Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

IBM Argentina Opens Three New Global Delivery Centers and Extends South American Virtual IT Campus

International Business Times

IBM today announced it has opened three new Global Delivery Centers in Argentina, entailing a US $60 million investment over ten years. IBM also announced the extension and opening of its Virtual IT Campus, the largest IT services hub in SouthAmerica.

These investments are in addition to the more than US$200 million that the company has announced in Delivery Centers over the past seven years in Spanish-speaking South America (SSA) — Argentina, Bolivia, Chile,Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, Ecuador, Uruguay and Venezuela — as a result of exponential growth reported in the services division and in the development of Global Delivery Services.

Argentina has been selected by IBM as one of the four countries in the world to deploy its Global Delivery Centers, as part of the company’sstrategy to become a globally integrated enterprise.

IBM has tripled its workforce in SSA in recent years, to almost 15,000 professionals, 50% of whom work in the Global Delivery and Servicesorganization.

The three new global delivery centers located in Argentina serve more than20 countries around the world. Services include server, database, networkand storage monitoring and support based on global practices, processes andmethodologies.

“These projects are part of the ten-year investment plan we have for SSA,”said Gustavo Méndez, IT Services Director for SSA.

Due to the steady pace of growth experienced over the past five years bythe LA region and LA countries — including Spanish-speaking South American countries, IBM Corporation has included the region in a new organization called “Growth Markets.” This territory comprises 51 countries with a consistent 20% growth rate, now representing 22% of the Company’s global revenues. The Company is planning to invest in these countries approximately US$1.6 billion by 2010.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Banco Itaú Argentina S.A. Joins IFC Global Trade Finance Program as an Issuing Bank

Media-Newswire.com

IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, today announced that Banco Itaú Argentina S.A. has joined the Global Trade Finance Program as an issuing bank.

Launched in 2005, the IFC Global Trade Finance Program supports trade with emerging markets worldwide. It aims to increase developing countries’ share of global trade and promote South-South flows of goods and services. The program supports an extensive network of banks globally and has issued guarantees for $4 billion to facilitate trade.

Fernando Ferrari, Itaú’s Treasury Sales Representative, said, “Trade finance is a strategic product for Itaú Argentina in developing the middle market. Through the program, the bank will improve its trade finance capacity by broadening access to international markets and extending its geographic coverage to serve clients better.”

James Peter Scriven, IFC Director for Financial Markets in Latin America, said, “IFC’s Global Trade Finance Program will allow Banco Itaú Argentina S.A. to increase its trade finance business worldwide as well as enhance its ability to provide efficient trade solutions to its clients, especially those in the small and medium enterprise sector and the agribusiness industry.”

Popularity: 3% [?]

Meet the giant-killers in soccer

Express Buzz –

JULIO Cesar,Lucio,Luis Fabiano,Ronaldinho,Robinho! No prizes on offer for guessing. Not even for Lionel Messi, Riquelme, Carlos Tevez. The entire world knows that they are gems from the lustrous footballing fields of Brazil and Argentina respectively.

But Johan Fano and Piero Alva Niezen or Roque Santa Cruz and Nelson Valdez of Paraguay or Jaime Robles and Ronald Raldes of Bolivia? Well, indeed the biggest prize could be on offer. To give it away, they belong to Peru, Paraguay and Bolivia respectively. Not just that, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay have been having a tough time in containing them and a host of other talented players from these less acclaimed nations in terms of soccer silverware.

Brazil are the only five-time World Cup winners — 1958, 1962, 1970 during the Pele, Vava, Didi, Garrincha, Tostao, Jairzinho era and, later, in 1994 with Romario, Bebeto and Dunga around. Their last triumph was in 2002 with Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho at their best.

Argentina won it for the first time in 1978 during the Daniel Pasarella and Leopaldo Luque era. The Diego Maradona period brought them success in 1986. Uruguay won the World Cup twice in 1930 and 1950.

Collectively, these three nations have won the World Cup on nine occasions to match Italy (4 times), Germany (thrice), England and France (once each) to make it South America 9, Europe 9 of the 18 World Cup tournaments played so far.

One would naturally expect the South Americans to have a cakewalk during the continental qualification phase of the World Cup. But year after year, nations which send shivers down the spines of aspirants from Europe, challengers from Africa and participants from Asia at every World Cup finals, struggle to eventually make the grade.

South American countries like Peru, Paraguay, Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Chile and Colombia appear unfazed by their presence of their illustrious rivals. In fact, they do scrape away a lot of lustre from their reputations with truly gutsy and brilliant performances.

Brazil, Argentina? Bring them on. Long live South American soccer!

Popularity: 2% [?]

Argentina and Uruguay’s tango row


BBC NEWS | Programmes |

One of the great Argentine icons, alongside footballer Diego Maradona and the former first lady, Eva Peron, is the tango singer, Carlos Gardel.

