Tag: free-trade

  • Ghana, Turkey to sign trade agreement

    Ghana, Turkey to sign trade agreement

    658401659 595234Ghana and Turkey will by January 2012 conclude bilateral negotiations for a free trade agreement aimed at increasing trade volumes between the two countries.

    The Second Secretary and Charge d’Affaires of the Turkish Embassy, Ms Ipek Zeytinoglu, announced this at the opening of the 2nd Ghana-Turkish Export Products Exhibition in Accra.

    Organised by Meridyen International Fair Organisation, the three-day fair which attracted more than 50 companies from Turkey representing various private sector businesses, ends on December 22, 2012. Among the products on exhibition are industrial machinery, plastic wares, detergents, woolen carpets, floor mats, confectionaries and automobiles.

    The exhibition comes on the heels of the 2nd Ghana Joint Economic Commission Meeting in Accra in October, which, among other things, charged the Trade Ministries of both countries to raise the volume of trade between the two countries to $1billion by 2015.

    In that regard, Ms Zeytinoglu said although the dynamism and entrepreneurship of the private sector in Ghana and Turkey had a primary role in enhancing our trade relations, an equally important role will have to be assumed by “our governments by providing an adequate legal infrastructure between our two countries and thus supporting our business communities”.

    Ghana-Turkey diplomatic relations started in the 1950s and has since blossomed. Ghana is considered Turkey’s third largest trade partner. Currently, while the country’s main export to Turkey include cocoa and gold, Turkey on the other hand, exports to Ghana commodities including stones, cement, metals, mineral oils, electrical machinery and equipment.

    The bilateral trade volume between the two countries amounted to $175 million by the end of 2009 and increased to $290 million in 2010, with that of 20 11 estimated to hit $400 million.

    Currently, the volume of trade weigh heavily in favour of Turkey, but Ms Zeytinoglu noted that to balance trade, “the business communities of our two countries will have to work hard and it is precisely the mutual organisation of trade fairs that will be instrumental.

    “From our side, we also urge the Ghanaian exporters to participate in the Izmir International Trade Fair which is organised every year in September in Turkey,” she stated.

    As an incentive to boost trade, she said the two countries also envisaged to conclude an agreement on the avoidance of double taxation.

    Mr Kofi Larbi, a Director of the Ministry of Trade and Industry, who represented the sector minister, observed that exhibition “provides us not only to strengthen the long-standing diplomatic ties and economic relations of our two countries but also to deepen trade and economic co-operation between Ghana and Turkey”.

    The search for export markets for products, he stated, had become very intense in recent times as countries all over the world were deploying considerable efforts to secure their fair share of the international market.

    He said the current focus of the trade and industry sector included the transformation of Ghanaian businesses and enterprises to become highly competitive create jobs and improve the livelihood of Ghanaians.

    For that reason, the director said the ministry was implementing policies including the Private Sector Development Strategy IT and a new National Export Strategy.

    “In line with the government’s broader objective of achieving a better Ghana for all, the trade and industry sector is committed to increasing international trade through an aggressive export drive based on improved competitiveness of local industries and enhanced competitiveness of Ghana as a business destination.

    He urged Ghanaian entrepreneurs to make good use of the opportunities that the fair would provide to create long-lasting relations between the two countries.

    The first Ghana-Turkish Export Products Exhibition was held in Accra in April 2001.

    via Ghana, Turkey to sign trade agreement | Business.

  • Switzerland demands from Azerbaijan to accede to Istanbul Watch Convention

    Switzerland demands from Azerbaijan to accede to Istanbul Watch Convention

    51870Baku, Fineko/abc.az. Switzerland has demanded from Azerbaijan to accede to the international rules of watch-making industry turnover.

    According to the protocol of the 5th meeting of the Azerbaijan-Switzerland Intergovernmental Commission on Trade & Economic Cooperation held in Baku this week, Switzerland proposed Azerbaijan to join the Istanbul Convention to facilitate import of watch-making industry products. Azerbaijan declared its readiness to study the relevant proposals of the Swiss side.

    In addition, the Swiss side expressed readiness to increase assistance to Azerbaijan in the process of entering into the World Trade Organization (WTO) and integration into world economy. At that, within the framework of talks on Azerbaijan’s admission to WTO Switzerland asks the country to cut customs duties for watches.

    via Azerbaijan Business Center – Switzerland demands from Azerbaijan to accede to Istanbul Watch Convention.

  • Colombia Plans To Start Free Trade Talks With Turkey

    Colombia Plans To Start Free Trade Talks With Turkey

    BOGOTA -(Dow Jones)- Colombia plans to start free trade talks with Turkey later this year, part of an ongoing effort by Bogota to broaden its trade ties around the world as hopes for a free trade agreement with the U.S. remain in doubt.

