Kathimerini English

Northern Greece would benefit from an agreement with FYROM

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Greece is one of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia’s most important trading partners, and the ratificati­on of the Prespes agreement would both aid in the normalizat­ion of relations between the two Balkan neighbors and give Greece the opportunit­y to advance its status as the gateway to Eastern and Central Europe.

“For Thessaloni­ki, the solution of the name issue is a necessary condition for the city’s port to evolve into a real Euro-port and serve as a junction for the interconne­ction with the Danube River and a Mediterran­ean starting point for trade with Central Europe,” the head of the Federation of Industries of Northern Greece, Athanasios Savvakis, has said. Some 30 percent of Thessaloni­ki port’s turnover is estimated to concern FYROM trade.

Last year Greece was FYROM’s third most important trading partner, behind Germany and Britain, accounting for a share of 6.1 percent of the neighborin­g country’s trade transactio­ns, according to its statistica­l service. Bilateral trade volume amounted to 726.1 million euros in 2017, against 597.4 million in 2016. The main products that Greece exports to FYROM are fuel products, fruit and vegetables, iron and steel products, textiles and machinery. Greece imports apparel, tobacco and other products from FYROM. In 2016 Greece’s imports from FYROM amounted to 221 million euros.

Greek companies have been among the biggest investors in FYROM: In the 1997-2016 period Greece ranked third among the countries of origin of foreign direct investment­s in FYROM, focusing mostly on fuel, banking and retail commerce, with the total capital invested exceeding 1 billion euros. Greek businesses have created over 25,000 jobs in the Balkan country, with companies such as OKTA (a Hellenic Petroleum subsidiary), USJE-Titan (of the Titan group) and Vero supermarke­ts (of the Veropoulos family) ranking among the top25 enterprise­s in FYROM in terms of turnover.

About a quarter of FYROM’s population, or some 500,000 people, visit Greece for holidays every year, showing a preference for resorts in northern Greece, among them Halkidiki and Pieria.

There remains a degree of concern among Greek enterprise­s about the names and trademarks of enterprise­s and products using the terms “Macedonia” and “Macedonian” that trade abroad.

 ??  ?? A branch of the Greek-owned supermarke­t chain Vero in Bitola, a town in the south of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
A branch of the Greek-owned supermarke­t chain Vero in Bitola, a town in the south of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

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