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Armenia's Role In The Eurasian Economic Union

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  • Armenia's Role In The Eurasian Economic Union

    ARMENIA'S ROLE IN THE EURASIAN ECONOMIC UNION

    Silk Road Reporters
    Oct 17 2014

    Published by John C. K. DalyOctober 17, 2014

    Artwork by Mariam Marukian, winner of United Nations stamp contest
    marking the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.

    On Oct. 10 Russian, Belarusian and Kazak Eurasian Economic Union (EEU)
    leaders signed an agreement on Armenia's accession to the organization
    in Minsk. On May 29 Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan signed the treaty
    converting the current Eurasian Customs Union (ECU) into the EEU,
    which will formally establish the EEU on Jan. 1, 2015.

    The EEU is designed to increase economic cooperation among its member
    countries, who under the terms of the treaty agree to guarantee the
    free flow of goods, services, capital and labor and to implement
    a coordinated policy in the energy, industrial, agricultural and
    transport sectors. The three EEU member states account for 85 percent
    of the GDP of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), with a
    combined GDP in 2013 of $2.43 trillion.

    Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan has no doubt that his country's
    accession to the EEU will launch a new phase of integration in
    Eurasia, telling reporters, "We will do everything possible for
    Armenia, with its expertise and competitive advantages, including
    by continuing institutional and structural reforms, to contribute to
    the strengthening of the Eurasian space."

    On Oct. 2 Armenia Public Television reported that the government
    approved the agreement on the nation joining the EEU during a session
    held in the capital Erevan, the same day that it approved the EEU
    draft treaty of accession. In presenting the draft accession document
    Deputy Finance Minister Suren Karayan said, "Armenia will become a
    full member of the EEU at the moment the treaty takes effect. The
    treaty lists commodities to which special import rates, differing
    from unified customs tariffs, will apply on the part of Armenia in
    the transitional period."

    The following day in Moscow Russian President Vladimir Putin said
    before a government meeting, "Today I signed a federal law on the
    ratification of the treaty on the EEU," hailing the signing as "a
    significant stage" in the joint work on integration with Russia's
    closest partners and allies, Belarus and Kazakhstan. The same day
    Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan told a press conference before
    the executive meeting of the Republican Party of Armenia that the
    country would sign an accession agreement to join the EEU in Minsk,
    commenting, "There is not much time till Oct. 10. I am sure that
    Armenia will sign the contract, and we will enter the Eurasian united
    economic space," adding that he foresaw no obstacles for entry into
    the EEU because the country fulfilled all the obligatory prerequisites.

    The benefits of the EEU for smaller member states seem clear, as
    membership in the bloc would give local producers easier access to a
    far larger and more lucrative market than their own. Armenia's economy
    is already intertwined with its fellow EEU members: during the period
    Jan.-Aug., Armenian trade with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia was worth
    $839 million, representing 23.1 percent of the nation's foreign trade.

    Energy figures prominently in the EEU's future agenda, as the three
    founding member states have 20 percent of the world's gas reserves
    and 15 percent of oil reserves. Though the three states only make up
    2.5 percent of the world's population, they cover 15 percent of the
    total land area. A common energy market concept is being developed
    which should be passed by mid-2015 to create a single energy market
    and merge EEU members' energy systems by 2016, with the ultimate goal
    of establishing a single hydrocarbon market and single gas transport
    system accessible to all EEU members by 2025.

    While many analysts speculate that the EEU, economically dominated by
    Russia, may become a tool of Russian economic and political policy,
    Armenia is already showing signs of daylight in its accession: on Aug.

    15 Armenian First Deputy Minister of Economy Garegin Melkonyan stated
    that even after joining the EEU, his country would not follow Russia's
    lead in banning imports of agricultural products, feedstock and food
    from U.S. and EU states over their sanctions policies towards Russia,
    telling the media, "The restrictions announced by Russia can only
    be used in Russia's territory. Under the relevant provisions of the
    Agreement on Eurasian Economic Union, the sides have the right to
    take some protective and restricting measures."

    Armenia's EEU accession will present some logistical issues. Sargsyan
    said at the session of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in
    Minsk, "The membership of Armenia has its own specificity which is
    the absence of common borders with the rest of the Eurasian Economic
    Union. However, we believe that this would not hamper the integration
    of Armenia into the single system of regulation, transportation,
    energy, telecommunications and finance in our common economic area. We
    are well aware of the special responsibilities that we assume by
    joining the treaty."

    Regarding possible Russian intentions to inject political overtones
    into the EEU, on June 17, Kazakh first deputy prime minister and
    a top negotiator in the EEU accession process Bakytzhan Sagintayev
    reiterated that his country was "forming a purely economic union. It is
    a pragmatic means to get benefits. We don't meddle into what Russia
    is doing politically, and they cannot tell us what foreign policy
    to pursue." Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev noted, "The Union
    is first and foremost economic and does not touch upon the issues
    such as independence and political sovereignty of the members of the
    integration process."

    Putin certainly sees the EEU as expanding; following the May 29
    signing ceremony he told reporters, "It is no accident that already
    the largest global economic players are showing interest, most direct
    and immediate, towards this union. Wherever I go, whoever I talk to,
    everyone asks: how to establish relations with the future Eurasian
    Union."

    As for the future, on Oct. 6 in Novo-Ogariovo near Moscow Russian
    First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said that a special group
    is also analyzing Kyrgyzstan's possible accession to the EEU, and
    there is a road map for drafting a treaty on Kyrgyzstan's joining
    the EEU but added, "This work will take some time." Further afield,
    Uzbekistan and Tajikistan may join later, and significantly, India,
    Israel, New Zealand, Turkey and Vietnam are among the countries that
    have expressed a desire to have trade agreements with the EEU.

    Whatever the eventual form future EEU policies will take, Armenia,
    as the most isolated and poorest of the three post-Soviet Caucasian
    states, is being presented with an opportunity to ally itself with
    two of Eurasia's stronger economies, Russia and Kazakhstan. If that
    integration comes with significant political baggage remains to
    be seen.

    Dr. John C. K. Daly is a non-resident Fellow at the Johns Hopkins
    Central Asia Caucasus Institute in Washington DC.

    http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2014/10/17/armenias-role-eurasian-economic-union/

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