Eco Ue 1
Eco Ue 1
Eco Ue 1
with the common tariff it changes to the 2. CUSTOM UNION. tariffs should be the same to every country outside the
borders of the union. They have to get along and make a common decision.
1958: the EU was formed as a custom union
REMOVE TARIFFS AMONG MEMBERS. Agree COMMON TARIFFS (common commercial policy) against third
countries: - No “Rules of Origin'' needed. - Difficult to agree to common tariffs. - How to distribute revenue from the
tariffs.1986: it was a custom union. Spain entered the EU.
3. SINGLE MARKET
Remove also NON-TARIFF BARRIERS to trade of GOODS: EXAMPLES: - Long queues at the borders. - Abuse of
TECHNICAL AND HEALTH STANDARDS and regulations. HARMONIZE. - Discrimination in public procurement. -
Discriminatory taxes AFTER crossing the border - Subsidies to national producers (STATE AID) → Ensuring undistorted
COMPETITION.Unrestricted trade in SERVICES
FREE MOVEMENT for goods, services, labour and capital.
mutual recognition of titles, physical and financial capital market. specific exam for law and medicine.
4. MONETARY UNION. EUROPEAN UNION IS (but it has some features of economic union)
To CONSOLIDATE THE SINGLE MARKET, avoiding the effects of variations in the exchange rates on
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS and trade.
The exchange rate is the value of one country’s currency in relation to another . With different currencies, it is
IMPOSSIBLE TO STABILISE FOREVER the exchange rate, NEITHER UNDER A FLEXIBLE NOR A FIXED
REGIME. RADICAL SOLUTION = SHARE THE CURRENCY
Fixed exchange rate: it's an intervention in the currency, and sometimes it needs a devaluation for one of them in order to
get the other.
Common exchange rate policy: central bank, the only one capable of producing dollars. One currency in common, one
central bank in common, one monetary policy and an exchange rate policy. Some things are in national power
5. ECONOMIC UNION
Fiscal policy through taxes, public expenditure and debt.
Right now, we have Fiscal policy/budgetary policy, different national budget and fiscal policies (taxes and public
expenditure are decided by national governments)
Each national government decides its public expenditure: pensions, unemployment payments, education, health, payment
of interests on public debts
Countries spend more than they collect through taxes: public deficit. How? They ask for money from other countries, so
they create a new public debt. But the total debt is the sum of this year’s debt plus the previous years (deficit of this plus
debt of last’s)
Public debt greece= 180% of gdp. This huge public debt can create problems for the EU, as the common central bank was
spending a huge quantity of money to only help the Greek economy. Even if other countries are not okay with it, they
must help its debt crises so it does not become a banking crisis. The European central bank ECB must help them when
this happens, providing liquidity and printing more euros. But this generates inflation, as there is more money circulating.
So, national policies can interfere with common monetary policies.
If they didn't have that deficit because they didn't have that money to spend in public expenditure, issues such as
education, pensions and health would be injured.
First peaceful attempt at European unity, but not the only one.
Starting point: post- war period, after Second World War (1945), protectionism, destruction.
Customs Union 1958 treaty of rome: eu began as a customs union to ALL PRODUCTS (not only for coal and steel). 6
founder countries of the European Economic Community. Transitional period of 8 years to decrease the tariffs of the
products to the common tariff until 1968, when the whole transition was made and the common trade policy began.
They wanted more independence, that's why they jumped
Even in the customs union the different currencies of the countries were already a problem. So in 1979 the European
monetary system was created. President of the European commission: the one in charge to make decisions and proposals.
1986: Spain, Portugal and Greece (1981) entered the customs union. In 1-1-1993 the Customs union changed into
a Single Market: single act. free movement for goods, services, transport, financial services, people, labour and capital.
It was a huge step, in the custom they were only dealing with tariffs. The monetary union (the euro) was created almost
immediately after this change.
