By Boris Ajeganov
January 23, 2017, the CACI Analyst
Foreign investment in Georgia is strengthening the country’s importance in connecting East Asia with Europe, which has positive implications for the broader region. The rise in FDI in commercial and transportation infrastructure in combination with the signing of international free trade agreements will reduce Georgia’s vulnerability in terms of economic and, ultimately, ‘hard’ security. The growing importance of the South Caucasus as node for EU-China trade will weaken Russia’s incentives to undermine its southern neighbors by military, political, and economic means as it has done in the past. Accordingly, Tbilisi’s ability to conduct an independent foreign policy is set to improve despite the absence of Western security guarantees.
- Georgia
- South Caucasus
- China
- East Asia
- Central Asia
- European Union
- EU China trade
- Belt and Road Initiative
- OBOR
- Silk Road Fund
- SREB
- Xinjiang
- Black Sea
- EU Georgia DCFTA
- Georgia EFTA
- Turkey
- CIS
- South China Sea
- CAMCA
- Anaklia deep sea port
- Kazakhstan
- Caspian Sea Basin
- Aktau and Kuryk ports
- Azerbaijan
- Baku Tbilisi Kars railway
- TRACECA
- AIIB
- ADB
- NATO
- Russia
- Abkhazia
- South Ossetia
- Eurasian Economic Union
- United States
- International trade and security
- Donald Trump administration