Title: History and Theory of European Integration
1History and Theory of European Integration
2Lecture 6
- Transformation of the European Community
- (1979-1989)
3Contents
- The second and third Enlargements (Greece, 1979,
Spain and Portugal, 1986) - The Budgetary issues
- The crisis in the Community
- The Single European Act (1986)
4Readings for the lecture
- Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An
Introduction to European Integration. Second
edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave.
Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 - Thatcher M. A Family of Nations (1988). The
European Union. Readings on the Theory and
Practice of European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and
Alexander C G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998 - Delors J. A Necessary Union (1989). The European
Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of
European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C
G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998
5Readings for the lecture
- Robert O. Keohane and Stanley Hoffmann
Institutional Change in Europe in the 1980s in
The New European Community. Decision-making and
Institutional Change, Robert O. Keohane and
Stanley Hoffmann (eds), 1991, Westview press. - Moravcsik A. Negotiating the Single European Act
National Interest and Conventional Statecraft in
the European Community (1991). The European
Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of
European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C
G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998.
6End of 70s - Beginning of 80s The patient too
ill for a birthday party?
- What are the symptoms?
- EC budgetary problem
- Decision making paralysis
- Week central institutions
- Conflicting agendas of the member-states
- Budget rebate unresolved
- Economic decline in the EC
7The major events leading to the SEA negotiations
- May 1979- Accession Treaty with Greece
- 1961 Treaty of Athens
- 1967-74 - military regime in Greece
- 1975 reapplication for membership
- negative Commission Opinion overturned by the
Council - 1977 Portugal and Spain applications
- need for institutional reform
- June 1979 - direct elections to EP
8March 1979 launch of the EMS
- October 1977
- Roy Jenkins call for the EMS as a macroeconomic
tool for lowering inflation and increasing
investment - October 1977 February 1979
- a period of scepticism
- continuous dollar depreciation undercutting
German industrial competitiveness Schmidt
change of position
9April 1978 Copenhagen Council
- Schmidt enthusiastic
- Giscard backing
- Callaghan concerned
- Ortolli still cautious
10July 1978 Bremen Council
- critical stage in the development of the EC as
a whole Helen Wallace - Franco German proposal for the Exchange rate
mechanism - European currency unit
- Divergence indicators
- Fluctuation band from 2, 5 to 6 per cent
11British Budgetary Issue 5 years and 15 summits
story
- The corrective mechanism not effective
- The cost of the UK membership increasing to 1
billion pound sterling in 1980 - Temporary solutions unsatisfactory
12- June 1979 Strasbourg Council
- Battle lost to Schmidt and Giscard
- November 1979 Dublin Council
- Degenerated into an open combat
- April 1980 Luxembourg Council
- Members departing in despair
- June 1980 Venice Council
- Interim agreement achieved
- June 1983 Stuttgart Council
- Thatchers position bolstered by domestic support
- Thatcher opposing the CAP and connecting budget
reform with the - resolution of the BBI and CAP reform
- Mitterrand and Kohl new in the EC game
- No progress achieved
13- June 1984 Fontainebleau Council
- Resolution achieved ! ?
