The implementation of the CAP reform has improved the EU's position in negotiations concerning a possible opening up of agricultural markets.
The attractiveness of foreign direct investment (FDI) has become not just a priority for the countries of the Mediterranean basin, but an indispensable factor in their socio-economic development.
We live in a globalising world economy. This is a cliché. It is also true. What does this mean for the countries of North Africa, particularly Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia?
The world economy is increasingly dominated by two phenomena: on the one hand, globalisation, and on the other, regionalisation and integration.
The European Union is by far the major partner for a great number of countries in the southern and eastern Mediterranean, as much from the point of view of trade as passenger traffic.
The Mediterranean is one vector of flow of Euro-Mediterranean and transatlantic exchange. It is an interface between the countries located on its shores, a strategic platform and a significant force to be reckoned with for all the great powers.
Like many other countries in Europe and in its peripheral areas, Turkey has to deal today with a growing irregular influx of foreign nationals to the country.
Within the European area, the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) has long been accepted as a formidable machine to distribute public assistance, and a way of supporting unlimited productivity.
Nobody seems to doubt, at least officially, the many economic, social and environmental functions performed by agriculture in many parts of the countries that border the Mediterranean basin.
Transport in the Mediterranean region constitutes an opportunity for integrated social and economic development in the area.
The ports have always been the «lungs» of trade across the Mediterranean, and meeting points for culture, diaspora and crossbreeding.
The condition of the labour market in the Mediterranean has proved to be far more worrying than was first anticipated in the early stages of the Partnership.