Discussion paper

DP7852 Sequencing regionalism: Theory, European practice, and lessons for Asia

Feedback mechanisms are the key to sequencing when it comes to regional integration. Feedback mechanisms can mean that today?s policy or institution alters the political economy landscape in a way that makes it politically optimal for future governments to take further steps towards integration ? even when these steps are not politically optimal from today?s perspective. After outlining the theory, the paper uses feedback mechanisms to organise Europe?s postwar integration narrative, and then draws lessons for today?s integration of East Asia. The paper suggests that the spontaneous cooperation that created Factory Asia has not been codified. One starting point for Asian regional institutions would be to institutionalise the spontaneous cooperation that already exists on trade, services, and investment. New, creative thinking is needed on the sort of soft-law commitments and new modes of cooperation that would make this work with limited sovereignty pooling.

£6.00
Citation

Baldwin, R (2010), ‘DP7852 Sequencing regionalism: Theory, European practice, and lessons for Asia‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 7852. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp7852