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History and Theory of European Integration

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Title: History and Theory of European Integration


1
History and Theory of European Integration
  • Marina V. Larionova

2
Lecture 5
  • A decade of Enlargements
  • (1969-1979)

3
Contents
  • The Hague, relaunch of European Integration
  • Accession negotiations with Britain, Denmark,
    Ireland and Norway and accession of the UK,
    Denmark, Ireland
  • Werner plan for the Economic and Monetary Union
    (1970), launch of the monetary snake (1972) and
    plan for the European Monetary system and
    European Monetary mechanism (1978)

4
Recommended Readings
  • Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An
    Introduction to European Integration. Second
    edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave.
    Chapter 3.
  • Robert Skidelsky The Choice for Europe. 1970.
    Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave
  • Helmut Schmidt We Need the British.1974.
    Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave

5
The Dark ages of the 70s Community in a Time of
Flux
  • Community ineffective response to the oil crisis
  • Decision - making gridlocks in the Council
  • Eurosclerosis
  • The Hague spirit
  • December 1969 summit of states
  • new political dynamics and tensions
  • Agreement on the basis of
  • Identity of aspirations? Or Convergence of
    interests

6
Liberal intergovernmentalism fundamentals
  • States are the major actors (unitary actors)
  • Foreign policy goals shift in response to
    changing pressures from domestic interest groups
  • State preferences are neither fixed nor uniform
  • Governments relative bargaining power is the
    result of asymmetric distribution of information
    and benefits of a specific agreement
  • International institutions are designed and
    established to overcome first order (achieving
    coordination) and second order problems (control
    over observing rules for distribution of gains)
  • Institutions design reflect the functions and
    specific problems of the cooperation
  • Institutions reduce the costs for achieving the
    outcomes and controlling the behavior of states.

7
Object of study
  • Actors
  • Actors preferences and sources of their change
  • Institutional design

8
Actors
  • EU can be best understood as a series of
    rational choices made by national leaders. These
    choices responded to constraints and
    opportunities stemming from
  • economic interests of powerful domestic
    constituents,
  • the relative power of each state in the
    international system, and
  • the role of institutions in bolstering the
    credibility of interstate commitments
  • (Moravcsik A. (1998) The Choice for Europe
    Social Purpose and State Power from Messina to
    Maastricht. Cornell University press)

9
Preferences are issue specific
  • Domestic preferences reflecting the
    competitiveness of national economy act as a
    filter between the structural incentives of
    international economy and the national
    preferences (Schimmelfennig F. Liberal
    Intergovernmentalism (2004) in European
    Integration Theory. Wiener A. and Diez Th. (eds).
    Oxford)
  • ideological geopolitical preferences can
    influence national preferences
  • international interdependence can serve as a
    catalyst of societal demand for integration

10
Integration
  • Integration - a means to secure commercial
    advantage through intergovernmental bargaining on
    distribution of gains
  • Three assumptions about integration process
  • First order problems do not exist
  • Second order problems dominate
  • Supranational entrepreneurship is not necessary

11
Institutional design
  • driven by governments to overcome high
    transaction costs and information assymetrics
  • supranational institutions assigned a role in the
    second order issues
  • the degree of pooling of sovereignty or
    delegating to supranational institutions
    dependant on the value placed on the outcome
  • delegation to supranational institutions acts as
    a safeguard against short term preferences of the
    governments

12
The intergovernmental approach limitations
  • biased case selection (EC, IGC, Treaty
    amendments)
  • problem of separating the substantive bargaining
    and institutional choice
  • neglect of integration dynamics (ECJ)

13
France
  • Georges Pompidous objectives and challenges
  • De Gaulles heritage
  • Retaining Frances influence and credibility in
    the EU
  • Overcoming persistent economic and monetary
    problems
  • Enhancing Frances international standing
  • Counterbalancing Germanys growing economic
    power and political assertiveness

14
Germany
  • Willy Brandt s objectives and challenges
  • Asserting Germanys international position
  • Normalizing Germanys relations within the East
    Ostpolitik
  • Overcoming domestic opposition of Christian
    democrats to the Ostpolitic
  • Appeasing the member states fears of Germanys
    resurgence

15
Britain
  • Harold Wilson challenges
  • EU entry

16
The Hague spirit - Completion, deepening,
enlargement
  • Completion finalizing the regulations for
    funding the CAP
  • Deepening extending the EC competencies beyond
    existing policies to include
  • A system of foreign policy cooperation (Etienne
    Davignon report)
  • Coordination of member states monetary
    policies to secure farm prices from parity
    fluctuations (Pierre Werner report on the EMU)
  • Enlargement launch of negotiations conditional
    to the enforcement of the new financing system
    for CAP

