Chapter 8: Russia’s Agri-Food Trade Within the Eurasian Economic Union

Author:

Dragneva Rilka

Abstract

AbstractThis chapter examines the role of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) in Russia’s agricultural food trade. The discussion focuses on four of the most important areas affecting agri-food trade, namely the food safety regime, the effects of Russia’s food import ban, the agenda for agricultural cooperation, and the external free trade agreements of the bloc. The analysis identifies the critical role of structural factors in the build-up of obstacles to trade, including the weak common regime and its inability to constrain unilateral actions at the cost of integration. The chapter concludes that despite some recognition of the issues, fundamental changes are unlikely.

Publisher

Springer International Publishing

Reference19 articles.

1. Bhutia, Sam. ‘As the Eurasian Union Looks East, Its Deals Do Not Benefit All Members Equally’. Eurasianet.org, 19 November 2019. Available at https://eurasianet.org/as-the-eurasian-union-looks-east-its-deals-do-not-benefit-all-members-equally.

2. Black, Robert and Irina Kireeva. ‘Sanitary and Phytosanitary Issues for the Customs Union of Russian Federation, Belarus and Kazakhstan in Relation to Trade with Other CIS Countries and the EU’. Journal of World Trade 49, no. 5 (2015): 805–36.

3. Dragneva, Rilka and Christopher A. Hartwell. ‘The Eurasian Economic Union: Integration without Liberalisation?’ Post-Communist Economies 32, no. 7 (2020). Available at https://doi.org/10.1080/14631377.2020.1793586.

4. Dragneva, Rilka and Kataryna Wolczuk. ‘The Eurasian Economic Union: Deals, Rules and the Exercise of Power’. Chatham House Research Paper, May 2017. Available at https://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/default/files/publications/research/2017-05-02-eurasian-economic-union-dragneva-wolczuk.pdf.

5. Dragneva, Rilka. ‘The Eurasian Economic Union: Balancing Sovereignty and Integration’, in Post-Soviet Constitutions and Challenges of Regional Integration, eds. Roman Petrov and Peter van Elsewuge. London: Routledge, 2018, 48–70.

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