- Abatement refund of the UK contribution to the
budget calculated annually as a difference
between the British share of community
expenditure and the proportion of the of the ECs
VAT-based revenue of the UK to be paid in a form
of a reduced VAT contribution in the following
year - Decision to cut down CAP spending
- Increase of the EC own resources from 1 to 1.4
of the VAT generated revenue - March 1982 the Treaty of Rome twenty fifth
anniversary - Need for completion of the Single market and
institutional reform announced
14Incentives for European Integration metamorphosis
in the 80s External
- Political and economic competitive pressures
- Economic turbulences
- Technological competition / US and Japanese
technological advancement - Weakening of the US support
- Need for development of a coherent EU trade
policy - Inefficiency of the European Political
Cooperation - Tensions in the EC US relations
- US June 1982 sanctions / ESPRIT
- Transatlantic disputes over subsidized steel and
agriculture products
15Incentives for European Integration metamorphosis
in the 80s Internal
- Poor economic performance in the three large
member states / need for a steady economic growth
strategy - Change of economic policy in France
- Consensus of the governments on the need for
deregulation - Convergence of the economic policy prescriptions
of ruling party coalitions in France, Britain and
Germany - Cassis de Dijon case (1979) Court of Justice
Ruling on the mutual recognition principle - Resolution of the British budgetary issue
16Iberian enlargement
- October 1978 - Portugal application
- February 1979 - Spanish application
17Consequences and Results
- Reinforcing the need for institutional and
decision making process reform - Exacerbating differences between the member
states foreign policies - Widening versus weakening dilemma
- Highlighting the CAP mechanisms inefficiency and
need for reform accumulating surpluses and
competing for CAP funds - Paving the way to accession (January 1986)
- new rules to organize fruit, vegetable and olive
oil markets - fisheries disputes resolution
- restrictions on wine production
- Integrated Mediterranean Programmes of 6.6
billion ECU
18- Building Europe from the Roof Down?The early
80-s
19November 1981 - London Council Genscher-Columbo
Plan towards further European unity
- Adoption of a Draft European Act
- Common foreign policy
- Coordination of security policy
- Transformation of the EC into an organ of
political guidance - Wider application of the QMV principle
20Stuttgart June 1983 Council
- Adoption of the Solemn Declaration on European
Union - Determination to transform EC into EU
- TEU
- Evolving role of the European Council and
European Parliament - Strengthening of the EMS
- Common action in political and economic aspects
of security - Deepening and broadening of the scope of European
activities - Call for completion of the internal market
- Reinforcement of the monetary system and
industrial policy - Perseverance of the Luxembourg compromise right
to invoke veto - Link of the four outstanding issues
- increase in the EC funds (raising the ceiling of
the VAT revenue conditional to resolution of the
British budgetary problem) - internal market liberalization
- agricultural reform
- entry of Spain and Portugal
211984French Presidency in the EC Francois
Mitterrands shuttle diplomacy
- Abandoned building site
- economic decline
- agricultural disputes
- stalemate of the EU budget need for unanimity to
increase VAT ceiling - British budgetary issue
22March 1984 Brussels Council Unsatisfactory
solutions
- Agreement of the rebate achieved in principle
- British rebate of 457 million for 83 blocked
- Haggling over the rebate amount for 1984
continued - The deal of 1.2 ECU blocked by Kohl
23Mitterrands geometrie variable strategy
- Mitterrands speech to the EP
- two track Europe threat of the UK exclusion
- choice between satisfying specific interests and
staying in the game
24June 1984 Fontainebleau summit
- Europe the Future liberalization of internal
market agenda - Consensus on the rebate achieved
- Abatement refund of the UK contribution to the
budget calculated annually as a difference
between the British share of community
expenditure and the proportion of the of the ECs
VAT-based revenue of the UK to be paid in a form
of a reduced VAT contribution in the following
year - The need for a package deal on liberalization,
abolishing customs control, institutional reform
accepted
25- Adonnino Committee on People Europe mandate
- customs formalities
- diplomas equivalence
- European symbols
- The Dooge Committee for institutional reform
- Single market on the basis of precise time
table - Strengthening the EMS
- Improving the European Political Cooperation
- Expansion of the QMV in the EC
- Reduction of the number of Commissioners
- Parliaments right for co-decision with the
Council - Calling of an intergovernmental conference on the
draft EU Treaty
26- Negotiations for the SEA
- the carrot of market liberalization and the
stick of exclusion
27June 1985 Milan Council
- Dooge Committee report
- Delors priorities
- Fully inified internal market by 1992
- Overhaul of decision making process
- New monetary policies and common macroeconomic
policy - Foreign and Defense policies
- Lord Cockfields White paper approved
- Economic integration has to proceed European
Unity - Timetabled Action plan with the 1992 deadline
- The British proposal of a right to abstain versus
the right to invoke a veto accepted - Unprecedented vote on IGC
- The three recalcitrant member states out voted
28Thatchers vision and principles for the EC
future Shared by the member states?
