to integrate
foreign
markets, technology, and capital with its diversifying and
expanding economic efforts at home.
In the pursuit of economic liberalization, Colombia
forged
strong bilateral relations with both developing and
industrialized
countries. Colombia maintained trade relations with
numerous
industrialized nations, including the United States,
Japan, the
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany), the
Netherlands,
Canada, and Britain. Economic arrangements with developing
countries, by contrast, were important but constituted a
much
smaller portion of Colombia's trade.
In addition to bilateral trade agreements, Colombia
also
participated in several organizations dedicated to
improving trade
among regional members. As one of the original signatories
to the
Latin American Integration Association (Asociación
Latinoamericana
de Integración--Aladi), formerly the Latin American Free
Trade
Association (LAFTA), Colombia supported early attempts to
develop
a common market in Latin America. Although no more than 8
percent
of trade among its members could be attributed to Aladi,
integration efforts were an important aspect of both
political and
economic relations in Colombia and Latin America. Colombia
was also
a signatory, in 1969, to the Cartagena Agreement, which
established
the Andean Common Market (Ancom), also known as the Andean
Group
(Grupo Andino). Formed as a reaction to LAFTA's poor
performance,
the Andean Group was particularly important to Colombia
because
most of the nation's subregional trade in Latin American
was with
its northern neighbors.
The Andean Group was created to encourage greater
economic
cooperation within the region; although problems arose
among member
countries, it continued to operate with the full support
of its
constituency in the late 1980s. Commerce orchestrated by
Andean
Group agreements, however, amounted to no more than 5
percent of
the combined trade of the group's members at that time.
Colombia
was the group's largest trading partner.
In addition to regional trade groups, Colombia was a
member of
all United Nations (UN) organizations, including the
General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the Economic
Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). Moreover,
Colombia
participated in concessional trade arrangements, such as
the
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) offered by the
United
States.
As a leading exporter of coffee, Colombia supported the
provisions for coffee trade outlined in the International
Coffee
Agreement (ICA). Originally struck in the early 1960s, the
agreement had nearly seventy-five signatories by the
mid-1980s,
one-third of which were importing countries. The goals of
the
agreement included stabilizing world coffee prices and
ensuring
that a steady supply was available to consuming nations.
In an
international environment emphasizing free trade, however,
the
provisions for fixed prices and export quotas came under
attack in
the late 1980s. By the end of 1987, importing countries
led by the
United States had decided against extending the agreement,
preferring to let international markets set the prices and
quantities of coffee sold in the world. Despite this
setback, the
exporting countries argued that the ICA had been
beneficial to all
parties for twenty-five years and lobbied for the
agreement's
resurrection.
Colombia also offered free-trade zones and continued to
expand
them after they were introduced in 1964. Numerous parts of
the
country provided facilities for transshipment, assembly,
packaging,
or sampling of goods. Goods that were then sold in
Colombian
markets were treated as normal imports, whereas those that
continued on to markets outside Colombia traveled free of
any
government duty or regulation. To encourage foreign
participation,
these zones also provided exchange rate incentives,
allowed free
repatriation of profits for the foreign investors, and
granted
preferential rates on utility use. In 1988 free-trade
zones were
operated as autonomous organizations under the stewardship
of the
Ministry of Economic Development. They were located in
Barranquilla, Buenaventura, Cartagena, Cúcuta, Palmasca,
and Santa
Marta.
In addition to trade, Colombia nurtured foreign
investment. The
Andean Group's adoption of Decision 220 in 1987 further
loosened
foreign investment regulations, allowing greater freedom
for the
repatriation of profits, a higher percentage of foreign
ownership,
and investment in a wider variety of firms. In 1986 there
were more
than 700 foreign firms operating in Colombia, totaling
US$2.7
billion in investment. Approximately 85 percent were
concentrated
in mining and manufacturing. Government efforts were
directed
toward attracting capital for export industries that would
maximize
the use of local materials and labor. Additionally, the
government
was courting foreign banks as potential investors in the
restructured financial sector and hoped to bring in more
capital
for the highly promising petroleum industry.
The United States accounted for two-thirds of all
foreign
investment in 1986; it was followed by Western Europe with
21
percent, the Caribbean and Latin America with 9 percent,
Canada
with 2 percent, and the rest of the world with 1 percent.
United
States interests included manufacturing, such as
affiliates of
General Motors, International Business Machines, Union
Carbide, and
Goodyear; pulp and paper producers, such as W.R. Grace and
International Paper; and food-processing companies, such
as Borden
and R.J. Reynolds, in addition to mining and petroleum
companies.
In the 1980s, Colombia continued to be a major
recipient of
foreign economic aid and assistance. In 1949 it became the
first
Latin American country to receive a World Bank mission
dedicated to
analyzing its foreign assistance needs for development. As
a member
of the World Bank group of lending agencies, as well as
the IDB,
Colombia had consistently received financing for the
development of
infrastructure, public services, and other areas often
neglected by
capital allocated on purely economic grounds. Nearly 40
percent of
Colombia's outstanding public debt in 1986 was in the form
of longterm credits from the World Bank and IDB, totaling US$3.8
billion.
Bilateral aid and concessional loans also played an
important
role in financing Colombia's economic development. In 1986
total
outstanding loans to government development agencies, such
as the
United States Agency for International Development and the
United
States Export-Import Bank, amounted to US$2.4 billion.
Approximately 50 percent was owed to the United States, 18
percent
to Japan, 9 percent to West Germany, and 23 percent to
numerous
other donors. Since the 1940s, Colombia had consistently
ranked
among the top Latin American countries in terms of
subsidies
provided by the United States; total value of development
assistance, food aid, and other economic support was
US$1.5 billion
as of 1987. Most of that assistance had been terminated by
1978,
however. Since that time, Colombia had not received
significant
amounts of development assistance from the United States.
Data as of December 1988
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