Pictures of him with his slicked-backed hair and perfectly tailored suits adorn many Argentine bars and restaurants and you will often hear his songs played by Buenos Aires taxi drivers on the all-tango radio stations.

He was an early playboy, an international superstar who came to a tragic and premature end in a plane crash in Colombia in 1935. Gardel is to Argentina what Frank Sinatra is to the United States or Edith Piaf is to France.

So while driving through northern Uruguay recently, I had to take a second look when I saw a sign pointing to Carlos Gardel’s birthplace and museum.

How cheeky can you get? It is like Canadians saying that Sinatra was not really born in Hoboken, New Jersey, but in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.

Or the British claiming that Edith Piaf really hailed from Basingstoke in southern England.

Gardel is as Argentine as a big lump of juicy steak being barbequed by gauchos out on the pampas. But not according to the Uruguayans, and they have the evidence to prove it – or so they say.

[T]his dispute goes to the heart of Argentine and Uruguayan national identity.Tango is not just a style of music and dance – it is the beat to
which both nations evolved from their immigrant roots.
It matters.

Popularity: 4% [?]

“Argentina puede exportar 10% del total de vino mundial”

lanacion.com

Para la enóloga Susana Balbo, propietaria de la bodega Dominio del Plata y presidente de Wines of Argentina, asociación que nuclea a las bodegas exportadoras, si se corrige el problema inflacionario y la falta de infraestructura, la Argentina puede llegar a capturar el 10% del mercado mundial de vinos en los próximos años (hoy está en el 3%). En una conferencia que brindó durante la Feria de Vinos y Bodegas en La Rural, presentó un completo panorama de las exportaciones de vinos argentinos. Estos son los principales conceptos:

- El mercado vitivinícola internacional es un mercado en plena evolución: las exportaciones mundiales de vino crecieron un 280% en los últimos 20 años y hay un crecimiento en el consumo mundial sostenido del 4% anual. El mercado está dominado por los países del Viejo Mundo (Francia, Italia y España), pero hay un gran crecimiento de las exportaciones del Nuevo Mundo: en 1994 eran del 8% del mercado mundial y en 2007 del 38%.

Popularity: 4% [?]

De la periferia al centro

lanacion.com

Uno de los autos más innovadores de los últimos tiempos llegaría al mercado sobre finales de este año. ¿De dónde viene? ¿De los Estados Unidos, de Alemania, Francia o Japón? No. Viene de la India. Así como lo fue en su momento el “Escarabajo” de Volkswagen, el “Nano” de Tata Motors promete ser “el nuevo auto de la gente”. Su valor rondará los 2500 dólares. Se transformará en el ícono del nuevo mercado de la “accesibilidad”. Ratan Tata es el dueño del grupo económico que lleva su nombre. Sus 96 empresas facturan, en conjunto, unos 22.000 millones de dólares al año. Tienen presencia en más de 50 países y exportan a unos 120. Ratan se acaba de dar un pequeño gusto: quedarse con dos empresas emblemáticas de la más alta alcurnia británica: Jaguar y Land Rover.

El “dinero nuevo” ya no está en el centro, sino en los bordes. Cabe
remitirse a los números. En el período 2003-2008, mientras la economía
de los Estados Unidos habrá crecido un 15%, la de Europa, un 11,5%, y
la de Japón, un 11%
; la de China lo hará un 64%; la de India, un 52%;
la de Rusia, un 41%, y la de Brasil, un 25%. Por supuesto que es en “el
centro” donde sigue concentrándose la mayor parte del stock de riqueza
del mundo: los EE.UU., Japón y Alemania continúan siendo las tres
principales potencias económicas globales. Si consideramos la Comunidad
Económica Europea como un todo, es tan importante como los Estados
Unidos. Ambos manejan casi 2/3 de la economía global. Pero una cosa es
el stock y otra el flujo. La velocidad de crecimiento de “los bordes”
es muy superior a la del centro.

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Popularity: 2% [?]

In South America, Gauchos Still Ride Tall in the Saddle — and So Can You

WashingtonPost

Even Charles Darwin was smitten by gauchos.

Notes from his 1833 expedition to South America excitedly describe a rare breed of cowboys discovered riding the open plains, “long, black hair curling down their backs . . . daggers at their waists” and weather-beaten guitars in tow.

For centuries, the itinerant gauchos roamed the South American countryside, toiling on ranches, serenading small-town women and inspiring folk legends about their footloose way of life.

Now, growing numbers of working farms, known in Argentina and Uruguay as estancias, are offering modern-day explorers the chance to experience the gaucho lifestyle for themselves, with a few contemporary comforts thrown in.

“The original gauchos were just wanderers,” Castro explains in Spanish,
lifting a gate to let the cattle back out to pasture. “They didn’t have
a home.” The herd streams past and recedes into the plains. Beyond, a
sea of scruffy grass rolls to the horizon.

