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Armenia: How To Maintain Multi-Vector Integration?

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  • Armenia: How To Maintain Multi-Vector Integration?

    ARMENIA: HOW TO MAINTAIN MULTI-VECTOR INTEGRATION?

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    June 20 2013

    Leonid Vardomsky, the head of the Center of Post-Soviet Studies of the
    RAS Institute of Economy

    Armenia, like the majority of post-Soviet countries, tries to provide
    a multi-vector foreign policy. It is explained by a complicated
    geopolitical situation in the country, first of all, the unsettled
    Karabakh problem and the vast geography of the Armenian Diaspora.

    Among economic reasons of the multi-vector nature there is a limited
    internal market, overload of labor resources under a deficit of
    capital and technologies. As the result Armenia significantly depends
    on foreign outlet markets of its products and on foreign demand on its
    labor resources. At the same time, the country cannot fully use the
    factor of big marketing area within the CIS because of the transport
    blockade and high transport expenses on transiting through Georgia
    or Iran.

    On the other hand, Armenia takes one of top places among new
    independent states on institutional conditions of business providing.

    Evaluating the business climate of 185 countries, the World Bank
    registered the shift of Armenia in the Doing Business Rating from
    the 50th place in 2011 to the 32nd place in 2012. However, progress
    of market institutions doesn't bring necessary socio-economic effect
    without access to foreign markets.

    The European vector

    Armenia was one of the first countries in the CIS to join the WTO in
    2003 for an extension of cooperation with the EU. It led to a decrease
    of Georgian traffic rates. In 2004 Armenia joined the European policy
    of neighborhood; in 2009 in the context of the global financial crisis
    it became a member of the Eastern Partnership. In 2010 Armenia was
    offered signing the agreement on association which included an article
    on a deep and all-round free trade area. The aim of the agreement is
    political association and gradual economic integration into the EU.

    >From this point of view the EU market is the greatest for Yerevan:
    in 2011 45.5% of Armenian export referred to the EU countries, and
    only 20.1% - to the CIS countries, including the Customs Union -
    17.3% and Russia - 16.6%.

    The road map for Armenia adopted in 2012 within the Eastern Partnership
    speeded up preparation for the agreement on Association with the EU.

    The Eurasian (Russian) vector

    Intensification of cooperation in the Eastern Partnership is taking
    place in the context of Russia's growing integration efforts in the
    sphere of the Customs Union within EurAsEU and the all-round free
    trade area in the CIS (Armenia joined the area in September 2012). In
    general Armenia's integration policy is determined by an opportunity
    of simultaneous participation in the free trade areas with the CIS
    and the EU countries, like Ukraine.

    The Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Sarkisyan said in an interview
    with the Latvian newspaper Neatkarigas Rita Avize that he shared
    the view of Russian President Vladimir Putin that the process of
    integration of the CIS and the European Union cannot be contrasted,
    they should be considered as mutually complementary: "Armenia
    has the same position. We appreciate and want to develop mutually
    beneficial trade and economic contacts with the EU countries... We
    took responsibilities on launching the EU standards in economy and
    we won't reject this plan."

    The common view of the Armenian elite is that cooperation within the
    Eastern Partnership and the association with the EU will enable to
    establish a modern state, while cooperation with Russia will provide
    the country's security.

    At the same time, either Russia or the EU asks Armenia to make an
    integration choice because according to some European representatives,
    the association with the EU and the deep free trade area don't match
    the Customs Union.

    Can the multi-vector course be maintained?

    Armenia like other countries of the CIS which are not members of the
    Customs Union has found itself in a difficult situation. Improvement
    of the Eurasian vector means rejection of the familiar multi-vector
    model for Armenia which has many international treaties and duties
    and has developed the strategy of the foreign political activity for
    the near future.

    Considering the reaction of the country's leadership, it is not ready
    to change the developed course.

    Expert Andrey Areshev thinks that it "can be explained not only
    by counter-offers from Washington and Brussels (which are rather
    declarative and abstract), but also by absence of conceptual clearness
    in the Eurasian integration union."

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/41725.html

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