European Business Framework HA I Europæisk Business 1. Semester 2021 Noter
European Business Framework HA I Europæisk Business 1. Semester 2021 Noter
European Business Framework HA I Europæisk Business 1. Semester 2021 Noter
HA i Europæisk Business
1. Semester 2021
Noter
Indholdsfortegnelse
1. INTRODUCTION (W. 36)......................................................................................................................2
1.1 OVERVIEW.................................................................................................................................................2
1.2 PART 1.....................................................................................................................................................3
1.2.1 Roots of European integration........................................................................................................3
1.2.2 Early steps towards integration......................................................................................................4
1.3 PART 2.....................................................................................................................................................5
1.3.1 Summary of key concepts:..............................................................................................................5
2. EEC TO SEM (W. 37)............................................................................................................................5
2.1 OVERVIEW.................................................................................................................................................5
2.2 1960S......................................................................................................................................................5
2.2.1 Background.....................................................................................................................................5
2.2.2 The 1963 (small) crisis....................................................................................................................6
2.2.3 The 1965 (big!) crisis.......................................................................................................................6
2.3 1970S......................................................................................................................................................6
2.3.1 Background.....................................................................................................................................6
2.3.2 The Hague summit in 1969.............................................................................................................6
2.3.3 Other important developments......................................................................................................7
2.4 1980S......................................................................................................................................................7
2.4.1 Background.....................................................................................................................................7
2.4.2 The idea of SEM..............................................................................................................................8
2.4.3 The decision-making process concerning the SEM..........................................................................8
3. MAASTRICHT TO LISBON TREATY (W. 38)...........................................................................................8
3.1 OVERVIEW.................................................................................................................................................8
3.2 THE 1990S: FROM MAASTRICHT TO AMSTERDAM............................................................................................9
3.3 THE 2000S: FROM AMSTERDAM TO LISBON..................................................................................................11
3.4 THE 2010S: IN THE SHADOW OF THE CRISES..................................................................................................12
4. THEORIES OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION (W. 39)...............................................................................12
4.1 OVERVIEW...............................................................................................................................................12
4.2 PART 1: PURPOSES OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION THEORIES + FEDERALISM............................................................13
4.3 PART 2: FOUR OTHER THEORIES + CRITIQUE OF THOSE THEORIES.......................................................................14
Part 1:
The roots of European integration
Early steps towards European integration
Part 2:
A summary of key concepts
A few facts about the EU
1.2 Part 1
1.2.1 Roots of European integration
Federal ideas and attempts to integrate Europe are not new
o but the post WW2 drive towards integration was rooted in efforts to maintain
peace in Europe
o federalist aspirations - to avoid the nationalism of the “old order” - Jean Monnet
The Council of Europe was formed (1949)
o European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) (1949); Covers basic rights and
liberties e.g. Habeas Corpus (frihedsberøvelse)
o European Court of Human Rights
(Not formally connected to the EU)
The European project was also rooted in the politics of the Cold War & the Marshall Plan
The Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC) formed 1948 OECD
Marshall aid was tied to the removal of barriers to trade and commerce between member
states
- Marshall plan/aid larged sums of money used from USA to revive European economies and
produce attraction of communism.
- OEEC - European recovery program
- OECD - forum for discussing common problems among European countries and seeking
solutions
- Marshall aid, loan from USA, aimed at breaking down barriers.
1.2.2 Early steps towards integration
Schuman declaration (1950) Treaty of Paris established the European Coal and Steel
Community (ECSC) (1951) - six member states; Belgium, France, Germany, Italy,
Luxembourg and the Netherlands
o Transfer to a supranational level, sovereignty over two crucial “war industries”:
steel and coal. To rationalize and manage the development of two key industries.
o Create forms of cooperation which will male war impossible and, by means of spill-
over effects, develop more cooperation and interrelations
The ECSC had a “High Authority” and a “Council of Ministers”
Commitment to an “ever closer union”, to economic and social progress “by a common action to
eliminate the barriers which divide Europe” and to “the constant improvement of the living and
working conditions of their people.” (Preamble).
