international integration and the european union

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INTERNATIONAL INTEGRATION AND THE EUROPEAN UNION April 30, 2013

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International Integration and the European Union. April 30, 2013. Integration. In the 20 th and 21 st centuries, integration has been drive by two sources: state actions and technology. State actions: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: International Integration and the European Union

INTERNATIONAL INTEGRATION AND THE

EUROPEAN UNION

April 30, 2013

Page 2: International Integration and the European Union

INTEGRATION

In the 20th and 21st centuries, integration has been drive by two sources: state actions and technology.State actions: Often take the form of creating supranational

organizations: organizations that subsume a number of states and their functions within a single entity. Examples: UN, EU

Are sometimes difficult to take because supranationalism is opposed by supporters of state sovereignty and those who wish to retain unique national identities.

Page 3: International Integration and the European Union

ASPECTS OF INTEGRATION

The process of integration in general (whether through state action or technology) also involves other factors:

Transnational actors: actors that bridge national borders and thereby create new avenues for interdependence: non-governmental organizations (NGOs), MNCs.

Transnational issues: problems or developments that cannot be addressed by a single state because they also cross national boundaries (global warming, terrorism, refugees, disasters).

Page 4: International Integration and the European Union

EXPLAINING INTEGRATION

It is difficult for some schools of IR (such as realism) to explain integration because the process entails states giving up power and sovereignty to transnational institutions.However, it is also possible to see the continuing importance of state sovereignty and nationalism at work because the existence of transnational issues does not automatically result in integration. Moreover, the level of integration that has arisen in response to those issues is limited and uneven. Has never been the case that states have completely given power to transnational organizations to deal with any particular issue. Always have some voice as a state in the workings of transnational organizations and have a way of exiting such organizations if the judgment is made that costs of belonging outweigh the benefits.

Page 5: International Integration and the European Union

EXPLAINING INTEGRATION

Functionalism: explains integration by holding that particular issues and problems spur the development of specialized technical organizations and structures that allow states to perform particular functions that cross national boundaries: delivery of mail, coordinate use of rivers, regulate movements of airplanes and ships.But bare functionalism does not explain the rise and development of the European Union, which includes more than functional organizations and activities.

Page 6: International Integration and the European Union

EXPLANATIONSTo explain such entities as the EU, most move on to a more ambitious explanatory model

Neofunctionalism: more extensive integration, in the form of the creation of transnational organizations that do more than perform narrow functions, is the product of an added result of economic integration: the generation of a political dynamic that pushes through further political integration because higher level political organization is necessary for the processes of economic integration to operate effectively. Thus economic integration leads eventually to political integration.

Page 7: International Integration and the European Union

D E V E L O P M E N T O F T H E E U R O P E A N U N I O N A S E V I D E N C E

In some ways, the development of the EU follows the pattern predicted by neofunctionalism, in that economic integration was followed by political integration because the latter was necessary for the effective functioning of the former.However, note that the beginnings of economic integration in Europe were not purely economic in nature: important political and strategic factors played an important role in the beginnings of the integration process that made that process acceptable to member states.

Page 8: International Integration and the European Union

RESISTANCE TO INTEGRATION

Also important to note that there is and remains resistance to integration that stem not only from political elites attempting to maintain national power, but other groups attempting to protect regional economies, local cultures, and regional autonomy. Integration provides benefits, but it also comes with costs, not all of which are economic and political, and much of which is borne by those who are not national elites.

Page 9: International Integration and the European Union

COUNTERWAVESIt is also the case that integration has not always advanced such that the future always contains more integration than the past. There have been important waves of disintegration that have occurred over the past 75 years that have devolved power away from transnational entities back to national and regional entities:Decolonization that occurred in particular after WWIIBreakup of the Soviet Empire after the Cold WarBreakup of some post-colonial states due to inherent tensions created by the drawing of state boundaries by colonial powers.

Page 10: International Integration and the European Union

HISTORY OF THE EUROPEANUNION

The EU is the product of a long process; in this, it is different from the UN, which has changed little since its creation after WWII.The EU had its origins in the desire to coordinate reconstruction efforts in Europe after WWII. Some of the initiative came from the US, which encouraged

cooperation in the use of Marshall Plan funds. Other parts came from France, and in particular Jean

Monnet and Robert Schuman, who proposed the integration of French and German steel and coal industries, key components of European reconstruction and growth.