17
Compromise
18
Outcomes Completion
  • A new funding system for the CAP
  • positive EC own resource (amendment to the
    Treaty of Rome agreed by the foreign ministers
    subject to member states ratification)
  • Levies on agricultural products
  • duties on imported industrial goods
  • up to 1 per cent of VAT revenue
  • - negative - the mechanism of the agreement
    disadvantages member states importing on a big
    scale from outside of the EU

19
Outcomes Deepening
  • Davignons report (May 1970 / October 1970)
  • European Political Cooperation
  • Brandt agenda for EPC
  • Europe wide support for his Ostpolitik policy
  • Werner s plan for EMU the blueprint for
    achieving the Economic and Monetary Union
  • Increased coordination of domestic economic
    policies at European level to promote convergence
  • Institutional reform
  • Fixing of exchange rates and adoption of a single
    currency by 1980

20
Outcomes Deepening
  • March 1971 Ecofin Council Resolution on attaining
    the EMU
  • Member states commitment on the exchange rate
    fluctuation margin within 1,2 percent band
  • Snake proved unworkable due to dollar instability
    in 1971
  • Relaunch of the snake in the tunnel in 1972
    2,25 band
  • The UK, Ireland, Denmark and Italy withdrawal
    from the system in 1973 in the wake of the oil
    crisis and economic recession

21
Outcomes Enlargement
  • June 1970 accession negotiations with
    Britain, Ireland, Denmark and Norway begin in
    Luxembourg

22
Positions The UK
  • Edward Heath approach to gain entry, then sort
    out any differences
  • Edward Heath conservative party skepticism
  • Harold Wilson opposition in the Labor
  • Pompidou welcome of the British traditional
    Euroskepticism
  • Heaths and Pompidou accord French - British
    axis?
  • Labor denunciation of Heaths entry terms despite
    George Thomsons claim that they would have been
    accepted by the Labor governement

23
within the UK
  • The grass roots of the strength of
    opposition to European commitment which has
    existed, and continues to exist, at all levels of
    British society
  • fear of being boxed into the Continental system
  • fear of sovereignty cession
  • concern on abandonment of its unique position of
    being both independent and universal, committed
    to none and having a hand in the shaping of all

24
Causes of ambivalence
  • The British response to the growth of European
    movement was schizophrenic
  • Welcome of the steps to overcome age-old European
    rivalries
  • Reflecting that the divide and rule policy was at
    stake, Britain will not be able to hold the
    balance of power in Western Europe
  • Awareness that the new European power can
    undermine the UK influence in the world
  • Robert Skidelsky The Choice for Europe

25
Hence
  • The British policy
  • of selective sabotage and finally decision to
    stop the thrust of unity from inside Americas
    Trojan Horse in Europe
  • Political argument for
  • Britain has always been a European power.
    Today European powers are coming together in
    political union. Britain can no longer stop it.
    To stand outside would be to cut itself off for
    the first time from the Continent of which it has
    always been a part. This would be a betrayal of
    Englands past and the real guarantee that it
    would have no future.
  • Robert Skidelsky The Choice for Europe

26
A series of referendums
  • France - April 1972 to split the Communist
    Socialist opposition 61 vote for
  • Ireland May 1972 83 vote for
  • Norway September 1972 53,5 vote against
  • Denmark September 1972 63 vote in favor

27
The UKParliamentary approval in October 1972
  • Five days debate in the Parliament culminating in
    the vote taken on October 28
  • Labor dissidents performing the divine duty of
    making a judgment and then courageously applying
    the judgment by voting for Europe (69 20
    abstaining)
  • Roy Hattersley Voting for Europe

28
A Historic Decision Speech to the House of
Commons by Edward Heath
  • Economic and political arguments
  • Change in the international trade relations
  • US increasing economic connections with the new
    powers China, SU, EEC
  • Commonwealth developing into a loose association
    of independent countries
  • Economic and social benefits of the common market
  • Resilience of the Community and its effective
    mechanisms of dealing with the problems arising

29
Economic and political arguments cont.
  • Making a commitment which involves our
    sovereignty, we are also gaining an opportunity.
    We are making a commitment to the Community as it
    exists tonight, if the House so decides, but we
    are gaining the opportunity to influence the
    decisions of the future.
  • Being a member of the community would be an
    effective use of our contribution of
    sovereignty.
  • Britain, which will be united to Europe
    economically, will be able to influence decisions
    affecting her future and enjoy better standard of
    life.

