We may become an EU-40, but that's not necessarily good news

Spring 2010

by Fritz Breuss 
<http://www.europesworld.org/NewEnglish/Home_old/PublicProfile/tabid/690/UserID/2697/Default.aspx>
 

http://www.europesworld.org/DesktopModules/ITOmni.ContentRating/images/star_norating.pnghttp://www.europesworld.org/DesktopModules/ITOmni.ContentRating/images/star_norating.pnghttp://www.europesworld.org/DesktopModules/ITOmni.ContentRating/images/star_norating.pnghttp://www.europesworld.org/DesktopModules/ITOmni.ContentRating/images/star_norating.pnghttp://www.europesworld.org/DesktopModules/ITOmni.ContentRating/images/star_norating.png

RELATED ARTICLES: 

  _____  

by Mart Laar 
<http://www.europesworld.org/NewEnglish/Home_old/Article/tabid/191/ArticleType/articleview/ArticleID/21582/Default.aspx>
 

 

Mart Laar’s inventory of the most recent EU enlargements is primarily from the 
newcomers’ viewpoint, and, think it‘s worth contrasting this with a broader 
view from the EU as a whole. 

The EU’s “big bang” enlargement in 2004 that took in 10 new member states, 
followed by Bulgaria and Romania in 2007, is only the provisional endpoint. 

The enlargement process goes on; negotiations with Croatia and Turkey are 
underway (FYR Macedonia is a candidate country) and Albania, Bosnia & 
Herzegovina, Montenegro and Kosovo are potential candidate countries. Iceland 
after its near-state bankruptcy applied for EU membership last July and Serbia 
last December. Some of the countries that the EU subsumes under its European 
Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) – an alternative EU strategy to pure enlargement – 
are also potential EU candidate countries. We could see an EU-40 in the next 10 
to 20 years. 

The enlarged EU of 27 already has many undoubted merits. Besides the historic 
and political dimension of the peaceful re-unification of Europe, the Single 
Market means that nearly 2/3 of EU trade can now be carried out tariff-free, 
acting as a shield against the dangers of globalisation. And this 
trade-creating effect helps new EU member states to catch up faster with the 
income levels of the older member states. 

Less positively, the recent enlargements had many flaws and drawbacks. With its 
2004 enlargement the EU tried to integrate two completely heterogeneous groups 
of countries – the rich older EU member states with the poorer new ones that 
are still in transition. This imposed fresh costs on the EU budget, so in this 
sense enlargement is a form of development policy. Some critics say that both 
enlargements were too early, with one of the biggest problems being corruption, 
and another the economic instability that was dramatically revealed by the 
present crisis. All the newcomers except Poland suffered deep recession last 
year, and the Baltic states depression, and unlike the richer older member 
states didn’t have enough money for fiscal stimuli so some have had to be 
supported massively by international institutions. The crisis has interrupted 
the badly needed catching-up process, with consequences we can’t yet judge. 

 

http://www.europesworld.org/NewEnglish/Home_old/Article/tabid/191/ArticleType/ArticleView/ArticleID/21632/language/en-US/WemaybecomeanEU40butthatsnotnecessarilygoodnews.aspx


  _____  

 

<<image001.png>>

Reply via email to