Middle East economic integration explained

Middle East economic integration refers to the process of improving economic cooperation, coordination, and connectivity among countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. This process aims to create a unified economic space that allows for the free movement of goods, services, capital, and labor across national borders within the region. The objectives behind such integration include enhancing regional trade, stimulating economic growth, achieving economies of scale, and fostering stability and peace through economic interdependence.[1]

Policies advocating Middle East economic integration aim to bring about peace, stability, and prosperity in the Middle East, which they believe can only be sustained over the long run via regional economic cooperation.

Efforts towards Middle East economic integration have faced various challenges, including political conflicts, economic disparities among countries, and differing levels of economic development. However, initiatives like the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the Greater Arab Free Trade Area (GAFTA) have made strides in facilitating some level of economic cooperation and integration among member states.[2]

Background

See also: History of the Middle East. Former U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher said that, "Governments can create the climate for economic growth...[but] only the private sector can produce a peace that will endure."[3]

Benefits of integration

Countries seek greater regional integration in order to:

Economic integration requires good governance, education reform, social investing, knowledge economy, market economy, privatization and freedom of press.

Objectives

In 1993, Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, a leading architect of the Oslo peace plan, envisioned that:[1]

The next stage, after bilateral and multilateral relationships have been established, will entail formation of regional industries through the cooperation of internationalbodies and independent international consortiums. At this point, the regional economic process will be upgraded and the new reality, in which business precedes politics, will be instituted. Ultimately, the Middle East will unite in a common market after we achieve peace. And the very existence of this common market will foster vital interests in maintaining peace over the long term.

Integration and peace

A prerequisite to economic integration is the establishment of peace. To date, several initiatives have enabled rapprochement among former enemies:

The Oslo Peace Accords and the 1994 Israel–Jordan peace treaty have promulgated greater economic interactions between Israel and its Arab neighbors. Despite this progress, problems like the Israeli–Palestinian conflict continue to be a hindrance to peace and development. Furthermore, the instability created by the war in Afghanistan, civil wars in Syria, Libya, Yemen and Egypt and the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq are considered negative factors to be overcome before the establishment of an economic union in this region.

Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Economic Summits

Following the Israel–Jordan peace treaty in 1994 s series of Economic Summits were organised, to promote regional economic development and economic cooperation with Israel.[4]

Following the 1997 conference, the Middle East peace process suffered a serious setback due to Benjamin Netanyahu government's policies that alienated the Arab countries (namely the refusal to work towards establishment of an independent Palestine State), which refused to discuss economic cooperation with Israel unless it made some concessions. As a result no more summits were held.

In the 1995 summit the actions agreed included:[7]

Regional characteristics of MENA

See also: Economy of the Middle East.

  1. Flows from non-oil economies to the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (GCC) economies, and
  2. Palestinian labour working in Israel. In the 1990s, these flows have been subject to major restrictions and there has been recent substitution of Asian labour for Arab labour in both cases. MENA does not have the kind of labour mobility found, for example, in the European Union, where the citizens of one country have the right to work in others.
Prospects for the MENA Region[9]
MENA Region200920102011
Real GDP growth2.83.64.5
Real GDP growth (PPP)2.73.64.5
Exports (change %)−9.52.65.2
Imports (change %)1.24.96.6
CA (% of GDP)−0.11.50.9

Initiatives for integration

Examples

  1. Council of Arab Economic Unity

Established in 1964, with the ultimate goal of achieving complete economic unity among its member states. An intermediate objective of customs union has been set for 2015.

  1. Economic Cooperation Organization

Established in 1985. The common objective is to establish a single market for goods and services in West Asia, like the European Union.

  1. U.S.–Middle East Free Trade Area

Established in 2003 by the United States, this aimed to gradually increase trade and investment in the Middle East by assisting countries to implement domestic reforms and protecting private property rights.

  1. Euro-Mediterranean free trade area

The initial aim is to create a matrix of Free Trade Agreements. The next step would be a single free trade area of 600–800 million people, including, eventually, the European Union.

Challenges and opportunities

Good governance attracts capital. Some Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia have made positive steps in reforming their judicial systems or adapting their capital market laws to international standards. Building efficient and capable public institutions needs to be a priority.

See also

References

  1. Momani . Bessma . A Middle East Free Trade Area: Economic Interdependence and Peace Considered . The World Economy . November 2007 . 30 . 11 . 1682–1700 . 10.1111/j.1467-9701.2007.01036.x . 155053491 . 12 June 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120311234338/http://www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/~bmomani/WE-%20MEFTA.pdf . 11 March 2012 .
  2. Web site: Challenges of Growth and Globalization in the Middle East and North Africa by George T. Abed and Hamid R. Davoodi . 2024-03-25 . www.imf.org.
  3. Prosperity in the New Middle East: Building the Structures of Peace, remarks made at the 1994 MENA Economic Summit . Christopher . Warren . 1 December 2004 . Casablanca, Morocco .
  4. Web site: Middle East/North Africa Economic Summit. 2000-11-15. Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the People's Republic of China.
  5. Book: The Casablanca Report: The Middle East/North Africa Economic Summit, October 30-November 1, 1994, Casablanca, Morocco. Council on Foreign Relations. 1995. 9780876091791.
  6. Financing National Pride: The 1995 MENA Economic Summit in Amman. Political and Legal Anthropology Review. Anne Beal. E. 1999-11-01. 22. 2. 27–40. 10.1525/pol.1999.22.2.27. 24510863.
  7. Web site: Declaration of the Amman Economic Summit, 31 Oct 1995. Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  8. http://www.middleeastconversation.org/?p=1749{{Dead link|date=April 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  9. Web site: Iran's economic growth to hit 2.2% in 2010: World Bank.
  10. Web site: Business Articles - Arabs urged to speed up economic integration . The Daily Star . 2010-02-12 . 2010-02-25.
  11. Web site: MENA: Trade and Regional Integration are Critical to Economic Recovery in the Post-Covid Era . 2024-03-25 . World Bank . en.
  12. Web site: MENA Economic Update: Trading Together — Reviving Middle East and North Africa Regional Integration in the Post-COVID Era . 2024-03-25 . World Bank . en.
  13. Web site: Designing a Roadmap to Recovery .

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