Title: EU Conditionality and Democracy Promotion after the Fifth Enlargement
1EU Conditionality and Democracy Promotion after
the Fifth Enlargement
- Comenius University
- Frank Schimmelfennig
- European Politics
- ETH Zurich
- schimmelfennig_at_eup.gess.ethz.ch
2Background
- Political situation after the Fifth Enlargement
- Enlargement fatigue in the EU
- Domestic problems in remaining accession
countries (legacies of ethnopolitical conflict,
governance) - Partial or temporary suspension of negotiations
with Croatia, Serbia and Turkey - European Neighborhood Policy instead of
enlargement - ? change in EU enlargement policy?
- ? change in consistency and effectiveness of
political conditionality? - ? problems for theory?
3EU political conditionality theory
- When is EU political conditionality effective?
Mix of international and domestic conditions - . Political conditionality main instrument of
EU democracy and human rights promotion - Size and kind of external incentives credible
conditional accession perspective - Ineffective non-material incentives
- Ineffective material incentives below membership
- Credibility of threat to exclude in case of
non-compliance - Credibility of promise to admit after compliance
- Normative consistency (conformance with liberal
democratic norms) - Low power costs of compliance
- No regime change
- Government stability
- Partial exception endgame of negotiations
4EU political conditionality implications
- Potential causes of ineffectiveness
- lt incentives short of credible membership
perspective - lt normative inconsistency of the EU,
discrimination - lt high costs of compliance in remaining
non-member countries
51.1. Conditionality and Democracy set-up
- What is the impact of political conditionality on
democratization? How relevant is a credible
membership perspective for its effectiveness? - Panel study of 36 countries of the European
neighborhood from 1988-2004 (with Hanno Scholtz,
University of Zurich) - Value-added?
- Control for other causes of democratization
economic development and transnational exchange - Beyond accession countries
- ? overcomes potential omitted-variable bias and
limited generality in existing studies
61.2 Conditionality and Democracy variables
- Dependent Freedom House political rights
(reversed from 0 to 6) - Political Conditionality size and credibility of
incentives
7Size and credibility of incentives
Credibility of incentives
0 1 2
Size of incentives 0 No tangible incentives Relations with Central and Eastern Europe before 1989 No tangible incentives Relations with Central and Eastern Europe before 1989 No tangible incentives Relations with Central and Eastern Europe before 1989
Size of incentives 1 Partnership (minor economic and financial incentives) without political conditionality Relations with Mediterranean countries before 1995 Conditional partnership with low credibility of threats and/or promises Partnership and Cooperation Agreements with post-Soviet states Conditional partnership with high credibility of threats and/or promises Trade and Cooperation Agreements with Central European and Balkan countries
Size of incentives 2 Conditional association with low credibility of threats and/or promises Euro-Mediterranean Association Agreements Conditional association with high credibility of threats and/or promises Europe Agreements, Stabilization and Association Agreements
Size of incentives 3 Conditional membership with low credibility of promise General enlargement promise without candidate status Conditional membership with high credibility of promise Enlargement candidacy, opening of accession negotiations
81.2 Conditionality and Democracy variables
- Dependent Freedom House political rights
(reversed from 0 to 6) - Political Conditionality size and credibility of
incentives - Economic development income (GDP per capita)
life expectancy - Transnational exchange trade with EU
geographical proximity to democratic countries
(distance gravity democratic-neighbors ratio) - Others time region (Muslim Mediterranean)
91.3. Conditionality and Democracy the model
- Random-effects ordered-probit estimation
- Cross-country variation
- Censored and ordinal dependent variable
- Statas GLLAMM module
- Four-year lag change through elections, change
in government - Plus many robustness/sensitivity tests
101.4 Conditionality and democracy main results
Partnership, no credibility -1.663 (1.634)
Partnership, low credibility .0085 (0.103)
Partnership, high credibility 1.085 (1.361)
Association, low credibility -1.953 (1.701)
Association, high credibility 1.942 (2.207)
Membership, low credibility 3.436 (3.416)
Membership, high credibility 5.926 (5.057)
GDP p.c., ppp, log 1.553 (2.989)
Life expectancy at birth 0.340 (6.113)
Muslim Mediterranean country 0.036 (0.053)
Democratic neighborhood 3.291 (4.548)
EU imports, share of total imports 4.789 (2.804)
EU exports, share of total exports -3.319 (-0.078)
111.5 Conditionality and Democracy comparative
statics
- Unstandardized regression coefficients of
ordered-probit model difficult to interpret - Effects strongest for partly-free countries
smaller impact of conditionality for not free
and free countries - For partly free countries
- Effect of low to high credibility membership
perspective 0.9 points - Effect of No incentive to high credibility
membership perspective almost 2 points
121.6 Conditionality and Democracy Findings
- International and domestic conditions of external
EU effects on democratic consolidation confirmed - Robust and strong effects of membership
incentives - But only on unconsolidated democracies
- Effects cannot be reduced to economic development
and transnational exchange - Impact during consolidation phase
democratization as such is exogenous - ? considerable potential impact on remaining
unconsolidated democracies outside the EU if
credible membership perspective offered and
upheld - ? but then why problems in remaining candidate
countries?
132. Discrimination
- Inconsistent treatment of eligible countries
- Eligibility
- European country
- Democratic country (Freedom House rating of 3.0
or better) - Eligibility ratio
- eligible countries/ European countries (not
associated or not in the process of accession
negotiations) - Discrimination
- Empirical baseline FH of 3.0 or better for 2
years - Number of countries that deviate from this
baseline/eligibile countries (positive and
negative discrimination)
142.1 Discrimination eligibility
152.2 Discrimination eligibility ratios
162.3 Discrimination association
172.4 Discrimination accession
182.5 Discrimination FH ratings at time of
institutional decisions
Year Association negotiations Association treaty Accession negotiations Accession treaty
1990 2
1991 2
1992 3.25
1993 2.75 1
1994 2.3 1
1995 1.5 1.8
1996 1.5
1997 1.4
1999 1.7
2000 3
2001 3
2003 3 1.35
2005 3 2.5 1.75
2006 3 3
Average 2.6 2.3 1.5 1.3
192.6 Discrimination results
- Eligibility and discrimination reflect two waves
of democratization in Eastern Europe - No increase in negative discrimination after the
Fifth Enlargement - Overall normative consistency
203.1 Domestic costs
- Why the current problems with candidates?
- Strong incentives
- Normative consistency
- Domestic conditions identity politics produce
potentially high political costs - Croatia and Serbia cooperation with ICTY
- Serbia Kosovo
- Turkey Cyprus
- Conditions for overcoming these costs
- Endgame of pre-accession or accession
negotiations - Strong identification with EU
213.2 Overcoming the costs of identity issues
Case Endgame Political costs Identity Outcome
Estonia (naturalization language) Before conclusion of accession negotiations Split government -- Western
Latvia (language) Before opening of accession negotiations No support in parliament -- Western
Croatia (ICTY) Before opening of accession negotiations no threat to survival of government, rift in party /-- Western
Serbia (ICTY) Before conclusion of association negotiations -- Minority govt dependent on extremists -- Nationalist -- --
Turkey (Cyprus) Just after opening of accession negotiations -- Military opposed, upcoming elections -- Western --
22Conclusions
- Political conditionality after enlargement
conforms to previously established theory - size and credibility of incentives
- low domestic power costs
- Good news for theory is bad news for policy
- ENP unlikely to be effective because of weak
incentives - Enlargement in Western Balkans and Turkey incurs
high domestic costs in spite of strong incentives
and high normative consistency - The end of a success story?