30
The EC of the Nine in 1973
  • Britain, Ireland, Denmark join the EC
  • The member states of the Community, the driving
    force of European construction, affirm their
    intention before the end of the present decade to
    transform the whole complex of their relations
    into a European Union.
  • October 19-20, 1972, Paris summit concluding
    statement

31
External and domestic pressures, diversity of
national agendas and Euroslump
  • The collapse of the postwar fixed exchange rate
    mechanism
  • August 1971 Nixons statement on suspension of
    dollar convertibility and imposition of
    restrictive trade measures
  • European economies slipping into recession
  • Need for a concerted anti inflationary action and
    coordinated policy for exchange rate stability
    accepted in the Paris summit

32
Positions/Preferences
  • Brandt
  • Opposing the European Regional Development Fund
    (ERDF)
  • Advocating float of the currency
  • Pompidou
  • Concerned with the impact of the currency
    fluctuations on the CAP
  • Opposing a joint float
  • Support of the ERDF
  • Heath
  • ERDF financial assistance for depressed regions
    in the UK

33
December, 1973, Copenhagen summit
  • Continued inflation
  • Worsening of oil crises onset of embargo in
    Rotterdam
  • Need of a common energy policy and a concerted
    response to the oil crisis
  • EC Common position on the Middle East causing
    further transatlantic tensions
  • EC US Trade disputes
  • Kissingers call for a new Atlantic Charter and a
    coordinated Western response to the oil crisis

34
Positions/Preferences
  • Pompidou
  • Opposing Kissingers initiative
  • Advocating bilateral consumer producer bargains
    on concrete supply issues
  • UN stage for the multilateral negotiations on the
    general political and economic differences
  • Brandt
  • Support of the US position
  • Continued Ostpolitik
  • Treaties with the SU, Wasaw, Prague
  • Agreement on Berlin
  • Accord between two Germanies
  • Opposition to the ERDF
  • Heath
  • Blocking discussions on energy to get a deal on
    the ERDF

35
1974
  • France - election of Giscard dEstaing
  • Germany Brandts resignation and Helmut Schmidt
    becoming the Chancellor
  • The UK Wilsons reelection
  • Reestablishment of the French German axis
  • Renegotiation of British accession agreement
    terms

36
April 1974 Council meeting
  • James Callaghan voices the UK demands of the
    Labor Party manifesto
  • Recalculation of the UK budgetary contribution
  • CAP reform
  • Commonwealth interests protection

37
November 1974
  • Schmidts speech in the Labor party conference
    We need the British
  • My party feels that the advantages of the
    EEC so far do have greater weight than the
    stresses and the burdens. After all it is an
    organization, whose pace and direction can only
    be decided by the agreement of all members. We
    feel that it provides us with the necessary means
    of cooperation which we do need to solve the
    problems of the present day crisis of the world
    economic structure.

38
April 1975
  • The House of Commons approval of the
    governments recommendation that Britain should
    stay in the European Community 396 to 170 votes
    split
  • Three pamphlets to each voter referendum campaign
  • 1975 referendum 67 vote in favor of staying

39
December 1974 Paris summit
  • Schmidt brokerage between the British and
    French leaders
  • Agreement on the ERDF (UK getting the 28)
  • Correcting mechanism decision
  • Decision to hold direct elections to the European
    Parliament
  • Decision to hold regular summits of the European
    council as a forum for directing EC affairs

40
March 1975 Dublin summit
  • Agreement on the British rebate negotiated

41
Consequences of the corrective mechanism hidden
flaw
  • Conditional to overall deficit of the member
    state balance of trade
  • November 1979, Dublin summit, Margaret Thatcher
    demanding British money back
  • June 1984, Fontainebleau meeting of the European
    Council, abatement agreement
  • Abatement
  • Calculated on the basis of the difference
    between the British share of community
    expenditure and the proportion of the Community
    VAT-based revenue contributed by the UK
  • Paid in the form of a reduced VAT contribution
    in the following year

42
The stagflation period
  • The large member states failure to provide
    leadership
  • Germany strong economically, but not politically
  • France, depressed economically and politically
    volatile
  • The UK, weak politically and economically
  • Privileged partnership impatience with the
    Commission contribution to its dysfunctionalism
  • Europe can only be brought forward by the
    will of a few statesmen, and not by thousands of
    regulations and hundreds of ministerial councils
  • Inefficiency of the Brussels institutions
  • The Council indecisiveness lack of political
    will to revive European integration
  • Leo Tindemans reports (1975) on ways to advance
    European integration (two speed Europe)
  • The three wise men (Barend Biesheuvel, Edmund
    Dell, Robert Marjolin) Report on European
    Institutions (1979)

43
Lecture 6 Transformation of the European
Community (1979-1989)
  • The second and third Enlargements (Greece, 1979,
    Spain and Portugal, 1986).
  • The Budgetary issues.
  • The crisis in the Community.
  • The Single European Act (1986).

44
Readings 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

45
Readings 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.

46
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