Page 11: International Integration and the European Union

ECSCTheir efforts gradually spurred the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community, which included not just France and Germany, but also Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.

• Reduce trade barriers in coal and steel• Coordinate coal and steel policies• High authority to do coordinating work and deal directly with

companies, unions and individualsA functional organization, though it also had political and strategic overtones. Coal and steel were economically important, but they are also strategically important. To control and coordinate coal and steel policies was one way of reassuring European nations (along with the efforts of NATO) that a revitalized Germany would not be a threat.

Page 12: International Integration and the European Union

LATER DEVELOPMENTS

1952: attempt to move beyond technical cooperation to include political and military coordination. Resulted in a treaty that created the European Defense Community:

One European military budget

One European military command

But France failed to ratify treaty.

Also an attempt tin 1953 to come to an agreement on a European Political Community, but failed.

Page 13: International Integration and the European Union

TREATY OF ROME (1957)

Members of the ECSC agreed to create two new entities:

Euratom (European Atomic Energy Community): coordinate development and use of atomic energy through pooling research, investment and management. An extension of principles regarding coal and steel to this new energy source.

European Economic Community: framework for further economic integration:

• Create customs union by 1969• Goal of creating common market, but with no deadline

Page 14: International Integration and the European Union

OTHER DEVELOPMENTS

Treaty of Rome established the principle of unanimity with regard to changes in its provisions, allowing any state to veto, for example, new member applications (as France did with Great Britain in 1963 and 1967 in an expression of continued Great Power rivalry).

Common Agricultural Policy (CAP): reduce conflicts over agricultural subsidies by stipulating that any subsidies given by a state to its farmers must be given to farmers in any EU country. Results in the provision of costly subsidies by the EU and the creation of important trade issues with non-EU countries.

Page 15: International Integration and the European Union

NEW EU MEMBERSBritain 1973

Greece 1981

Spain and Portugal 1986

Austria (1995)

Bulgaria (2007)

Cyprus (2004)

Romania (2007)

Czech Republic (2004)

Denmark (1973)

Estonia (2004)

Finland (1995)

Malta (2004)

Poland (2004)

Slovakia (2004)

Slovenia (2004)

Sweden (1995)

Hungary (2004)

Ireland (1973)

Latvia (2004)

Lithuania (2004)

Page 16: International Integration and the European Union
Page 17: International Integration and the European Union

IMPACT OF NEW MEMBERS

Introduced more complexity into the system through new members, and more problems as new members were economically, culturally and politically different from the original members.

Necessitated change in nature of the system, in that with enlarged membership, not all countries would join with all EU endeavors, allowing for selective integration. Thus, for example, not EU members are part of the common currency and monetary system.

Page 18: International Integration and the European Union

SINGLE EUROPEAN ACT (1985)

Target date of 1992 for the creation of a common market, which would entail the elimination of nontariff barriers to free trade in good, services, labor and capital within the EU

Goal of creating a single European Bank

Goal of creating a single European currency and monetary system

Page 19: International Integration and the European Union

MAASTRICHT TREATY (1992)Replace different currencies with a single European currency. This took place 2002, with 17 countries eventually participating. Not every country had to join, and there are strict membership guidelines for admittance into the single currency: Budge deficit of less than 3% of GDP National debt of less than 60% of GDP Inflation of no more than 1.5% of the average of

the lowest inflation EU countries Stable interest rates and national currency values.

Page 20: International Integration and the European Union

MAASTRICHT: POLITICAL INTEGRATION

Creation of a European Policy Agency

Understanding of EU citizenship that allows foreign national residing in another EU country to vote in local elections.

Commitment to work towards a common foreign policy and establishing a joint military force.

Page 21: International Integration and the European Union

REACTIONS TO MAASTRICHT

Revival of nationalism and national identityControversies over measures needed to meet the financial requirements to join the EuroMore conflicts over trade with non-EU countries, as economic, labor, health and safety and other regulations are standardized and tightened.Complaints of unfair treatment regarding economic policies across EU countries.Complaints by richer countries that they are subsidizing the loose social policies of poorer countries.