by souroul » Wed Mar 12, 2008 10:17 am
Cyprus peace would bring in billions, say academics
12/03/2008
Cyprus' economy would gain at least 1.8 bln euros on an annual basis if there was a reunification deal on the ethnically-partitioned island, economists said.
Economic benefits would come mainly from new business opportunities with Turkey, tourism revenue and construction, the survey sponsored by the Norway-based PRIO peace institute said.
"Translated into household income the annual dividend per family comes to approximately 5,500 euros per year," PRIO said. That represented 20% of the average income of Greek Cypriots, and 40% of Turkish Cypriots, it added.
Economic disparities between the two sides are huge. Gross domestic product in the south was 15.5 bln euros in 2007, and approximately 2.0 bln euros in the north in 2006, according to the latest data available.
The authors of the report, Fiona Mullen, Özlem Oğuz and Praxoula Antoniadou Kyriacou, based their projections on a seven year gameplan if a settlement were reached in 2009, and using Greco-Turkish trade relations, which have flourished in the past decade, as their reference point.
According to their calculations, if Cyprus were reunited, the recurring annual benefits to Cypriot businesses in the first seven years after reunification would generate, on average:
· EUR 510 mln per year in additional exports of goods and services to Turkey, of which EUR 385 mln would be tourism and EUR 22 mln would be transport;
· EUR 393 mln per year in new business for construction companies;
· EUR 155 mln per year in new business for real estate companies;
· EUR 316 mln per year (excl. new business from Turkey above) in new business for local tourism enterprises;
· EUR 162 mln per year of additional revenue for the university education sector;
· EUR 103 mln per year in additional income for Cypriot accounting and legal firms;
· EUR 184 mln in new foreign direct investment (excl. construction and real estate above) into Cyprus.
The survey added that the annual boost to business — the annual peace dividend — would rise from EUR 283 mln in Year 1 to EUR 3.9 bln, or 10% of GDP, by Year 7.
The peace dividend is the equivalent of approximately EUR 1.8 bln per year (over CYP 1 bln or more than YTL 3 bln).
If this is translated into the annual dividend per family (household) in Cyprus, it comes to an annual peace bonus of approximately EUR 5,500 per household per year.
This calculation is the least that can be expected since it focuses only on the sectors that stand most to gain. Moreover, the peace dividend calculated could be almost doubled if important regional developments, such as new business from the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline (EUR 1.3 bln) and the implementation of the Ankara Protocol (EUR 187 mln per year) are taken into account.
The Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) is financed by the Norwegian Research Council, the United Nations and the World Bank.
keep in mind, thats in euros:)