NICOSIA, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) -- With just hours to go before the legal tender
changeover from Cyprus pound to the euro on Jan. 1, authorities and citizens on
the eastern Mediterranean island seem well prepared to embrace the single
currency.
In the past weeks, security vans escorted by police have traveled
frequently between the Central Bank of Cyprus in the capital Nicosia to local
commercial banks, delivering brand new euro bank notes and coins.
Cypriots, especially shop owners have obtained euro coin starter kits from
bank branches, since all changes should be made in euro instead of Cyprus pound
since the New Year's day, though the latter can be circulated along with the
euro till the end of January.
Markets and banks have been displaying prices in both pound and euro for
the past three months to help consumers get used to the new scale of values,
while the Ministries of Finance and Commerce are closely monitoring price
developments.
The government plans to name and shame those who try profiteering from euro
adoption by publishing a list of their names on a weekly basis, local media
reported.
On the benefits of euro zone membership, Finance Minister Michalis Sarris
has stressed that it would provide an opportunity to further consolidate fiscal
policy and reduce public debt.
The changeover will bring important benefits to households, consumers and
enterprises since the euro zone is an area of low inflation, low interest rates
and a vast market where transparency prevails over prices of goods, Sarris
added.
He also said that as a result of the euro adoption, Cyprus will attract
more foreign investment, and thus encouraging technological advancement, raising
productivity and increasing high quality employment opportunities.
Cyprus joined the European Union (EU) in May, 2004. It is one of the
smallest economies in the euro zone, contributing 0.17 percent to the area's
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and 0.24 percent to its population.
In 2006, Cyprus' per capita GDP was 92 percent of the EU average.
If the accession to the EU could be considered as the beginning of the
country's political integration with the 27-member bloc, the Cypriot government
believes that by entering the euro zone, the easternmost island to the European
continent could get closer to the EU in terms of economy.
To mark the adoption, celebrations are scheduled at midnight both in the
Ministry of Finance and in the Central Bank, with the participation of President
Tassos Papadopoulos and foreign envoys in Nicosia.
Papadopoulos, who will run for a second term in presidential elections in
February, has also voiced that the introduction of the euro would have a
positive fallout in efforts to reunite the divided islands, with the northern
part of Turkish Cypriots still using Turkish Lira.
"We are optimistic that the adoption of the euro will create more favorable
conditions leading to a solution that will actually reunite Cyprus, its economy,
territory, institutions and society at large. Any solution cannot but provide
for a unified economy," he said.
Under the decision adopted by EU finance ministers earlier this year, the
exchange rate will be 0.585274 Cyprus pound to one euro.
The adoption of the euro by Cyprus and Malta, two island states of the EU,
will bring the number of euro zone members to 15, with an estimated population
of 318 million.
Britain, along with Denmark, have opted to stay out of the euro zone for
the time being. However, two British military bases retained in southern Cyprus
will embrace the single currency on Jan. 1, ahead of their euro-skeptical
countrymen at home.