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Negotiations Turkey - EU   Will They Ever End?

Negotiations Turkey - EU   Will They Ever End?. by Crystal Santana, Mike O‘Donnell, Bojana Marusic, Nina Schulte-Schmale. Table of Contents. 1.) Overview 2.) Background 3.) Beginning of negotiations with EU 4.) Turkey’s progress in meeting the requirements

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Negotiations Turkey - EU   Will They Ever End?

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  1. Negotiations Turkey - EU   Will They Ever End? by Crystal Santana, Mike O‘Donnell, Bojana Marusic, Nina Schulte-Schmale

  2. Table of Contents 1.) Overview 2.) Background 3.) Beginning of negotiations with EU 4.) Turkey’s progress in meeting the requirements 5.) Arguments for Turkish membership 6.) Arguments against Turkish membership 7.) Conclusion/ Will Turkey join the EU?

  3. Overview • Capital: Ankara • Official language: Turkish • Religion: secular, 99.8% is Muslim • Government: ParliamentaryRepublic • Population: 2005 estimate 72.600.000 2000 estimate 67.803.927 • GDP: 2006 estimate Total $612.3 Billion Per Capita $9,107

  4. Background – steps in becoming a candidate of EU • Turkey –pluralist secular democracy • Proclamation of the Republic in 1923 • 1959 – European Economic Community (EEC) • 1999 – candidate country • 2004 – Copenhagen political criteria • 2006 – concrete accession negotiations

  5. Beginning of negotiations with EU • 3. October 2005 => formal beginning of negotiations by adoption of Negotiating Framework • Based on: Screeningprocess (first stage) Three pillars

  6. Screening => analytical examination of the EU legislation EU law divided into 35 chapters 1.) “Analytical screening”: Commission explains its acquis to Turkey 2.) “Detailed or bilateral screening”: Ankara explains its laws Screening Process • Commission evaluates the degree of development • in all chapters.

  7. Three Pillars • Full implementation of Copenhagen criteria (political, economic and adoption of acquis) • Complying with the EU acquis: - harmonization of Turkey’s rules and institutions with those of the EU • Civil society dialogue: - dialogue on cultural differences, religion, migration issues and concerns about minority rights and terrorism

  8. Turkish Progress on the Requirements • Criteria needing improvement: • Economic • Political • Ability to assume obligations

  9. No progress made on trade unions’ rights (based on standards set by EU and Int’l Labor Organization) Must have the option to strike Must make ability accessible to conduct collective bargaining Government debt has decreased Since 2001, the share of debt in relation to GDP has fallen, and is expected to continue decreasing Economic Aspect

  10. Political Aspect (1) • Non-Muslim groups -continual delay of law protecting other religious communities • Freedom of Speech -improvement in allowing people to assemble peacefully • Women’s rights -legal structure established, but not always applied, especially in areas of poverty, where sometimes crimes against women still take place i.e. “honor crimes”

  11. Political Aspect (2) • Minimizing corruption - policies in place are still not strong enough to deter rampant levels of corruption • Corporal abuse - torture still used

  12. Ready to Assume Obligations? • Right of establishment and freedom to provide services • Intellectual/property law • Competition • Energy • Environment

  13. Arguments against Turkish Membership • Values and culture • Geography • Population size and poverty • Political power • Relations with neighbors • Human right and democracy • CAP • Budgetary costs

  14. Values and Culture • Predominantly Muslim country (99.8 % of the population) Turkey is currently the only candidate country with a Muslim majority Predominantly Muslim country (9

  15. Geography • Only 3% in geographical Europe • Turkish capital is in Asia • Turkey's borders reach Middle Eastern nations

  16. Population Size and Poverty • expansion almost equal in population to that of the 2004 Enlargement • wave of poor Turkish immigration • high current account deficit, high debt, and high unemployment

  17. Unemployment http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/about/activities/cceq/2005q1_cceq.pdf

  18. Political Power • Its almost 70 million inhabitants will bestow it the second largest number of representatives in the European Parliament, after Germany

  19. Relations with Neighbors • Cyprus dispute • Aegean dispute

  20. Human Rights and Democracy • Concerns about the Turkish state´s ability to reach European standards in issues as gender equality, political freedom, religious freedom and minority rights

  21. CAP costs • In general full membership for Turkey of the EU would require an additional $3.1 bn of agricultural subsidies following the existing lines of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)

  22. Budgetary Cost Aspect (1) • starting point • two variants to this approach: • a) How much would Turkey receive today if it were a fully established member? • b) How much is Turkey likely to receive under current rules by a likely accession date, e.g. 2015?

  23. Budgetary Cost Aspect (2) a) Turkey in the EU today: • Structural Funds, capped at 4 % of its GDP • Turkey’s GDP around 200 billion euros- its allocation would be around 8 billion annually • extending the current CAP to Turkey -approximately 9 billion b) Turkey in 2015 in an enlarged EU: • absorption limit has been set at 4 % of recipient GDP • Turkish GDP could reach about 4 % of the EU-28 GDP

  24. Arguments for Turkish Membership • Economical • Political • Energy Resources • Population

  25. Economical(1) • Top 10 emerging markets in the world • In 2004 and 2005, growth was above 7% • In a few years, Turkey will have overtaken Poland and Romania

  26. Economical(2) • GDP is set to grow by 6% per year on average • Contribution to the EU budget would rise from estimated € 5bn in 2014 to almost € 9bn by 2020 • Turkish population: vast market for European goods and ready labour force • It could supplement a labour shortage in “old Europe” (by 2014, 1 in 4 Turks will be 14 or less)

  27. Domestic and Foreign Investments • low labour costs, closeness to a huge potential Eastern European market and unrestricted access to the European market would trigger massive domestic and foreign investments into Turkey's manufacturing industry

  28. Political • Strong regional military power • Second largest standing armed force in NATO and strongest in the Muslim world • Important geo-strategic position • Terrorism concerns

  29. Energy Resources • Turkey – center plot of energy resources • Direct piping between Russia and Iran carries natural gas to Turkey • Strategical papelines may help EU to maintain energy guarantee

  30. Population • Muslim population would be a weight to EU multi-culturalism efforts • Might help to prevent potential “clash of civilizations” • 23% of Turkish population is under 15, a balance for the increasingly aging population of the current EU

  31. Conclusion/ Will Turkey Join the EU? Latest steps Public opinion

  32. Latest Steps (1) • 29 Nov. 2006: Commission recommends to partially suspend membership negotiations with Turkey • 11 Dec. 2006: EU foreign ministers suspend talks with Turkey on eight of the 35 negotiating areas • 1 Jan. 2007: Germany takes over the rotating Presidency of the EU

  33. Latest Steps (2) • Turkey: presidential elections in May and parliamentary elections in November 2007 • negotiation process-“open-ended” • 2012: Membership negotiations end • 2015: Joining date

  34. Public Opinion • 48% of EU citizens are against Turkey joining the EU, while about 39% are in favor • Citizens from new member states • Austria • Sweden

  35. What Do People in Turkey Think About the Issue? • http://search.bbc.co.uk/cgi-bin/search/results.pl?q=turkey+EU&tab=av&edition=d&recipe=all&scope=all&start=3

  36. References • http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/about/activities/cceq/2005q1_cceq.pdf • http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4063233.stm • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accession_of_Turkey_to_the_European_Union • http://www.foreignaffairs.org • http://www.mfa.gov.tr/MFA/ForeignPolicy/MainIssues/TurkeyAndEU/EUHistory.htm • Turkey 2005 Progress Report, European Commission, Brussels 9. November 2005

  37. Thank you for your attention!

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