Title: The European Union (EU)
1The European Union (EU)
2What is it?
- The European Union (EU) is a family of democratic
European countries, committed to working together
for peace and prosperity. - It is not a State intended to replace existing
states, but it does represent a greater
compromise of sovereignty than any other
international organization. - The EU is unique its Member States have set up
common institutions to which they delegate some
of their sovereignty so that decisions on
specific matters of joint interest can be made
democratically at European level. - This pooling of sovereignty is also called
"European integration"
3Backgroundpost WWII governments.
4West Germany
- By the 1950s, West Germany had evolved into a
stable two-party democracy Christian Democratic
Union (CDU) and Social Democratic Party (SPD). - Konrad Adenauer (CDU) (Chancellor 1949-1967)
led W. Germany towards closer ties with the US
and the other W. European nations.
5West Germany, continued
- Following the death of Adenauer, Willy Brandt
(SPD) took over and began a process called
Ostpolitik, which meant he tried to open
diplomatic contacts and with Eastern Europe. - Brandt formally recognized E. Germany and
accepted the post-war settlements in the east,
thus easing tensions with the USSR, Poland and
Czechoslovakia.
6Post-war Italy
- Following WWII, Italy adopted a new constitution
which brought the Italian monarchy to an end and
created a democratic republic (which still is
there today). - Two major parties dominated the new government
the communists (because they had been
anti-fascist during the war) and the Christian
Democratic Party. - Italy remained in the W. European bloc.
7Post-war France
- The 4th French Republic was formed after WWII,
but it was plagued by the frequent changes in
government ministries and by factionalism. - France had many small parties and so they all had
to rely on multi-party coalitions to implement
their policies. - Women in France voted in parliamentary elections
for the first time in 1946.
8Fifth French Republic
- Using the Algerian crisis as a pretext, DeGaulle
created the 5th French Republic in 1958, giving
the French President much more power. - DeGaulle used his power to build an independent
France and to try to make France somewhat
independent of America.
9Economic Recovery in Western Europe
- Marshall Plan aid was used to provide the
financial underpinnings for the post-war economic
recovery and expansion of W. Europe. - This growth lasted until the economic downturn of
the early 1970s.
10Economic Recovery
- For approximately a decade after the war,
workers wages failed to keep up with economic
growth. - To offset the potential social problems this
could have caused, most W. European governments
provided social welfare protection programs for
their citizens.
11Post-war Great Britain
- The British Labor Party tried to direct national
policy toward solving many problems, such as
inadequate housing for workers, poor safety
standards and wages in industries, and lack of
security in employment. - The Labor Party concentrated on many issues that
had been big problems since the industrial
revolution.
12Britain, continued
- To avoid social unrest, the government enacted a
variety of reforms. - The British government nationalized the Bank of
England, the railways, the airlines, and the coal
steel industries. - The government also established old-age pensions,
unemployment insurance, allowances for
child-rearing, and the National Health Service.
13Reforms in Europe
- France and West Germany also faced many of the
same social and economic problems that were found
in Britain. - The French communist party was somewhat powerful
after WWII and forced many socialist reforms. - West Germany also adopted many similar reforms to
bring recovery and stability after the war.
14The Cost of Reform
- The economic cost of these social economic
reforms was long debated. - Because the 1990s process of globalization often
had a negative effect for the nations of W.
Europe, (with their high wages and very
comprehensive social welfare programs), they
often found it much harder to compete in the
global marketplace. - Under Margaret Thatcher, there was a significant
rollback of the Br. welfare state.
15Implementation of Economic Reforms
- 1951 Formation of the European Coal Steel
Community. - Goal to coordinate the production of coal
steel and to prevent some of the economic
competition that had served as a cause for
previous 20th century wars.
16Economic Reforms, cont.
- 1958 Formation of the European Common Market
(now the European Economic Community--EC) - The EC was established to eliminate custom duties
among the participating nations and to establish
a common tariff on imports from the rest of the
world.
17European Union
- 1991 Members of the European Union (European
Parliament) signed the Maastrict treaty in 1991
in Maastrict, Netherlands. - Goal to establish a common European currency
and a central banking structure by 1999. - The Euro is currently in use in member nations.
18Map 301 THE GROWTH OF THE EUROPEAN UNION This
map traces the growth of membership in the
European Union from its founding in 1957 through
the introduction of its newest members in 2004.
Note that Turkey though having applied for
membership has not yet been admitted.