- Willing and active cooperation between
independent sovereign states without suppressing
nationhood and concentrating power at the center
of a European conglomerate Working more closely
together does not require power to be centralized
in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an
appointed bureaucracy. - Reform of the ineffective Community practices and
policies. - Community policies should encourage enterprise
through getting rid of barriers and making it
possible for companies to operate on a Europe
wide scale. Action to free markets, widen choice,
reduce government intervention. - Community should lead the process of removing the
barriers to trade in GATT.
29The major reform issues
30The major reform issues
31Convergence of domestic policy preferences in the
large member states
- economic integration part of a geopolitical
grand strategy response to the declining
industrial competitiveness of Europe - a way to stimulate investment by removing market
barriers - need for high technologies cooperation programmes
- need for economies of scale to compete
effectively - liberalization of the European market
- role of Centrist coalitions and national
bureaucracies
32October - December 1985 Intergovernmental
Conference Negotiations Participants
- Member state ministers for Foreign affairs and
political directors of the FM - Permanent representatives
- Commission
- European Parliament
- Finance Ministers in September Luxembourg meeting
on monetary capacity in the SEA
33Contributions and Outputs
- Debate on the EP role and competencies and the
cooperation procedure agreed - Single European Act instead of the Treaty of Rome
revisions coupled with the Treaty on Foreign and
Security policy - Endorsement of the Internal market goal by
December 31, 1992 - Recognition of the need to converge economic and
monetary policies - QMV in a limited number of areas
- Article 95 to allow Single market measures to be
agreed by QMV with the exception of the fiscal
provisions, the free movement of persons, and the
rights and interests of employed persons - Provision for structured cohesion policy agreed
34December 1985 Luxemburg Council
- Failure to resolve the outstanding issues
35- February 1986 SEA signed in Luxembourg by nine of
the twelve - The Hague signatories
- Danish Parliamentary negative vote and
ratification referendum - Italian Parliament deliberations
- Greek wait and see delay
- Irish Supreme Court ruling and referendum
- SEA effective July, 1, 1987
36Resolutions and Outcomes
- Foundation for completion of the single market
- Potential for advancement of integration in
related economic and social sections - Strengthening of the Commission position
- Step towards bridging the democratic deficit
- Means for enhancing EC international standing
through EPC - Cohesion policy a tool for closing the gap
between the ECs rich and poor member states and
regions
37SEA the triumph of the lowest common denominator
method of bargaining?
- Part of the story of the Single European Act,
therefore, is that governments decided to strike
a bargain on deregulation, which seemed to them
to require, were it to be effective, reform of
the decision making system.
38Single European Act links the EU market
liberalization with institutional reform
- Provisions for completion of internal market
- Reform package of 279 proposals aiming to create
an area without internal frontiers in which the
free movement of goods, persons, services and
capital is ensured - Removal of non tariff barriers on the basis of
mutual recognition - Provisions for limited foreign policy cooperation
- Provisions for change in decision - making
procedures - Thanks to the Single Act, the Council,
Parliament and the Commission are a more
efficient institutional troika than they were a
few years ago. Jacque Delors
39Provisions for change in decision - making
procedures
- QMV in the Council on issues related to
establishment and functioning of common market - The old inequality-unanimity-immobility
triangle has been replaced by a new
equality-majority-dynamism triangle, the key to
success. Jacque Delors
40- Restrictions of member states legal freedom of
action? - Sacrifice of sovereignty?
- OR
- A process of pooling sovereignty through
incremental change and thus sharing the
capability to make decisions among governments
through a process of QMV? - Is authority transferred to the supranational
body?
41NO!
