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Armenia Takes One Step Towards Europe

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  • Armenia Takes One Step Towards Europe

    ARMENIA TAKES ONE STEP TOWARDS EUROPE

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #696
    Aug 9 2013

    Immediate effect will be to ease visa process; broader trade benefits
    will come later.

    By Yekaterina Poghosyan - Caucasus

    An impending deal with the European Union should be good news
    for Armenia's struggling economy. But economists warn that the
    benefits of trade on preferential terms will take a long time to
    make themselves felt, because Armenia's economy is in no shape to
    compete internationally.

    Negotiations on the "Association Agreement" were successfully completed
    on July 24, and once it is signed at a meeting in Lithuania at the end
    of November, it will result in lower tariff and other barriers between
    Armenia and the EU, offering the country access to a massive market.

    One immediate benefit is that Armenians will find it easier to get
    visas for the Schengen Zone, which includes most EU states.

    Closer association with the EU has been a key aim of Armenian foreign
    policy for most of the post-Soviet period.

    Yerevan joined the European Neighbourhood Policy in 2004, opening the
    way to cooperation on justice matters, human rights, energy and more.

    Five years later came the Eastern Partnership, an EU initiative to
    broaden cooperation with near-neighbours Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
    Moldova, Ukraine and Belarus.

    Talks on the Association Agreement with Armenia have taken three years.

    In a statement, the EU commissioners for external affairs and
    enlargement, Catherine Ashton and Stefan Fule, said the agreement
    would "allow the EU and Armenia to drive forward together a programme
    of comprehensive modernisation and reform based upon shared values,
    political association and economic integration".

    "The agreement will have a direct positive impact on daily life and
    will bring Armenia and all its citizens closer to the European Union,"
    the joint statement said.

    Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, a deputy foreign minister who was Armenia's chief
    negotiator on the agreement, said he anticipated that the deal would
    finally be signed, ratified and in force by 2017 or 2018.

    Officials say the deal could lead to a boost in trade between Armenia
    and the EU, already its biggest trading partner. But implementing
    the agreement will take time.

    William van der Geest, a consultant on trade matters based in Yerevan,
    said the Armenian economy would take a long time to reach international
    standards, and judging by the experiences of countries like Romania
    and Bulgaria, there would be a transitional period before the terms
    of the deal could be fully implemented.

    One decisive factor, he said, would be addressing the monopolies that
    currently dominate in Armenia.

    "There are monopolies in the economy everywhere," he said. "The
    question is about how we control them. This supervision process must
    allow new businesses to enter the market."

    Van der Geest predicts that "it will take five to seven years for the
    average Armenian to see the difference. In the long term, however,
    residents of Armenia will see a greater choice of goods and services on
    offer in their country. Thanks to the reduction of obstacles to import,
    goods will get cheaper. The growth of exports will create more jobs."

    Some commentators say the average Armenian has no idea of the
    significance of the EU agreement or its implications for them
    personally.

    "Even the country's parliament is only superficially informed about
    the points in the deal. The time has come to tell the people what
    the purpose of this agreement is," said Naira Zohrabyan, head of the
    parliamentary commission for European integration.

    In Zohrabyan's opinion, the key aspects of the deal are the prospect
    of economic integration with Europe, impetus to combat corruption,
    and free movement for Armenian nationals.

    She said the agreement should help keep the pressure on Armenia's
    leaders to change the way politics and business were conducted.

    "Armenia will be forced to undertake concrete, specific reforms,
    rather than just issuing announcements with neither the political will
    nor the readiness to implement them, which is what the government
    has always done up to now," she said. "If, after the Vilnius summit
    [in November], Armenia slows the pace of reforms, I am certain the
    EU will be able to impose sanctions."

    An agreement unveiled last November and due to come into force later
    this year already allows for simplified - and cheaper - Schengen visa
    procedures for certain categories like official delegations, academics,
    students, journalists, sportspeople, artists, and relatives of anyone
    with permanent residency.

    "Of course, at first the simplification of visas affects only a
    few sections of the population - students, academics, journalists
    and politicians," Zohrabyan said. "But all the same, it will be a
    very important step. The degrading conditions for Armenian citizens
    applying for a Schengen visa at the moment are simply not appropriate
    to the current level and nature of Armenian-EU relations."

    Yekaterina Poghosyan is a reporter for the Mediamax agency in Armenia.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/armenia-takes-one-step-towards-europe

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