iQuango.org

Croatia's Results: World Bank Continues to Support Croatia in the Accession Process

Croatia's Results: World Bank Continues to Support Croatia in the Accession Process

Croatia Results 2008
http://www.worldbank.hr

Related Content

Project Stories

Multimedia

Press Release


Environmental preservation. Land registration. Court modernization. Trade competitiveness. Since Croatia started the official negotiations process to join the European Union in October 2005, the country has had to tackle these and a wide range of other issues in order to move forward with the EU accession process.

By September 2008, Croatia had opened 21 out of 33 negotiations chapters of the acquis communautaire with the European Commission and provisionally closed three – Education and Culture, Science and Research, and Enterprise and Industrial Policy. The EC announced earlier this year that Croatia is well placed to conclude its accession negotiations by November 2009, and it is widely anticipated that Croatia will officially join the EU in 2011.

‘Croatia has made significant progress, both economically and politically during the past decade. It is critical for Croatia to continue on the set path of reforms, to safeguard the living standards of its people and the economy in a more difficult external environment and to decrease the income gap vis-à-vis the EU member states. The new Partnership Strategy is designed to support Croatia’s EU accession process in a fiscally, socially, and environmentally sustainable fashion, and to improve the quality of life for Croatia’s citizens,’ said Andras Horvai, World Bank Country Manager for Croatia.

The key objective of the World Bank’s Country Partnership Strategy for Croatia is to support the completion of its EU accession process. An institution with global experience that provides advice and analysis on a wide range of issues, the World Bank continues to play an important role as an accession ‘tool box’ by supporting Croatia and other countries in their EU reform efforts – and they’re seeing results.

"Croatia today has many achievements to be proud of.  In a short period of time,  it transformed from a conflict-torn country into an advanced middle-income economy and  now stands at the doorsteps of the European Union.  The overarching goal of the CPS is to help Croatia step into the EU with a dynamic and competitive economy that will create more opportunities and deliver high quality education, and health services for its people,"  said Orsalia Kalantzopoulos, World Bank Country Director for Croatia. "We will work closely with the Government of Croatia and stakeholders in the final phase of this important journey towards EU membership, building on the lesson and experience of our work in other EU candidate countries."

Results on the Ground

The World Bank is active in a number of areas in Croatia, including sound economic management, public administration and judicial reform, private sector development and competitiveness, education, health and social welfare, as well as, environment protection. The Bank has cooperated closely with the European Commission through complementary projects and analytical work and also focused its support on capacity building efforts to assist Croatia in using EU funds.

Under the Country strategy for 2004-2008 World Bank-supported projects and programs implemented have already generated positive results:

The program in Croatia is part of the World Bank’s broader strategy to tackle the unique challenges faced by Middle Income Countries (MICs). In addition to improving lending terms last year to make loans at better than market rates, the Bank is engaging MICs by sharing experiences from other countries, and helping to address complex issues like environmentally sustainable development, how to create a competitive education system, and judicial and pension reform.

http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:21920868~pagePK:34370~piPK:34424~theSitePK:4607,00.html

seen at 01:40, 1 October in WorldBank. Find original source (feeling lucky?).
Email this to a friend.

Comment


(You must give a valid email address, but it will not be displayed to the public.)

We only allow the following html tags em strong p br. After posting, there may be a short delay before your comment appears on the site