Abstract

The initial chapter of this work describes the general character of the Cartagena Agreement and its original and current relationship with the different types of national development strategies followed by the six nations that signed it. Such strategies are examined in chapter II, studying in the next one the probable economic effects of the main integration programs or mechanisms on each country. Chapter IV is intended to evaluate, in the light of the economic and ideological interests of each country, the degrees of conflict and harmony that may arise between the different States in the course of the process. The work ends with a brief analysis of the perspectives and main challenges facing Andean integration in the middle of the 1970s.

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