- Decision making intergovernmental
- Decision enforcement national
42The debate on nature of the European institutions
continued
- A network involving the pooling of sovereignty
- Supranationality acquired through the spill over
process - A set of intergovernmental bargains
43EC as a network
- Establishes common expectations / provides
information / facilitates intergovernmental
negotiations - Protects members against the consequences of
uncertainty - EU as a series of intergovernmental bargains
- Pooling and sharing of sovereignty rather than
its transfer to the supranational level
44EC as a supranational polity
- More centralized and institutionalized than any
other international organization - Possesses full jurisdiction over external trade
(but not in foreign policy or defense, nor in
judicial sphere) - Possesses a legal status
- Supremacy of the EC laws over the laws of the
member states / Court of Justice - Possesses Own Resources
- Trade policy making / authority to negotiate with
the rest of the world - The authority is derived from the member - states
as a result of a process of decision making
cumulative pattern of accommodation in which the
participants refrain from unconditionally vetoing
proposals and instead seek to attain agreement by
means of compromises upgrading common interests.
45The three hypothesis concurrence
- Intergovernmental bargains necessary
condition of European integration process
46Three contending (?) hypotheses
- Spillover hypotheses
- political institutions and the Community
processes - World political economy hypotheses
- affecting the member states positions and
intergovernmental bargaining processes resulting
in legitimate task expansion of the Community - Preference convergence hypotheses
- endogenous changes in the incentives and
convergence of governments policy preferences
47Spillover
- in a dialectical manner, the enlargement from
the six to the twelve, first appearing as an
antithesis to effective decision making, became a
decisive element in decision making reform. - Spillover took place not as a functional
expansion of tasks, but rather in the form of
creation, as a result of enlargement, of
incentives for institutional change.
48World political economy Rational Adaptive
hypothesis
- Concern for EC waning competitiveness
- The national champion strategy failure
- Turbulence in the oil market
49Convergence of preferences of the major European
governments
- Shift of the French economic policy towards
deregulatory preferences - Resolution of the British budgetary problem
- Delors programme on creation of the Single
market - The EC as the practical means for economic
success, improved quality of life, prosperity and
security of its peoples
50- Explaining the SEA
- Thrust for institutional reform
51Supranational institutions
- Two trends in the European parliament
- reform and revival of the EC on the basis of a
new Treaty/ Federalism as the basis / a broad
expansion of the EC activities scope /
Institutional Affairs Committee / Draft Treaty
Establishing the European Union (Altiero
Spinelli) - Liberalization of the internal market through
abolishing administrative, technical and fiscal
barriers - Parliament Resolution on the SEA in no way
represents the real reform of the Community that
our people need.
52Transnational business groups
- The Thorn- Davignon Commission (1981) Big 12
- Round table of European industrialists (1983)
geared by Guy Gyllenhammer - The Union des Confederations de lIndustrie et
des Employeurs dEurope (1984) - Wisse Dekker Europa 1990 plan for market
liberalization (1984)
53International Political Leaders
- January 1984 Frances Presidency, Mitterrand
commitment to BBI resolution - Delors Commission Presidency a symptom of
mounting pressure for reform - Delors December 1985 tour to secure approval of
the European Heads of state - Delors policy to identify the reform goal with a
date / to be achieved in a two terms period by
1992
54- The intergovernmentalist and neofunctionlist
analysis foci
55Neofunctionalism
- Underlying propositions
- An elite alliance between transnationally
organized interest groups - Ability of the central institutions to generate
strong positive expectations - Demonstration that further actions are necessary
to attain the goals already agreed - Upgrading the common interest nature of
bargaining
56Intergovernmentalism
- Underlying propositions
- EC politics is the continuation of domestic
policies and result of national initiatives - Bargains reflect the relative power positions of
the member-states - Bargaining converges toward the minimum common
denominator principle - Threat of exclusion as a tool coercing a state to
accept the outcome it does not prefer to the
status quo - Unanimity as the key tool of sovereignty
protection - No granting of open ended authority to central
institutions - International regime contributes to shaping
interstate politics by providing a common
framework that reduces uncertainty and
transaction costs of interstate interactions - Changing interests are the sources of the regime
reform
57Dynamics of QMV The Six12 votes cast by 4
member states
58Dynamics of QMV The Nine41 votes cast by 6
member states
59Dynamics of QMV The Ten45 votes with the
blocking minority of 30.2
60Dynamics of QMV The Twelve54 votes /with the
blocking minority of 30.3
61Dynamics of QMV The Fifteen62 votes with the
blocking minority of 29.9
62- Dynamics of QMV The Twenty Five
- 232 (72.3) votes with the demographic clause
providing for population per cent check (at least
62 of the Union population) - based on the new weightings introduced by the
Treaty of Nice
63New weighting of votes As from 1 January 2007
- Qualified majority for votes in the Council is
set at 255 votes out of a total of 345, cast byat
least 14 Member States out of 27. a Member State
may request verification that the QM represents
at least 62 of the population of the EU (for
2007 the threshold is established as 305.5
million people out of a total of 492.8 million).
