1 / 10

EU-Turkey Trade Relations

EU-Turkey Trade Relations. 31st Meeting of the EU-Turkey Joint Consultative Committee. Dimitris Tsarouhas Jean Monnet Chair Assistant Professor, Department of IR Bilkent University www.bilkent.edu.tr/~dimitris. 20 December 2012, TOBB. Presentation Outline. Free Trade: an Evolving Idea

Download Presentation

EU-Turkey Trade Relations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EU-Turkey Trade Relations 31st Meeting of the EU-Turkey Joint Consultative Committee Dimitris Tsarouhas Jean Monnet Chair Assistant Professor, Department of IR Bilkent University www.bilkent.edu.tr/~dimitris 20 December 2012, TOBB

  2. Presentation Outline • Free Trade: an Evolving Idea • The EU’s Trade Policy • EU-Turkey Trade Relations • Global Business Bridges: Innovative Initiatives Adding Value to the EU-TR Partnership

  3. Free Trade: An Evolving Idea • 1701, Considerations Upon the East India Trade (Henry Martin): Technological progress and imports allows for an efficient use of resources • 1817 David Ricardo: Comparative Advantage, trade as a non-zero sum game • Mid-19th Century: repealing the UK Corn Laws, the Cobden-Chevalier Treaty of 1860 – MFN Clause • Free Trade reliant on ideology and interests • This is a fragile coalition at best (e.g. Interwar period, protectionism in most of Europe till 1945). • Bretton Woods and WTO: trade as a welfare-generating mechanism

  4. The EU’s Trade Policy • Goal: to create a fair and open trade system by use of WTO mechanisms and procedures • Assessment: benefits of globalization and open markets outweigh the costs • How? Generates growth, reduces prices and enhances quality, offers more employment opportunities (trade sector employs 18% of EU workforce) • The EU accounts for 20% of global exports and imports • EU imports more agricultural products from the developing world than the US, CAN, AUS, JPN, and NZ put together • EU and M-S account for more than half of all development aid • EU trade market share: 19.4% (US 12.5%, Japan 8%). • Trade volume doubled from 1999 to 2010

  5. EU-TurkeyTrade Relations:Overview • Economic Relations date back to the 1963 Association Agreement – enhancing economic and trade relations • 1970s Additional Protocol, 1996 Customs Union • EU Turkey’s No.1 imports and exports partner; Turkey Europe’s 7th largest importer and 5th largest exporter • Turkey exports machinery and transport equipment • EU exports machinery, transport materials, chemical products and manufactured goods • EU primary source of FDI in Turkey (75%)

  6. EU Trade with Turkey: Going Strong Despite The Crisis

  7. Turkey’s Trade with the EU: Robust Despite the EU Crisis

  8. EU Remains Turkey’s Most Important Trade Partner: By Far Turkey’s Imports Partners Turkey’s Exports Partners Major Trade Partners 1) EU-27 54.610 39.3% 1) EU-27 39.755 46.3% 1) EU-27 94.364 42.0% 2) Russia: 16.291 11.7% 2) Iraq 4.564 5.3% 2) Russia 19.788 8.8% 3) China: 13.000 9.4% 3) Russia 3.497 4.1% 3) China 14.715 6.5% 4) USA 9.338 6.7% 4) USA 2.906 3.4% 4) USA 12.244 5.4% 5) Iran 5.791 4.2% 5) UAE 2.522 2.9% 5) Iran 8.092 3.6%

  9. Global Business Bridges • Promoted by the EUD – a Positive Business Agenda • Aims to facilitate EU-Turkey business matchups, reaping the benefits of the CU • Economic and investment synergies of enterprises • Joint Ventures in neighbouring markets • A win-win approach, supported by M-S and TR authorities (TOBB, MoE etc.) • Aims: business alliances, PP partnerships, technology and know-how transfer, cross-border service provisions, joint investments and ventures

  10. Global Business Bridges II: the Salience of Synergy • Target Regions Phase 1: Tunisia, Egypt, Palestine • Target Regions Phase 2: Iraq, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan • Arab Spring and global political change pose huge challenges to economic governance • EU-TR partnership a uniquely placed stabilizing factor • Ideal to facilitate investment, support local infrastrcuture and promote a business-friendly environment

More Related