19History of the EU
- The historical roots of the European Union lie in
the Second World War. - Idea of European integration conceived to prevent
such killing and destruction from ever happening
again - First proposed by the French Foreign Minister
Robert Schuman in a speech on May 9, 1950. This
date, the "birthday" of what is now the EU, is
celebrated annually as Europe Day
- Phases of growth
- Initially, the European Economic Community (EEC)
consisted of just six countries Belgium,
Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg and the
Netherlands (1958) - European Communities (EC) (1967)
- Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom joined in
1973 - Greece in 1981
- Spain and Portugal in 1986
- European Union (EU) (after 1992) (Maastricht
Treaty) - Austria, Finland and Sweden in 1995
- Largest enlargement took place with 10 new
countries joining May 9, 2004
20Creation of the EU
21GROWTH OF THE EU
22GROWTH OF THE EU
Admission of Romania and Bulgaria 2007
Croatia and Macedonia are new candidates
Major debates about Turkey
23D O M A I N
?
CORE
ANTICIPATED EXPANSION
?
24CONFIRMATION OF CORE-DOMAIN MODEL
25How does it work?
- There are five EU institutions, each playing a
specific role - European Parliament (one of two legislative
bodies in the EU elected by the peoples of the
Member States) - Council of the European Union (EUs highest
Legislative Body has legislative initiative is
made up of representatives appointed by member
states according to a population-based
allotment) - European Commission (EUs executive body one
commissioner per country appointed by each
government) - Court of Justice (ensures compliance with the EU
laws) - Court of Auditors (manages the EU budget)
- These are flanked by five other important bodies
- European Economic and Social Committee (expresses
the opinions of organized civil society on
economic and social issues) - Committee of the Regions (expresses the opinions
of regional and local authorities) - European Central Bank (responsible for monetary
policy and managing the euro) - European Ombudsman (deals with citizens'
complaints about maladministration by any EU
institution or body) - European Investment Bank (helps achieve EU
objectives by financing investment projects)
26The Euro
- The Treaty of Rome (1957)
- Declared a common market as a European objective
- Aim increase economic prosperity and contribute
to "an ever closer union among the peoples of
Europe" - The Single European Act (1986) and the Treaty on
European Union (1992) built on this - introduced Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)
- laid the foundations for a single currency
- name Euro was selected in 1995
- in January 1999, the exchange rates of the
participating currencies were irrevocably set and
Euro area Member States began implementing a
common monetary policy - in January 2002, 12 States in the EU introduced
the new euro banknotes and coins
27The Eurozone
- Coins and banknotes 1st used Jan 1, 2002
- Cyprus sheduled to join in 2008
- Slovakia scheduled to join in 2009
- Estonia scheduled to join in 2010
- Sweden is technically obliged to join but the EU
has made public that they will not enforce this
with regard to Sweden - Britain and Denmark have a derogation releasing
them from having to join
28Why have bills different sizes colors?
What values are reflected in these artifacts
that are not found in American money?
29What about Switzerland?
- Swiss are traditionally suspicious of other
countries - Swiss tradition of neutrality (WWI WWII)
- self-imposed
- permanent
- armed
- In some ways Switzerland is like the US
- Nationalistic government not interested in ceding
sovereignty - Economic policies are currently designed to
protect local industries (esp. agriculture) from
foreign competition - Initial cost of joining EU (progressive financial
redistribution policy would cost the Swiss) - Switzerland has embarked on a policy of building
bilateral agreements with the EU rather than
joining outright
30Costs of staying out
- Export problems
- Access to EU markets is not guaranteed
- Inflation problems
- Europeans nervous about the Euro due to expansion
of the EU invest in Swiss Francs, inflating the
value of the currency and inhibiting Swiss
exports - Capital flight
- High construction costs, expensive labor, and
skill shortages already make investment in
Switzerland unattractive - Several multinational corporations, such as
Roche, Sulzer and Alusuisse, have frozen planned
investment projects in Switzerland - Large Swiss companies, including Nestle, are
shifting activities out of Switzerland in fear of
discrimination by other nations - Already four out of five employees of the top 15
Swiss companies work in other countries - Scientific information lag
- EU scientific exchange programs accept Swiss
citizens only if they fail to fill such exchanges
with persons from EU countries - Accumulated bilateral agreements and cooperation
may create de-facto incorporation in the EU for
Switzerland
31The EU in comparative perspective
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36US dominates entertainment industry in Europe
Cultural hegemony?
37SUMMARY
- The European Union is the strongest supranational
organization in the world - shared currency financial management
- legislative, judicial, and executive bodies
- regulatory and planning bodies
- The EU is growing geographically, and its growth
suggests a core-domain model - core and domain are borne out by distribution of
income - The EU does not appeal to all Europeans (at least
not yet) - small states in particular seem skeptical
- Roughly comparable to the US in some ways
- population slightly larger than that of the US
- somewhat more densely settled than the US
- economy is at least as strong as the American
economy - other social statistics (e.g. literacy, infant
mortality homicide) are as good or better than
the US