An interesting new political strategy is happening in Eastern
Europe and on the north Asian plateau and it all smells too much like strategic
economics again. Russia is moving its economic weight, but this time for a new
strategic move of geographic proportion, an expansion into the realm of the trade/Customs
union.
The EU is not only a unity of policies, with endless
bilateral agreements and an entanglement of laws. Its main function at the end,
is primarily to liberalise the movement of free trade within the European
countries, which we closely now refer to as member states.
The reason to join a customs/trade union are simple, export
growth that can lead a much better balanced current account for a country.
Germany currently being the most prosperous, and even more so since the
European Monetary Union was introduced, has led the way in showing how free
trade is a great source for GDP.
Russia is currently focusing on expanding its customs union
to the former USSR satellite states and then maybe further onto the Eurasian
plate. It wants to take advantage of its natural resource position and the
export dependency a lot of the former satellite states still have on it.
Ukraine was poised and ready to become a member state of the
European Union, though it all smells now like a large bluff. At the end of it all, it comes down to your
largest trading partner. Ukraine does its trade with Russia a significant
amount more than with the EU. Having then a bilateral agreement between the
two, would significantly reduce export/import costs. Also most Ukrainians feel
more Russian than European in culture, one thing resented by many of the
eastern bloc is the European unity and fear of culture loss.
Though behind these arguments lies the main reason. Russia
has always dominated the energy supply of the eastern European sector, and
Ukraine knows this too well. Vladimir Putin has also imposed heavy custom
checks on Ukrainian imports creating losses in the billions in theory. Embargoes
from chocolate to steel pipes were also imposed upon goods this year and Mr
Putin goes further on this, with forwardly stating that the Customs union as a
whole may impose high levies in order to protect the Union for EU goods
possibly entering their market.
The Payoff for Russia is vast. Not only does it secure a
competitive advantage of trade with the Ukraine and cuts off basically its
trade relations with the EU. It further tightens its power over the former
soviet state and overall makes it ever so more dependent on Russia.
Vladimir Putin is also winning powerful game with the EU
over its diplomatic procedure. That in all the EUs democratic ways are rather
pointless in competitive arguments, as even if the Ukraine in someways would prefer to be courting itself with the EU commission, it still has to get into bed with Moscow. But this is by far not the
first major hit by Russian Bear: slowly but surely it is geographically
taking back its land.
It is amazing the unfortunate though inevitable power that strategic reason can have in undemocratic environments, but it is a good example of how maybe technocratic procedures could eliminate these problems for the EU, as it battles several fronts. Banking unity, Soverigen debt restructuring, migrational issues and strategic economics.
Tata for now
G.E.
It is amazing the unfortunate though inevitable power that strategic reason can have in undemocratic environments, but it is a good example of how maybe technocratic procedures could eliminate these problems for the EU, as it battles several fronts. Banking unity, Soverigen debt restructuring, migrational issues and strategic economics.
Tata for now
G.E.
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