The Central European Free Trade Agreement is a trade deal made by European countries that are non-EU member states. The free trade area encompasses seven nations that together cover a combined area of 97,463 square miles. There are six official languages in the region, but English is recognized as the region’s working language. The free trade area is home to over 21.9 million people, translating to a population density of 224.8 persons per square mile. The bloc has a robust economy, with a Gross Domestic Product of $400 billion, and a GDP per capita of $14,102.
Members States
The current members of CEFTA are as follows:Serbia Macedonia Albania Moldova Montenegro Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo (indirectly, represented by the UNIAMK) Several former CETA member states (Croatia, Slovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Czech Republic, Romania, and Poland) relinquished their membership after joining the European Union.
History
The Central European Free Trade Agreement was signed on December 21st, 1992 in the city of Krakow by Europe’s Visegrad countries; the Czech Republic and Slovakia (then known as Czechoslovakia), Poland, and Hungary. These former Soviet countries saw the establishment of a free-trade area as a starting point in their quest to integrate into Western Europe’s economic and political organizations. However, it was not until July 1994 that the agreement was enforced. The agreement went through a series of amendments in the late 1990s and early 2000s, to be in line with prevailing global political and economic conditions of the time. By 2004 all the four original members of the agreement had joined the European Union, and in so doing, had relinquished their respective memberships.










