The impoverished nation of six million people signed accession papers for the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) in December, but had to wait for the bloc's four other members -- Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia -- to ratify its entry.
The bloc's main regulatory body said yesterday Kyrgyzstan would officially become the fifth member of the bloc on August 6 after its membership was formally approved by neighbouring Kazakhstan.
But Eurasian Union tariffs on imports are significantly higher than WTO tariffs, raising fears that EEU membership will lead to a rise in prices in the mainly agrarian economy.
Union membership may however ease bureaucratic troubles for up to a million Kyrgyz migrants living and working in Russia, whose remittances hold the key to social stability in the politically fragile nation.
