PublicationsRegional Cooperation

Transition and international integration in eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union

This paper investigates the extent of integration of the transition economies into the world economy. We find that south-eastern Europe (SEE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) trade significantly less with the world economy than the accession countries. We use a gravity model to explain why this is the case and conclude that the low quality of economic institutions in the CIS, and hence the high risks associated with trade, explain a considerable proportion of the “trade gap” compared to trade levels in industrialised countries. Moreover, the landlocked nature of many CIS countries (and hence high costs of transport and transit) is another reason for the lack of integration. In SEE these factors play a lesser role and the gravity model is unable to fully explain the lack of integration, which we suggest is a legacy of the region’s recent turbulent past. The paper suggests that a combination of improved market access to western markets and efforts to reduce trade and transit barriers within the region provide the best hope to increase economic integration with the world economy in the future.

Link http://www.ebrd.org/pubs/econo/wp0083.htm
Author Babetskii, I., Babetskaia-Kukharchuk, O., Raiser, M
Date Nov 2003
Institute EBRD
Tags trade, transportation, SEE, CIS, soviet

See also

  1. External Trade in the CIS Countries
  2. General Equilibrium Analysis of Albania's Integration with the EU and South Eastern Europe
  3. The Evolution of EU policy towards its CIS neighbours
  4. Regional Free Trade Agreements of Bosnia and Herzegovina: analysis and policy recommendations
  5. Ten years after: what is special about transition countries?

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