Just after the first elections to the Supreme Soviet, the Supreme Soviets of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Moldavia submitted applications to withdraw from the Soviet Union.
The CPSU was helpless about this, because the party that was ruling in these republics was no longer the CPSU.
In accordance with Soviet law, the union republics had the right to demand withdrawal from the USSR.
The Supreme Soviets of these countries naturally have the right to demand this.
Gorbachev and the Central Committee of the CPSU felt helpless about this.
At the same time that these countries were applying to withdraw from the Soviet Union, the Central Bank of Eastern Europe received requests from these countries to join the unified market of Eastern Europe.
Since the Central Bank of Eastern Europe obtained the right to issue currency, replacing the original central banks.
In countries such as Poland, severe inflation has finally been contained.
And because of the opening of borders, the abolition of tariffs.
The market across Eastern Europe has become even larger.
Including the new additions of Bulgaria and Romania, a total of 100 million people in Eastern Europe use the Eastern euro guaranteed by the Bank of Colombia.
Polish mineral resources were sold to the Czech Republic, and Czech machined goods could enter the agriculturally developed Hungary, Slovakia and Bulgaria without customs duties.
Romanian petrochemicals are gradually opening up markets in these countries, while the port throughput of Gdansk in Poland and Constanta in Romania is starting to boom again because of the huge markets.
All this indicates that the plan of the single market has led to a positive and positive response in the economies of the participating countries.
The economic rebound has finally come as a relief to the governments of these countries.
At the same time, they are more convinced that the Central Bank of Eastern Europe is the guarantor of the economic development of the Eastern European region.
In order to ensure that the economic system is not affected by the rotation of political parties.
Each participating country is in the process of amending its constitution to codify the Unitary Market and the Central Bank of Eastern Europe in law.
Although the economies of various countries are beginning to improve, the enterprises of Eastern Europe are still unable to compete with the advanced capitalist countries, which even Skoda, the industrial pearl of the Czech Republic, has struggled to do.
In order to reduce the cost of industrial and agricultural production in the participating countries as a whole, cheap industrial raw materials and energy are indispensable.
So the Market Committee of the Central Bank of Eastern Europe began to coordinate with other countries to negotiate with its eastern neighbor, the Soviet Union, on the supply of industrial raw materials, agricultural products, and energy.
It is hoped that a fair and mutually beneficial cooperation agreement can be reached.
The basic framework of this agreement was born out of the European Steel and Coal Community in 1951, when Western European countries were unable to gain a competitive advantage with cheap steel in the United States because of uneven coal resources.
Western European countries formed the European Steel and Coal Community to reduce the cost of industrial production.
Eastern Europe is not as rich in mineral resources and energy as the Soviet Union, and it is impossible to afford the industrial production of the entire Eastern European region if it relies solely on the resources of Poland and Romania.
On the other hand, Glencore Group imported a large amount of cotton, electrolytic aluminum, coal, oil and other resource products from the Soviet Union.
These products are exactly what the Eastern European region needs.
Once the cooperation is reached, the prospects for cooperation between the two sides will be huge.
Because the Soviet Union had just successfully resolved the Kuwait crisis at the United Nations, coupled with Gorbachev's policy of new thinking, the Soviet Union had always maintained a friendly attitude towards the independence of the countries of Eastern Europe.
Cooperation between an independent Eastern European and the Soviet Union, which did not completely turn to the West, was entirely possible.
For both the USSR and the countries participating in the unified market, the most important task at present is to put aside ideological contradictions and actively develop the economy.
Against this backdrop, negotiations between NASGA and the participating countries of the UMP are proceeding very smoothly.
The two sides have signed a number of cooperation intentions in agricultural products, natural gas, oil, electricity, and transportation.
In order to avoid political and partisan interference, these collaborations were led by companies, such as the Mediterranean Shipping Group, which had acquired a large number of ports and railways in the privatization of the unified market countries, and the transport agreement with the Soviet railway companies.
Enron, which also accounts for more than 90 percent of the electricity market in the countries of the unified market, signed an agreement with the Soviet State Electricity Company on power cooperation.
In addition, the Eurasian Gas Group, the Glencore Group, and the Occidental Petroleum Group all achieved fruitful results in this meeting, and of course their partners were the most powerful official enterprises in the Soviet Union, which belonged to the Mediterranean Trade Group under the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation of the Soviet Union.
Since the large-scale economic construction activities initiated by Seryosha were never projected into the three Baltic states and Transcaucasia, which were highly separatist, the independence of these regions had no effect on Seryosha.
There were still only a few in front of these countries, either to join the unified market of Eastern Europe or to remain in the Soviet Union.
Western countries and the United States are afraid to invest in these regions, and if the communist regimes in these countries regain the election, it is very likely that European and American investment will be lost.
Against the backdrop of these countries' inability to cope with the terrible inflation and recession in their countries after independence, joining the Eastern European Unified Market would be the only way out.
Seryosha had long planned that his unified market for Eastern Europe would become an economic cooperation organization similar to the eurozone.
It's just that this organization is dominated by the Bank of Colombia.
Seryosha does not expect the Eastern European Central Bank to exist forever, and perhaps in the future the huge Colombia will have to split into a few smaller banks.
Just like Rockefeller's Standard Oil.
But Seryosha can always control the institution firmly behind the scenes through an offshore financial center, and in fact Seryosha already has such intentions.
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Not only Columbia, but also such behemoths as Glencore, Mediterranean Shipping, and Iridium are now too eye-catching.
Only the companies in Karim's hands are still in competition with each other even if they are acquired.
It seems that Karim is still more clever in this regard.
Know how to hide your strength.
Before the danger came, it first chose to dismantle itself, and then continued to control the huge industry of the Gorky consortium through a series of cross-shareholdings and offshore holdings.
This can not only ensure your own safety, but also a good sort out of your industry.
In order to better discuss the future of the Gorky Consortium, Seryosha decided to hold a long-awaited core meeting of the Gorky Consortium in Switzerland. t1706231537: