Exports from Latin America, Caribbean to contract 14 percent in 2015

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Exports from Latin America and the Caribbean will contract by 14 percent in 2015, due to "strong falls in the prices of raw materials and lower international demand," according to new forecasts released Tuesday by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

ECLAC Executive Secretary Alicia Barcena spoke on Tuesday in Mexico City to release the organization's new report, named "Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2015. The regional trade crisis: assessment and outlook".

Combined with a 0.4 percent fall in 2013 and 3 percent fall in 2014, the 14 percent fall in 2015 means these three years saw the region's worst export performance in 80 years. According to the ECLAC, exports could also continue to fall in 2016.

According to the UN body, the negative trend is attributed to a change of economic cycle characterized by an excess of liquidity, a fall in aggregate demand, and a lesser capacity among emerging countries to absorb external shocks, among others.

Furthermore, pressure is now mounting on countries to take adjustment measures, including investment in new technologies and infrastructure or improvement of production processes. The ECLAC stated that producers of raw materials had not invested enough in such measures during the boom years.

"The region is at a crossroad. Either it follows its current path and stays restricted in the global context, or it commits to a more active global participation which features industrial policies, diversification, free trade and intra-regional integration," said Barcena on Tuesday.

The report states that the largest contraction of exports will hit Venezuela with 41 percent, then Bolivia with 30 percent, Colombia with 29 percent and Ecuador with 25 percent. The Caribbean, as a whole, will see exports diminish by 22 percent and Brazil will lose 15 percent, while Mexico and Central America will only see a 4 percent drop.

The ECLAC explained that Mexico and Central America had been protected by the fact that their principal export destination, the U.S., remained more dynamic than other regions. Endi

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