Yahoo – AFP,
Haukur Holm
Iceland
announced it was dropping its bid to join the European Union in line
with
pledges made two years ago by its then new eurosceptic government
(AFP
Photo/Georges Gobet)
|
Reykjavik
(AFP) - Iceland on Thursday announced it was dropping its bid to join the
European Union in line with pledges made two years ago by its then new
eurosceptic government.
Iceland
first applied for EU membership in 2009 but Foreign Minister Gunnar Bragi
Sveinsson said in a statement that the centre-right government had informed
current EU president Latvia and the European Commission of its decision to
annul the application.
"Iceland's
interests are better served outside the European Union," the minister
wrote on his website.
Iceland
first applied for EU membership under a leftist government in 2009, when the
country was badly shaken by an economic crisis that saw the Icelandic krona
lose almost half its value, making eurozone membership an attractive prospect.
But the
thorny issue of fishing quotas was seen as a key obstacle to joining the bloc,
although it was never brought up in the accession talks.
Fishing
represents an important part of the Icelandic economy, and it was never made
clear how differences between Brussels and Reykjavik could be patched over on
the subject.
Thousands
of protesters had thronged the streets of Reykjavik last year to demand a
referendum after the government said it was dropping its EU membership bid
without a popular vote.
But opinion
polls more recently began to show growing resistance among Icelanders to EU
membership.
The head of
the Social Democratic opposition, Arni Pall Arnasson, however lamented that the
government had taken the decision without approval from a majority in
parliament.
Clawing
back
When the
centrist Progress Party and the right-wing Independence Party came to power in
2013 they suspended the talks with Brussels.
Iceland has
said it wants to maintain "close ties and cooperation" with the EU,
and indeed already benefits from such links.
The North
Atlantic island is a member of Europe's visa-free Schengen area and the
European Economic Area.
That allows
it to export seafood to the mainland tariff-free and helps boost tourism, which
is crucial to the country's foreign exchange earnings.
Iceland has
clawed its way back from the demise of its bloated financial sector in 2008,
with official figures showing this week that GDP reached record levels last
year.
At constant
prices, Iceland's GDP grew by 1.9 percent in 2014 to beat a GDP record dating
back to pre-crisis levels, according to Statistics Iceland.
However,
"GDP per capita remains lower than in 2008, and while there is no shortage
of jobs, we lack jobs that pay well, especially for young graduates,"
University of Iceland economics professor Asgeir Jonsson told AFP.
For many
Icelanders, joining the EU has not been a major priority, with concern instead
over how to pay back loans taken on when the economy seemed to be booming
before the crash.
The small
Nordic country was hit hard as the crash of US investment bank Lehman Brothers
caused the collapse of its three largest banks.
Without
effective oversight, Iceland's banks had taken out massive cheap loans abroad,
scooping up assets worth several times the island's annual output.
Iceland
then became the first Western European nation in 25 years to appeal to the
International Monetary Fund to save its battered economy.
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