    A statement from Colombia’s trade ministry said officials from Turkey and Colombia met earlier this week in Ankara and agreed that a first round of talks could begin in Bogota as early as late May.

    The announcement comes a few weeks after the trade ministry said it hoped to wrap up a free trade deal with South Korea by late June and that it is also aiming for a free trade agreement with Japan.

    Colombia for years has been vying for a permanent free trade agreement with the U.S., its main trading partner, but lawmakers in Washington have so far failed to ratify any such deal.

    That’s led to frustration in Bogota, and President Juan Manuel Santos said recently that if a deal with the U.S. isn’t formalized soon, Colombia will give up trying. In the meantime, he said his government will continue pursuing other trade deals around the globe.

    Colombia’s push to increase the number of countries it trades with is also in response to a 2009 decision by Venezuela, its neighbor and a major trading partner, to begin cutting back on trade due in part to Bogota’s close ties with the U.S.

    Trade between Colombia and Turkey is minimal, reaching just $271 million last year. Colombia exported $214 million worth of products to Turkey, including coal. Turkey in turn shipped about $57 million worth of goods, including artillery parts, auto parts and textiles.

    -By Dan Molinski, Dow Jones Newswires; 57-310-867-6542; dan.molinski@ dowjones.com

    via Colombia Plans To Start Free Trade Talks With Turkey.

  • Turkey asks Uganda help for free trade deal with East African Community

    Turkey asks Uganda help for free trade deal with East African Community

    Arinc asked Uganda’s support for immediate launch of a free trade agreement between Turkey and East African Community which includes Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi.

    Monday, 29 November 2010 14:34

    arincTurkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, who attended on Monday the meeting of Turkey-Uganda Joint Economic Committee in Kampala, said that Turkey aims to help eradicate poverty in Africa and carry out a joint sustainable development policy with African countries.

    Speaking at the opening of the meeting, Arinc said that Turkey considers Uganda as a close friend despite the geographical distance.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a visit to Uganda last May, Arinc recalled, and he said that Gul’s visit was an important sign of friendship between the two countries.

    “I would like to underscore our eagerness and determination to improve commercial and economic relations,” Arinc told the meeting.

    Arinc also said that Turkey’s new strategy towards Africa, launched in 2003 to enhance economic relations with African countries, aims at helping eliminate poverty in the continent and carry out a joint sustainable development policy together with African countries.

    “Our strategy aims at full integration of Africa into global economy,” he said.

    Turkey’s trade with Africa skyrocketed and grew by 200 percent after the new strategy, he reminded. Arinc added that Turkey’s investments in the continent was over $3 billion in 2009.

    Arinc asked Uganda’s support for immediate launch of a free trade agreement between Turkey and East African Community which includes Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi. He said such an agreement was key to improve economic relations.

    On relations with Uganda, Arinc said that trade between the two countries grew by 10 times over the past seven years.

    “However, this level is far away from the potential of the two countries,” he said.

    “We can work together to increase mutual investments, and help Turkish construction firms carry out infrastructure and development projects in Uganda,” he added.

    Uganda’s Interior Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Ali Kironda Kiwajinja, on his part, told the meeting that his country was a commercial hub for several countries in Africa. Pointing out the potential between the two countries, Kiwajinja said that better relations was very important for Uganda.

    Kiwajinja also said that flights of Turkish Airlines to his country and Turkish schools in Uganda would help build better relations.

    AA

  • Four in Middle East to open free trade

    Four in Middle East to open free trade

    Davud Oglu Leads The WayNEW YORK, Sept. 27 (UPI) — Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Turkey had agreed to move forward on a regional free-trade zone.

    Davutoglu told reporters in New York that a summit meeting in Istanbul would likely concluded with an announcement that the four-country trade agreement, including “visa-free” travel for the region, would begin in January.

    “We will declare at that summit that this economic zone is in effect,” Davutoglu said after meeting with foreign ministers of Jordan, Syria and Lebanon at U.N. Headquarters, Today’s Zaman reported.

    Turkey and Lebanon have already entered into a formal free-trade and visa-free arrangement with a deal signed this summer.

    But the deal may well be a first step towards a Middle East version of the European Union, Today’s Zaman reported.

    Turkey has been openly pursuing membership to the EU since 2005, but the application process has moved slowly.

    In New York, Davutoglu said, “The EU is of course a good model of cooperation and we can look into it. But this cooperation, after all, is a product of our history.”

    https://www.upi.com/Business_News/2010/09/27/Four-in-Middle-East-to-open-free-trade/UPI-79101285623196/, Sept. 27, 2010