It was on lonely plains such as these that, in the early 1700s, the
gaucho was born, the progeny of Spanish colonists and local Indians.
The mixed-race gauchos played Spanish guitars but wore ponchos; they
smoked tobacco but also sipped mate, an indigenous tea brewed from a
pampas shrub.

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Popularity: 10% [?]

‘India’s medium-term prospects still look bright’

The Hindu Business Line

Prof Arvind Subramanian, Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington DC, has written extensively on growth, trade, development, institutions, aid, oil, India, Africa, the World Trade Organisation, and intellectual property. He also holds a joint appointment at the Centre for Global Development and is senior research professor at Johns Hopkins University. In Chennai recently to launch his book India’s Turn: Understanding the economic transformation, he spoke to Business Line on a range of issues concerning the Indian and global economy.

Excerpts from the interview:

Over the last one year, starting with the sub-prime crisis to the crude price going through the roof, and inflation shooting up, the mood over the global and Indian economy has darkened, the euphoria over the Indian growth story has been tempered. So going from here, what do you think are the near-term prospects for the Indian economy?

I would like to take a medium-term look at the economy. [India] grew at about 6 per cent from the late 1970s till about 2002. Then, over the last four-five years, we have gone from 6 per cent to close to 9 per cent growth.

Then, two external shocks — the sub-prime crisis and the rising global commodity prices — started kicking in. So, in the medium term, we are looking at an 8-plus per cent growth. Of course, in terms of the cycle, there is going to be some effect of what is happening in the US and world economy.

So, for the next one year or so, we could be looking at growth of around 7 per cent. This is partly because of external shocks and the policy response to those shocks, by way of monetary tightening and other measures. So some slowing down of growth is inevitable in the next year or so.

What’s your outlook on inflation? With crude prices falling, do you think inflation will come down in the next year or so?

With the slowing down of the US and European economies and Brazil and India, the dollar started appreciating and some commodity prices have softened; so the inflation outlook looks better now than it did a couple of months ago. But that does not mean that the inflation worries globally are by any means over. I think, fundamentally, we are looking at stresses on supply. Productivity growth is slowing down in the US and probably in Europe too.

Also, the policy stance in the US still remains expansionary. Monetary policy in the US remains relatively loose because of the financial crisis there. Regarding fiscal policy, many economists in the US are calling for a second fiscal stimulus package because they want to avert a growth slowdown at all costs. Plus, all those countries that have dollar pegs are **running US monetary policy. So, the inflation scare is by no means over, despite the supply-side easing to some extent.

The Doha Round has collapsed and it was not a surprise. Now, where does the WTO go from here?

If you step back and look at what has been happening around the world, you would see that there is a lot of unilateral liberalisation going on. Countries have either liberalised unilaterally or as a result of regional trade pacts. So, the attractiveness of the multilateral process to effect further liberalisation in the developing countries has reduced significantly. A corollary of that is private sector interest in the rich countries, which was the main protagonist in pushing multilateral trade agreement, was completely absent. So this was the biggest problem with the Doha Round.

If we look at the way the Doha Round was launched, we can see its aberration. Even the rounds before that — Seattle, Cancun, Geneva, Potsdam — were fractious where countries did not want to negotiate. So, given this, failure was always on the cards.

What compounded the problem was that between the launching of the Round and today, it is a completely different world.

When the Doha Round was launched, oil was selling at $20 a barrel; now, it is around $120 and the price of rice has shot up. China’s current account was very small; no one had heard of sovereign wealth funds then, so the world has completely changed since the launch of this Round.

So we need to step back and say that the collapse of the Round is not a serious issue. The Doha Round is dead, let us bury it and move on to more important issues. I am not saying there is no need for multilateral cooperation, in fact, there is a greater need for that today. But what we need to co-operate on is different from what the Doha round had been stressing.

The issues we need to cooperate on are: Agricultural prices and their link to bio-fuels; the cartelisation of oil markets (which is a big problem for oil importing countries); undervalued exchange rates (the Chinese exchange rates are a serious problem for India); and global warming.

Q: What about the issue of farm subsidies in the US and EU, isn’t that an intractable problem? Are they under less pressure to address that issue now that Doha round has collapsed?

A: The agriculture policies of the US and EU are outrageous. Over the last one year, because prices have gone up automatically, a lot of the protection has come down as it is price related. In the EU, there has been some liberalisation; it has reduced some tariffs. But a lot of it is because prices have gone up, there is less need for protection.

But if we look at the recent farm bill passed in the US, to me it is outrageous that so much subsidies for the farmers are still being given even when prices are going up. But I do not think that farm subsidies were the only reason for the collapse of Doha.

