26.01.2015 Views

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

PART II:<br />

versa for Croatia; for Macedonia it is Serbia, as well as for Montenegro; for Kosovo these<br />

are Macedonia and Serbia, and finally for Serbia it is Bosnia and Herzegovina). So, the<br />

creation and implementation of CEFTA-2006 acts as an incentive for closer integration<br />

in the Region, and as Jentisch-Muller pointed out: “...the quickest way to achieve the<br />

“Four freedoms” for the movements of goods, services, capital and people is not through<br />

a wholesale adaptation of the acquis but rather targeted removal of barriers that currently<br />

obstruct these freedoms” (Jentisch-Muller, 2007, p.7).<br />

3. Geographical concentration of imports and exports of the Republic of<br />

Macedonia<br />

Macedonia’s recent history, like that of most other Balkan countries, begins in the 1990s.<br />

No matter the fact that Macedonia peacefully achieved its independence in 1991, it hasn’t<br />

had less of a decline in GDP or trade. It took Macedonia until 2003 to return to the 1991<br />

level of GDP (Naghshopour 2008, p. 211). According to the report given by the World bank<br />

(WB, February 2008:7), growth was sluggish, but toward the end of the period, Macedonia<br />

has experienced considerable growth rates. GDP grew on average 3% annually in real<br />

terms and per capita GDP in EUR showed a jump of 26% between 2000 and 2006 (See<br />

Table 3).<br />

Table 3: Aggregate economic growth indicators of<br />

the Republic of Macedonia, 2001-2006<br />

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006<br />

GDP/capita (EUR at exch. rate) 1921 1887 1981 2025 2128 2279 2432<br />

GDP real growth 4.5 -4.5 0.9 2.8 4.1 3.8 3.5<br />

Source: “Labor Costs and Labor Taxes in the Western Balkans”, WB, February 2008<br />

Both imports and exports in the Republic of Macedonia had overall positive trends, and in<br />

fact, they grew by more than 2.5 times (See Tables 4 and 5). The main nagging problem<br />

in this area was that total imports exceed total exports and Macedonian imports from all<br />

SEE countries grew faster than exports (from 1.89 times for imports from Croatia; 2.35<br />

times for Serbia and Montenegro; 6.3 times for Albania and 6.47 times for Bosnia and<br />

Herzegovina, to 1.91 times increase of exports in Serbia; 3.43 times in Croatia; 3.79 times<br />

in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 5.68 times in Albania).<br />

The same can not be said for the geographical concentration of Macedonian imports and<br />

exports in the Region of SEE, since almost in the whole period, exports exceeded imports<br />

in all SEE countries (apart for Croatia in 2000 and for Serbia and Montenegro in 2004,<br />

when imports exceeded exports). Looking into the structure of import-export data, it is<br />

clear that in the whole period, the most important trading partner of Macedonia was Serbia 5<br />

(always more than 70% in the import, as well as in the export side), while Croatia was on<br />

the second place, creating almost ¼ of imports and between 11% and 17% of exports.<br />

5 Before the independence of Montenegro in 2006, data is given for Serbia and Montenegro.<br />

176

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!