SPEECH BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF
FINLAND,
MR. MARTTI AHTISAARI AT A MEXICAN-FINNISH BUSINESS CONFERENCE
IN MEXICO CITY ON 23.2.1999
To begin I thank the organisers for the opportunity to attend
this important function, which has attracted so many and such
distinguished representatives of Mexican industry and business.
This meeting is tangible proof of good cooperation between the
Confederation of Finnish Industry and Employers and its Mexican
counterpart CEMAI. We had an earlier example when a similar
meeting took place in Helsinki in summer 1997.
Relations between Finland and Mexico go back many decades. In
November of this year, in fact, we shall be celebrating the 50th
anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between
us. Even before that, in 1936, our governments had signed a
treaty of friendship. In those days, geographical distance was a
natural obstacle to closer contacts, but the explosive
development of air transport and telecommunication has nowadays,
fortunately, rendered it insignificant. The globe has shrunk into
a single village, where no corner is marginal.
With her colourful history, powerful cultural heritage and
richly-varied scenery, Mexico has always fascinated the Finns.
Today, your country is a rapidly-developing industrial power and
a fully-fledged member of the OECD, APEC and NAFTA. Foreign trade
is the engine of your economic growth and the development that
you are enjoying is the result of your far-sightedness in
exposing your economy to foreign competition.
My visit to Mexico is historic, because I am the first President
of Finland to come here on an state visit. Yesterday I had an
interesting and fruitful discussion with President Zedillo on
international, regional and bilateral themes. We were in complete
agreement that our relations are excellent and active. We agreed
to work jointly with the special goals of increasing and
diversifying trade between us. However, governments do not trade;
that, distinguished representatives of industry and business, is
your task.
The duty of governments, on the other hand, is to provide the
best-possible framework for trade and economic cooperation. With
that in mind, our governments yesterday signed an agreement
providing for the promotion and protection of investments.
Together with the agreement preventing double taxation that we
signed in 1997, this will provide a solid legal foundation for
companies to establish and invest in either country. The main
task of the Finnish Embassy and our export centre here is to
support companies in their efforts to penetrate the market.
The opening up of the Mexican economy in the 1990s, the
structural reforms that you have instituted and the rapidly
advancing privatisation of the state-owned sector have not gone
unnoticed in Finnish industrial circles. A good demonstration of
our increased interest in your growing market is the high-level
delegation accompanying me. It represents the strongest parts of
our industrial and commercial sectors: electronics and
telecommunications, papermaking, energy generation and
distribution, mining technology, mechanical engineering and the
distributive trades.
Our positive experiences to date of close cooperation between the
state authorities and the private sector justify confidence that
our efforts will create new business contacts in Mexico and
strengthen existing ones. I urge all of you to avail yourselves
of the opportunities that this conference is giving you.
Our bilateral trade doubled in both directions last year and
totalled about $140 million. As encouraging as that trend is, it
is still modest when we consider the economic and technological
potential of both countries. On the other hand, trade statistics
do not nowadays accurately reflect the volume of trade and
investment, because products are often manufactured in a third
country and exported from there. We estimate that at least twice
as many Finnish products are exported to Mexico from North
American and European countries than directly from Finland.
Finlands accession to membership of the European Union four
years ago has added a new dimension to our relations with Latin
American countries. This region is a clear priority for the EU
and its members. A good indication of this importance is the
first summit between the EU and Latin American and Caribbean
countries, which will take place in Rio de Janeiro next June.
Finland and Mexico are both helping to draft the agenda for this
historic gathering. It will be a search, on the highest level,
for solutions to regional and global problems and for ways of
ensuring that principles of democracy, human rights and good
administration are implemented in our countries.
In my view, we now have a unique opportunity for closer and
broader relations between the EU and Mexico. President Zedillo
and the Mexican Government have made this one of their political
priorities. The member states of the Union, in turn, want to
arrest the negative trend that has cut their market share in
Mexico almost in half, to only 6 per cent, in the past five
years. The agreement on economic association, political
coordination and cooperation signed in December 1997 created a
solid foundation for an ever-closer dialogue and growing
cooperation between us. I am proud to be able to say that Finland
was the first country to ratify this important agreement. As a
follow on, a free-trade agreement that will facilitate exchange
of a broad range of goods and services is now being negotiated.
The Finnish Government would very much like to see a
comprehensive and balanced agreement being reached as soon as
possible. It may well be that the talks will have reached the
final straight in the latter half of this year, when Finland
holds the Presidency of the European Union. Nothing would please
me more than to be able to witness the signing of the agreement
before the end of the year. It would be a good omen as we cross
the threshold to the new millennium.
The international environment in which companies do business has
been changing fundamentally throughout this decade. A central
feature of this development has been globalisation, with all the
international flows of capital, technology and other factors of
production that it entails. More and more companies now examine
their operations in a world-wide context. The force driving
globalisation is the revolutionary development in information
technology and telecommunications that has shrunk our planet.