India’s stance at Doha was that it needs to protect its farmers and ensure food security. To me, there seems to be a bit of disjunction between what we are doing domestically in this crisis (that is slapping export curbs, liberalising imports, which are hurting farmers) and what we were saying in Doha about protecting farmers.

The US and EU were unwilling to liberalise their agriculture but we were not willing to go too far either. We have liberalised agriculture as a result of food price hikes but we are not willing to commit that these policies would not be reversed in future. We still want huge margins of freedom to manoeuvre our policies. At the moment, our tariffs are pretty low but we want to regain the right to raise tariffs at some future date to protect farmers which is an issue.

I found China’s stance at Doha interesting. China did not want the Round because it wanted the right to protect its farmers. China’s stance was more credible than India’s because India still has a lot of margin to protect farmers as our bindings are much higher than actual tariffs. That is not the case with China. Under the WTO accession agreement, China’s bindings were much closer to the actual tariffs. So they do not have the freedom to raise tariffs to protect their farmers and that is what they were seeking.

But stepping back from who said what and when, the point is no one really wanted the Round. It was all drowned in the cacophony about who was not willing to liberalise when the fact was no one wanted to. So it was the agricultural exporters who got hurt.

But the really interesting political economy issue here is that countries like Brazil and Argentina, (which are big agricultural exporters that wanted  agricultural liberalisation), even they, at the end of the day, are saying that if prices remained high, they were happy. We can live without freer trade as long prices rule high. They are getting market access anyway.

Q: You have said recently that removing the curbs on global grain trade could bring down food prices. Do you see that happening?

A: In March-April, food prices we
re really surging, especially rice. So what became evident was, especially in the rice market, when countries imposed curbs on exports — India, Vietnam and the Philippines (Thailand was also contemplating) — the prices really spiked. And as these policies got reversed, you did see prices softening again. The funny thing about trade in agriculture is when we have a situation of surplus, we have protection, where countries subsidise agriculture, which leads to greater supply. But when we have pressures on the supply side, perversely we see the reverse happening, with countries curbing exports and removing import barriers. So this policy is making global grain prices move counter-cyclically. Prices go down in countries which have surplus due to subsidies and they go up in countries where there is scarcity.

The WTO is also ineffective here as it is unable to prevent protection in countries where there is excess supply and it is unable to prevent liberalisation and export controls in countries with scarcity. So what we need is more symmetry in the global trading system so that it could act as a price stabilizer.

You see when India imposed curbs on exports [ed - Argentina did as well leading to nationwide strikes] and liberalised imports, that seemed the logical thing to do to make more food available within the country. But when all countries adopt this policy, it does not help as it further drives prices up. So everybody ends up losing.

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Argentina, Brazil to sign trade currency pact: Lula

| Markets | Markets News | Reuters

Argentina and Brazil will sign a pact on Monday that will abolish the dollar in bilateral trade seen hitting $30 billion this year, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in an interview published on Sunday.

The initiative, announced in September 2006 and which had been expected to come into effect in July 2007, seeks to reduce exchange rate costs and simplify bilateral trade between the south American neighbors.

The pact will be signed in Brazil on Monday, when Argentine President Cristina Fernandez attends a bilateral summit — an initiative that could later be extended to other members of South American trade bloc Mercosur.

“On Monday we will sign an agreement with President Cristina (Fernandez de) Kirchner that will officially launch the use of reais and pesos in our trade exchange,” Lula told Argentine newspaper Clarin in an interview.

“We are going to abolish the dollar as a currency in our trade.”

He said he wanted Brazil and Argentina’s trade balance to be more balanced. Argentina had a $2.7 billion trade deficit with its larger neighbor Brazil in the first half of the year.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Copsa eyes US$3bn low altitude Trasandino tunnel, suggests modifications

BNAmericas , Chile news

Members of Chilean concessionaires association Copsa have met with Argentine firm CASA and Brazilian group Camargo Corrêa to express their interest in taking part in the project to build a low altitude Trasandino rail tunnel connecting Chile and Argentina, Copsa president Herman Chadwick told BNamericas.

The project, promoted by CASA and Camargo Correa, was declared of public interest by Argentine President Cristina Fernández on September 3, three weeks after the Chilean government announced the same endorsement.

The firms can now begin to carry out technical, financial and environmental feasibility studies to draw up a preliminary design, and authorities could launch a tender as early as late 2008, an official from Chile’s public works ministry told BNamericas.

Copsa is interested in including a highway tunnel in the project, said Chadwick, adding that the additional cost would be minor, considering the project’s US$3bn price tag.

In terms of construction time, Chadwick said great advances have been made over the last few years. While tunnels previously took 7-8 years to build, today works can last 7-8 months.

The project consists of building a rail tunnel near the Los Libertadores international pass that would guarantee year-round multimodal transport across the Andes, benefitting trade between Asia and countries such as Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Paraguay.

Popularity: 2% [?]

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