South Africa–European Union relations
European Union |
South Africa |
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South Africa has strong cultural and historical links to the European Union (EU) (particularly through immigration from the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Greece) and the EU is South Africa's biggest investor.[1]
Agreements
Since the end of South Africa's apartheid, EU South African relations have flourished and they began a "Strategic Partnership" in 2007. In 1999 the two sides signed a Trade, Development and Cooperation Agreement (TDCA) which entered into force in 2004, with some provisions being applied from 2000. The TDCA covered a wide range of issues from political cooperation, development and the establishment of a free trade area (FTA).[1] The liberalisation schedules were completed by 2012.[2]
Trade
South Africa is the EU's largest trading partner in Southern Africa and has a FTA with the EU. South Africa's main exports to the EU are fuels and mining products (27%), machinery and transport equipment (18%) and other semi-manufactured goods (16%). However they are growing and becoming more diverse. European exports to South Africa are primarily machinery & transport equipment (50%), chemicals (15%) and other semi-machinery (10%).[2]
EU – South Africa trade in 2012[2] | ||||
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Direction of trade | Goods | Services | Investment flow | Investment stocks |
EU to South Africa | €26.6 billion | €7.1 billion | €5.9 billion | €92.2 billion |
South Africa to EU | €20.5 billion | €4.4 billion | €1.0 billion | €7.4 billion |
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 South Africa, European External Action Service
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Bilateral relations South Africa, European Commission
External links
- EU delegation to South Africa
- South Africa - European Commission Aid and Development
- Outlook on Europe: South Africa’s Relations with the European Union Since the End of Apartheid
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