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Regional Integration in Latin America - The Pacific Alliance a Way Ahead
Featured, In Conversation

Towards a Digital Economy Strategy for the Pacific Alliance?: The Broader Agenda

The Pacific Alliance Blog interviewed Professor Rodrigo Corredor about his recent article on the Pacific Alliance and its digital economy strategy, published in the Colombian Yearbook of International Law.

Mr Corredor is professor and researcher at Universidad Externado de Colombia in Bogota. He holds a Masters in International Economic Law from the World Trade Institute. He has postgraduates in Intellectual Property, Copyrights and New Technologies from Universidad Externado de Colombia and a postgraduate in Public Management and Administrative Institutions from Los Andes University in Bogota. He is currently a visiting fellow at the Centre de Sciences Humaines in New Delhi and a researcher and professors at the Department of Economic Law within Universidad Externado de Colombia. He has previously consulted on managing intellectual property and innovation for projects involving the Andean region and the European Union. His research interests are international economic law, intellectual property, the digital economy, trade in services, and regulation. He has written several journal articles and chapters in edited books on these subjects.

Mr Corredor, how did you become interested in the digital economy topic, particularly in the context of the Pacific Alliance?

The digital economy has become a ubiquitous societal topic. Its international trade incidence is undeniable; the impacts of the current uncontrolled developments and expansion of the digital economy will probably be our research field for the coming years. In the specific context of the PA, the digital economy’s regulatory challenge has followed the same path of a regulatory transplant from the General Data Protection Regulation in the EU (GDPR standards), so my concern is to assess the suitability of such approaches.

What are the main social and economic challenges you see in the deepening of the region’s digital economy?

Among the various challenges, I would like to emphasise the cultural impact of digitalisation. So far, people are enjoying the advantages of the digital platforms in terms of a more even access to cultural products that gives us a sense of integration to a globalised cultural agenda. However, the long-term consequences of unlimited access to our personal data can extend to a cultural erosion phenomenon. This effect is something that regulators and political authorities from the PA countries absolutely disregard.

Why do you argue that following a model inspired by the United States’ FTAs and self-regulation results unsuitable for framing sustainable solutions to the complex challenges of deepening the digital economy in the region?

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March 18, 2021by Ana Maria Palacio
Reports, Spanish

Identification of Opportunities to Develop and Strengthen the Digital Agenda in the Pacific Alliance

Abstract:
Not available

Resumen:
Tras la revisión de los contenidos del Acuerdo Transpacífico de Cooperación Económica (TPP por sus siglas en inglés), del Foro de Cooperación Económica de Asia Pacífico (APEC), de la Organización Mundial del Comercio (OMC), el Acuerdo Económico y Comercial Global (AECG o CETA), Acuerdo sobre el Comercio de Servicios (ACS o TiSA) y las normativas de la Alianza del Pacífico, así como de las entrevistas con expertos tanto del sector público y privado, se concluye que el Protocolo Adicional de la Alianza del Pacífico (PAAM) contempla la mayoría de los temas necesarios para el impulso de la agenda digital. Sin embargo, aún se detectan áreas de oportunidad en las cuales se pueden profundizar con el propósito de asegurar de forma concreta la participación del bloque en el proceso global de digitalización.

En materia de comercio electrónico, uno de los elementos más pujantes de la economía digital, la Alianza del Pacífico debe promover la difusión de los respectivos marcos normativos que protegen a los consumidores en las transacciones realizadas dentro del bloque, junto con orientar sus esfuerzos en diseñar mecanismos y mejoras orientadas a proteger a los consumidores de posibles amenazas y fraudes online. A su vez, las economías de la AP deben sumarse al comercio sin papel, por ejemplo, a través la homologación de autenticación electrónica.

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February 11, 2016by Ana Maria Palacio

Recent Posts

  • Towards a Digital Economy Strategy for the Pacific Alliance?: The Broader Agenda
  • The Latin American Services Factory for the Asia Pacific Region: Opportunities for the Pacific Alliance
  • Academic and Policy Research About the Pacific Alliance: A Snapshot
  • In Conversation: A Collective Identity in the Pacific Alliance
  • On Social Entrepreneurship and the Pacific Alliance: An Invitation

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Hello my name is Ana Maria Palacio. I have a PhD from the University of Melbourne. This blog is about my thesis project, the Pacific Alliance.

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