Globalisation is not, however, merely a product of technical
development. It has also facilitated profound liberalisation of
trade and capital flows in many parts of the world. This, in
turn, has brought tougher competition and increased efficiency,
and thereby stimulated growth. Liberalisation of trade has been
achieved through multilateral and bilateral agreements, which
collectively form an important frame of reference for a global
system of economic endeavour. Mexicos extensive network of
free-trade agreements is a good demonstration of your
countrys timely response to the challenges of
globalisation.
In the past decade, investments have become a central
manifestation of globalisation. Indeed, they have even surpassed
trade in importance. It is estimated that every dollar invested
in an OECD country generates trade worth nearly twice as much.
About four-fifths of cash flows into developing countries is now
investment rather than development aid. Your Government has
created an investment-friendly climate in this country and as a
result Mexico is now one of the developing countries
biggest recipients of foreign direct investment.
Because globalisation is a process in which companies are the
driving force, it has eroded the ability of states to guide
economic endeavour: companies operate globally, but most
countries only nationally or regionally. The public authorities
can still to a certain extent influence the course that
globalisation follows as it evolves, but can not escape
involvement merely through political decisions. What is involved
is a much more profound economic and technological process, and
remaining aloof from it amounts to marginalising oneself. I find
it encouraging that the recent upheavals in the world economy
have not halted liberalisation of trade, capital flows and
investments.
As the influence of individual nation-states wanes, regional
integration gives them a better opportunity to relate to and
manage economic change. The constantly deepening integration in
Europe - for example our Economic and Monetary Union and the new
currency unit the Euro - are the clearest example of this. For
Finland, EU membership is an opportunity to have a real influence
on the decisions that this economic power - one of the most
important in the world - arrives at, thereby considerably
improving our ability to look after our national interests.
In a world of companies with global operations, the concept of
"national interest" needs to be redefined. Promoting
internationalisation is becoming a central national goal, and
global competitiveness is the most important force creating new
jobs. Also we in Finland have realised this and shifted the
emphasis in our policy onto encouraging our companies and the
economy as a whole to internationalise.
The task of the public authorities in Finland has been defined
as being to create favourable conditions for global business
operations. We have not embarked on the road of subsidies, which
violate the basic rules of competition and distort production
structures. Instead, we have channelled a lot of resources into
infrastructure, education and training and ensuring that
high-quality labour is readily available. In addition to that, we
have revised our tax system and legislation to bring them more
into line with changed circumstances and needs. Last year, the
public and private sectors between them invested the equivalent
of 3.1 per cent of gross domestic product in research and
development. That put Finland among the countries at the very top
of the world league. The indicators reflecting quality of life
likewise paint a positive image of Finland.
A high standard of education and training is a significant
competitive advantage for companies based in Finland. Cooperation
between our universities, the corporate sector and the
authorities is effective and flexible.
For the whole of this decade, growth in our economy has largely
drawn its strength from globalisation. The electronics sector has
come up rapidly to overtake forest products. Today, electronic
products account for a quarter of our total exports, which in
turn have doubled their value in less than ten years. The share
of advanced technology products in our exports has grown faster
than in any other industrial country. Finnish investments abroad
have grown strongly, which is natural as companies seek new
markets and merge in response to the challenges of
internationalisation.
As an economy with only five million inhabitants, Finland has
tried to specialise in certain key sectors where we believe we
have international-class know-how and high technology. The
majority of the Finnish industries that have enjoyed most success
already base their operations on specialisation and exports: more
than half of our industrial output is destined for international
markets. Thanks to the right economic policies, we have been able
to create strong competitiveness in several key sectors and in
that way respond to the challenges of globalisation.
Specialisation makes companies and whole economies more
interdependent. As a consequence, both impulses for growth and
disturbances are instantly reflected throughout the international
trade and economic system - and in the case of the latter,
unfortunately, often with undue severity. We can all recall quite
recent examples of this. On the whole, nevertheless, the benefits
of globalisation indisputably outweigh its drawbacks.
Looking at the matter in general, Europe has not managed
particularly well to respond to the challenges of globalisation.
A comparatively low savings rate, the public sectors large
share of the economy, high unemployment and a very expensive
welfare state have all contributed to weakening Europes
relative competitiveness. A successful changeover to a common
currency, the Euro, will give us a unique opportunity to make our
continent more competitive. However, it is mainly in global
markets that growth will have to be sought.
Finland and Mexico are irreversibly part of the new global
economy. Both of us have foreseen the challenges and problems
that it would bring and implemented the necessary structural
changes in our economies. We have supported the market economy
and free trade, and exposed our industry to tough international
competition. Mexicos membership of NAFTA and Finlands
membership of the European Union have integrated both of us into
a pattern of broader and more solid cooperation, something that
has had clear positive effects on the development of our
economies.
Thus our prospects of developing our mutual commercial and
economic cooperation on a basis of equality are excellent. The
Government and economic sector of Finland will work effectively
and smoothly together to ensure that this opportunity is availed
of.
Many thanks.