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Course Contents: (Business in Europe)
- Europe.
- European economy. Foreign trade.
- Institutions and agreements.
- The European Union. EU enlargement.
- Doing business in European countries.
The primary objective of this part, is to offer a
global vision of Europe Economy and european institutions.
Summary:
EU the world's biggest single market. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), Council of the Baltic Sea Status ...
Institutions and Ageements.
The European Union (EU) has grown in size with successive waves of
accessions. Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom joined in 1973 followed by
Greece in 1981,
Spain and Portugal in 1986 and Austria, Finland and
Sweden in 1995. Ten new countries are joining the European Union:
Cyprus, the
Czech Republic,
Estonia,
Hungary,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Malta,
Poland, the
Slovak Republic and
Slovenia. A new era of opportunity begins
for Europe. 450 million people in 25 countries can now build their future
together, united in peace, freedom and democracy.
Bulgaria and
Romania.
Turkey is also a candidate country.
It is now the world's biggest single market, in population terms, though the
North American Free Trade Agreement remains larger in terms of economic might.
In Copenhagen on 13 December 2002, the European Council took one of the most
momentous steps in the entire history of European unification. It decided to
welcome 10 more countries to join the EU on 1 May 2004. In taking this decision,
the European Union was not simply increasing its surface area and its
population. It was putting an end to the split in our continent - the rift that,
from 1945 onwards, separated the free world from the Communist world. So this
fifth enlargement of the EU has a political and moral dimension.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development was established
in 1991 when communism was crumbling in central and eastern Europe and ex-soviet
countries needed support to nurture a new private sector in a democratic
environment. Today the EBRD uses the tools of investment to help build market
economies and democracies in 27 countries from central Europe to central
Asia. The EBRD is the largest single investor in the
region and mobilizes significant foreign direct investment beyond its own
financing. It is owned by 60 countries and two intergovernmental institutions.
But despite its public sector shareholders, it invests mainly in private
enterprises, usually together with commercial partners.
The Central European Initiative (CEI) is composed of 17 Member States:
Albania, Austria,
Belarus,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Bulgaria,
Croatia, the
Czech
Republic, Hungary,
Italy,
Macedonia,
Moldova,
Poland, Romania,
Serbia and
Montenegro, Slovakia,
Slovenia and
Ukraine. They embrace a territory of 2.4
million square kilometers and a population of nearly 260 million. CEI has 7 EU and 10 non-EU Member Countries
European Free Trade Association (EFTA) is an intergovernmental
organization promoting free trade and strengthening economic relations. EFTA’s
Member States are Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. The EFTA
Secretariat supports the Member States in managing the EFTA free trade area, the
EFTA participation in the European Economic Area (EEA) and EFTA's network of
free trade agreements. The EFTA Secretariat is headquartered in Geneva, with an
Office in Brussels, and a Statistical Office in Luxembourg.
UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE UNECE. The
United
Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) is one of the five regional
commissions of the United Nations. It is the forum where the countries of
western, central and eastern Europe, central Asia and North America – 55
countries in all – come together to forge the tools of their economic
cooperation. That cooperation concerns such areas as economics, statistics,
environment, transport, trade,
industry and enterprise development, sustainable energy, timber and habitat.
Council of the Baltic Sea Status CBSS. The Council of the Baltic Sea
States was established at a conference of the foreign ministers of Denmark,
Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland,
Russia, Sweden and
a member of the European Commission in Copenhagen in March 1992. Iceland joined
the CBSS in 1995.
EU Enlargement
The economy
For the euro area, real GDP is forecast to increase on average by 1.8
per cent. Positive growth in the rest of the world will continue to support
exports, which remain the mainstay of growth. This moderate rate of economic
expansion will be associated with only small gains in employment. The average
annual unemployment rate in the euro area will be 8.9 per cent. Inflation is expected to fall slightly below the ECB’s 2
per cent threshold.
The stance of fiscal policy is expected to be broadly neutral (possibly even
slightly restrictive) both for the euro area and western Europe. In view of the
fragility of factors of domestic growth and the dampening effects of the
stronger euro on domestic economic activity and inflation, monetary policy in
the euro area is likely to continue to “wait-and-see”.
For western Europe as a whole, the annual rate of economic growth will be
some 2¼ per cent, reflecting the slightly stronger growth momentum in countries
outside the euro area. Among the four major west European economies, average
annual growth will remain significantly below 2 per cent in Germany and Italy.
Economic activity is expected to be stronger in France and the United Kingdom,
with real GDP increasing by nearly 2 per cent and by 2.5 per cent, respectively.
The average annual rate of economic expansion in the European Union
(EU-25) will be 2.2 per cent i, masking significantly stronger growth in the
aggregate of the ten new member States compared to the EU-15.
Economic growth should remain strong in central Europe and the Baltic States
(EU-8). Although GDP growth has started to decelerate in the EU-8 countries,
recent economic sentiment indicators suggest a favorable short-term outlook. In
2005, the average rate of growth in the EU-8 may slow down somewhat compared
with 2004 but, at some 4½ per cent, will remain considerably above the average
of western Europe. A noticeable surge in greenfield
FDI projects should accelerate the ongoing process of restructuring and
boost exports. Further fiscal consolidation is envisaged in some countries in
2005 but its dampening effect on domestic demand should be marginal.
Most of the south-east European economies are also set to maintain strong
rates of growth in 2005 but the unusually high rates achieved in some countries
in 2004 will be difficult to sustain. Overall, domestic demand is set to remain
buoyant, and should provide solid support to economic activity in these
countries. Better financial intermediation and rapid credit expansion will
continue to fuel demand and output growth. In the event, real GDP is forecast to
increase by somewhat more than 5 per cent compared with the preceding
year. If Turkey is excluded from the regional aggregate then the
average annual growth rate will be slightly lower. However, given the ongoing
enterprise restructuring in many parts of the region the increases in employment
are likely to be small.
Economic activity in the CIS as a whole may lose some steam in 2005, but
aggregate GDP is nevertheless expected to expand by some 6.5 per cent (table 2).
Decelerating growth rates will prevail in all the large CIS economies – Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine – following the evolution
of external factors such as commodity prices and demand
in the region’s main markets. Domestic demand in the CIS should generally remain
buoyant but its effect on domestic economic activity will depend on the
responsiveness of domestic supply. The macroeconomic policy stance should remain
broadly neutral in the large economies, with the possible exception of Ukraine
where some fiscal tightening can be expected. While in the short run there may
be some further improvement in the labor markets, many CIS economies still have
to address the challenge of restructuring as labor adjustment has in general
been lagging behind that in output.
Available Languages:
. Summary:
- Global strategies of European Union
companies
- Strategies of
French companies (Fr)
European Country Directory
Europe, The European Union, European Economy, Institutions, world's biggest single market, European Bank, Reconstruction and Development, United Nations, Economic Commission for Europe, UNECE, Council of the Baltic Sea Status, European Free Trade Association, EFTA, Central European Initiative, CEI, Master, International Business
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