The EEC saw the formation of the European Commission and the Council of ministers
o There was thereby a balance between intergovernmentalism and supranational
governance
Focus on the economic rather than political aspects of European integration
The EEC was a common market
The EEC was (and the EU still is) a customs union!
The EEC involved the liberalization of trade and commerce between member states
Yet it introduced a Common Agricultural Policy = a system of trade protection and price
support for farmers
The conflict of ideas between a free market approach and “dirigisme” was to be a key
battleground
Another key conflict was between supranational authority and national sovereignty
European Free Trade Association (EFTA) formed separately among non-EEC members
(1960)
- EFTA - alternative to European economic community
- It was a free trade agreement, each member had its own trade policy with non-member
country
- Intergovernmental cooperation
1.3 Part 2
1.3.1 Summary of key concepts:
European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
European Economic Community (EEC)
A Common market
A free trade area vs a customs union
Supranationalism: Policy where sovereignty has been ceded or pooled by member states
in (EEC/EU) institutions
Vs
Intergovernmentalism: Cooperation between sovereign states in which the national veto
is maintained
Progress towards further European integration can take form of deepening or widening
2.2 1960s
2.2.1 Background
Period of economic growth
New youth culture which is questioning authorities is born
In 1960 the competing trade block EFTA is launched
In 1961 the customs union is in place
The CAP is launched during 1962 leading to stable food supply but also overproduction
During 1968 custom duties among the EEC members were dismantled
2.2.2 The 1963 (small) crisis
In 1961 President de Gaulle proposed an intergovernmental political cooperation
Negotiations on the “Fouchet Plan” were ongoing when Britain first applied for EEC
membership in 1961
De Gaulle opposed British membership
However, he allowed negotiation on membership while trying to make the terms
unacceptable for the UK
When the Fouchet negotiations came to halt, and the entry negotiations did not, de Gaulle
unilaterally vetoed British entry in 1963 (and again in 1967)
o EEC received setback
So basically, the French president unilaterally declined the British application for
membership to the EEC without negotiating with the Six. The British membership would
have provided an alternative leadership which would've been a threat to de Gaulle’s plan.
2.3 1970s
2.3.1 Background
Period of economic and political turbulence in the world
The Luxembourg compromise made integration more difficult
The economic problems in Europe made the countries more inward looking
The entry of UK and Denmark caused problems, because they had a more
intergovernmental outlook.
Completion:
The EEC got its own resources coming from levies in agricultural products and customs
tariffs on imports of products from outside the EC
The European Parliament got a budgetary role, where it could propose amendments to
those part of the budget that was not compulsory expenditures
Widening:
Negotiations with the UK, Ireland, Denmark and Norway opened in June 1970
Completed successfully by January 1972
Referendums on membership were held in Ireland, Denmark and Norway. Whereas clear
majorities in Ireland and Denmark voted in favor, a majority of the Norwegian people
rejected the membership
On January 1973, the UK, Denmark and Ireland entered the EC
A referendum was held in the UK on June 1975 by the new Labour government after entry
which showed a two-to-one support for membership
Deepening:
Following The Hague Summit in 1969, a committee chaired by Pierre Werner drafted a
proposal for an Economic and Monetary Union
Based on the proposal, the snake-in-tunnel was launched in 1972 which, however, did not
do well due to the economic crisis following the collapse of the Bretton Woods system
The European-Political Co-operation based on the Davigion-report proved more success in
terms of creating a coordinated Foreign-Policy
2.4 1980s
2.4.1 Background
Sluggish (slow) growth in many member states
The Cold War including fear of a nuclear war
(Neo)liberal ideas on the rise because of change in leadership in many countries and
economic steering problems
3.2.5 Enlargement:
All member states paid lip-service to the principle of enlargement of the EU to the east
Germanys commitment to enlargement was based largely on security considerations
British motives reflected a combination of security, economic, and political considerations
France feared the impact on
o The EU balance of power
o Divert of attention away from the Mediterranean
o The impact on the CAP and structural funds
Copenhagen Criteria are the rules that define whether a country is eligible to join the
European Union
“Theory is always for someone and for some purpose” Robert Cox (1981) (Bulmer et al p66)
Therefore, theories do not offer absolute or universal truths, but versions of the truth
Federalism:
European federalism attracted strong support among resistance groups during WW2