The distribution of votes is the following - Germany, France, Italy, United Kingdom - 29
votes - Spain, Poland - 27 votes
- Romania - 14 votes
- Netherlands - 13 votes
- Belgium, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary,
Portugal - 12 votes - Austria, Sweden, Bulgaria - 10 votes
- Denmark, Ireland, Lithuania, Slovakia, Finland -
7 votes - Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Luxembourg, Slovenia - 4
votes - Malta - 3 votes
64After (if) the Constitutional Treaty amendments
become effective
- Article 24 Qualified majority
- When the European Council or the Council of
Ministers takes decisions by qualified majority,
such a majority shall consist of the majority of
Member States, representing at least three fifths
of the population of the Union. - When the Constitution does not require the
European Council or the Council of Ministers to
act on the basis of a proposal of the Commission,
or when the European Council or the Council of
Ministers is not acting on the initiative of the
Union Minister for Foreign Affairs, the required
qualified majority shall consist of two thirds of
the Member States, representing at least three
fifths of the population of the Union. - The provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2 shall take
effect on 1 November 2009, after the European
Parliament elections have taken place, according
to the provisions of Article 19.
65- Where the Constitution provides in Part III for
European laws and framework laws to be adopted by
the Council of Ministers according to a special
legislative procedure, the European Council can
adopt, on its own initiative and by unanimity,
after a period of consideration of at least six
months, a decision allowing for the adoption of
such European laws or framework laws according to
the ordinary legislative procedure. The European
Council shall act after consulting the European
Parliament and informing the national
Parliaments. -
- Where the Constitution provides in Part III for
the Council of Ministers to act unanimously in a
given area, the European Council can adopt, on
its own initiative and by unanimity, a European
decision allowing the Council of Ministers to act
by qualified majority in that area. -
- Any initiative taken by the European Council
under this subparagraph shall be sent to national
Parliaments no less than four months before any
decision is taken on it.
66Lecture 7 From the European Community to the
European Union (1989-1993)
- The relation between the disintegration of the
USSR, German unification and the acceleration
processes in integration - The Treaty on the European Union (the IGCs and
the Maastricht summit, 1992) - Structure and the three pillars of the EU
- Ratification hurdles
67Readings for the lecture
- Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An
Introduction to European Integration. Second
edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave.
Chapter 6. - L.Tsoukalis. The Economic and Monetary Union
The Primacy of High Politics (1996). The European
Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of
European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C
G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998.
68Seminar 3 Institutional Change in Europe in the
1980s
- Discussion of the European Community as a
network supranationality and intergovernmental
bargains. - Spill over, political economy and the preference
convergence hypotheses for the EC institutional
change. - Hoffman and Keohane projections for the 90s
(Discussion is based on the paper by Robert O.
Keohane and Stanley Hoffmann Institutional
Change in Europe in the 1980s in The new
European Community. Decision-making and
Institutional Change, Robert O. Keohane and
Stanley Hoffmann (eds), 1991, Westview press.)
69