Europe
The leading intellectual figure was Altiero Spinelli
The federalists advocated a “constitutional break” to replace sovereign states with a
federation
By the time their Congress took place in 1948, national political elites were re-established
in Europe
While the (Hague) Congress did produce the Council of Europe, this was an
intergovernmental body, falling short of federalist aspirations
The European Union of Federalists (EUF) formed in December 1946
Federalism proposed superseding nationalism
4.3 Part 2: Four other theories + critique of those theories
Realism:
The state is the most important actor in international politics - the state is a unitary actor
The statesman’s task is to ensure the survival of the state
o The key to survival is in the anarchic international system is self-help - to have more
power than other states
Cyclic view of history - even though there are periods with peace, there will arise conflicts
and war again
Realistic point of view: to recognize the fact that different cultures and countries have
different values
Thomas Hobbes: Humans are greedy for power, and war is a basic condition for humans
lives if there isn’t a state power
Rousseau: in the absence of a government, humans will act on their own with the purpose
of satisfying their own short term needs instead of cooperating with the purpose of
satisfying their common long-term needs.
Anarchy leads to states competing over power and security - Zero sum game (nulsumsspil)
Neo-functionalism:
First attempt to understand European Integration
Seek to provide closer integration without forcing countries to integrate too far or too
quickly
in achieving integration in one sector of common policy amongst sovereign states, this
would eventually lead to a ‘spillover’ into other policy areas. This would then lead to
integration in these policy areas and in turn, more ‘spillover’.
Neo-functionalism is the perspective that all integration is a result of past integration
According to neo-functionalism, the importance of nationalism and national state will
decline in the light of a central supranational state
Driving force of integration process: spillover
o Functional spillover: modern industrial economies were made up of interconnected
parts
If one sector integrated, it would lead to a spill-over into other sectors
o Political spillover: involved the build-up of political pressures in favor of further
integration within the states involved
Criticized realism, led to intergovernmentalism
Liberal intergovernmentalism:
Emphasized domestic rather than national interests
On the domestic level, various interest groups would compete in order to influence
national preference formation in integration
Finally, if governments feared the resultant agreement was not going to be lived up to by
the other parties, they would favor the transfer of sovereignty to supranational
institutions better placed to force compliance
A two-level game
Stanley Hoffman: Governments had much more autonomy in the process of European
integration than in the neo-functionalist view
Integration process remained intergovernmental
o It would only go as far as the governments were prepared to allow it to go
Like realists, Hoffman stressed the external limitations on autonomy
o States were seen as independent actors, but their governments were constrained
by the position of the state in the world system
Multi-level governance
Term used to describe the way power is spread vertically between many levels of
government and horizontally across multiple quasi-government and non-governmental
organizations and actors
A system of continuous negotiation among nested governments at several territorial tiers
o Supranational, national, regional, local
Offers important concepts for understanding EU practice
Argues that national governments have lost some control over policy to the
supranational level, and is particularly useful for understanding territorially organized
policies such as cohesion policy
Critique of theories:
Realism and neo-realism: Consider states as the only meaningful actors in international
relations, have a simplistic view of how national interests are formed, and have not taken
on board the impact of globalization and regionalization on the role of the national state
Neo-functionalism: Has trouble explaining periods of stagnation in European integration
e.g. following the “empty chair“ crisis
o Spillover between e.g. policy areas not inevitable
o Little consideration of different national demands
o The role of the state has endured, while that of supranational institutions - e.g. the
EC - has varied over time and according to policy area
Liberal intergovernmentalism: Appears to overestimate the degree of control retained by
states, to ignore transnational processes, not to take on board the supranational nature of
much integration, and to underestimate the significance of bodies such as the EC
Multi-level governance:
o some say its not a theory and explains little
o overestimates the significance of especially sub-national actors
o there are too few cases, where it applies