Treaty on European Union (TEU) or Maastricht Treaty 1993: same currency, monetary policy, exchange rate and
central bank. The countries must pass an exam to enter the union, if they meet the maastricht/convergence criteria, they
can enter. The first one was completed in 1-1-1999 when the European Monetary Union is formed. It contains criteria
about low inflation 2%, low public deficits and debts, which must be below 3% of GDP
Public expenditure, taxes, deficit and public debt, budgets are a national spanish decision
The stability pack: public deficit should be smaller of the 3% of the GDP
Next generation programme: issue european common debt 750.000 million euros, how to spend that money in the future,
it is an extraordinary programme, repair the debt and get rid of it, just because of the pandemic. Economy recovers, digital
transition,
Even if in terms of production eu, ee.uu and china produce more or less the same, the gdp per capita in ee.uu and in eu is
much higher as in china there are near 1500 million people and in the eu there are near 500 million.
Out of the euro: denmark, sweden, poland, czech republic, hungary, croatia (2023), romania and bulgaria. Denmark put
the condition of joining whenever they want the euro if the EU wanted them to accept the other treaties. They are out of
the central bank as well.
EUROPEAN COUNCIL: meetings of the EU’s top national leaders (Pedro Sanchez and the rest of presidents) + a
permanent President. They meet because they have a more general view of the problems, they are not specialised. They
provide strategic guidance and final compromises to solve disagreements. This institution was established in 2009 in the
treaty of lisbon. They have NO ROLE in law-making, they are informal meetings. To translate their decisions into law, it
is necessary to follow the legislative procedure: commission proposes, council of ministers and parliament approve. They
meet 4 times a year.
● Legislative power. It is shared by: COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION AND PARLIAMENT. They have
to vote to decide, and both have to approve it. Cope decisions , decide together CHARLES MICHELL
PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL
○ COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION/COUNCIL OF MINISTERS: shares legislative power with
the European Parliament. Approve the EU’s common budget jointly with Parliament. Formed by 1
minister from each country, it has different configurations. If they are deciding about agriculture, they
meet the ministers of agriculture, and the same with every area under discussion. The economic
configuration is the most important one, ECOFIN (economical financial affairs, 27 countries in the EU
meet) and EUROGROUP (when the 19 countries that are members of the euro € meet), and it meets the
ministers of economy. Each one represents their country and makes decisions according to their interests.
Every 6 months one country holds the presidency,for their ministers to meet, rotating alphabetically.
There is a different voting power, because as different as the commission, here they are representing their
country and each one has a different size and importance. In order to change the treaties, they need
unanimity. Decisions are made by QUALIFIED MAJORITY/ DOUBLE MAJORITY, when they vote
they need in favour a bit more than half of the countries (at least 55% of member states 15 countries or
more). And, the members/ministers voting in favour must represent 65% or ⅔ of the European population
or more (strong majority). 4 countries that equal 35% of the population can as well be considered as
enough in order to make a decision.
○ EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT: shares legislative power with the COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN
UNION. It approves European legislation, budget and exercises control. Members of parliament from the
27 countries. There are elections and it is directly elected every 5 years. The number of members per
nation varies with population. Most democratic institution of the EU. Its work is organised in
Parliamentary committees and plenary sessions. Decision making on the basis of a simple majority (half
plus one the votes). It is located in Strasbourg (France). 705 members.
Legislative procedure:
Codecision. Same weight to Council and Parliament, both have to approve a measure (the Council using a qualified
majority and Parliament a simple majority).
Revenue: OWN RESOURCES that belong to the Union. “Traditional ones”. Tariffs ½, small part of VAT 3%, 1% natuna
income, 4 resources. PROPORTIONAL money given by the 27 members.
Countries have the legal obligation to transfer this money to the Union. These are the revenue from the
1. tariffs of the EU from the CET (common external tariff, since the beginning of the creation of the Eu when it was a
customs union in 1958) and
2. Agricultural tariffs (higher, variable…)
The revenue from these traditional resources was not enough, due to trade liberalisation and EU enlargements (every time
there is an enlargement , there is a new country which enters tariff free.
New resources were needed, the importance of the traditional one has fallen over time. Today around 15% of total
revenues.
3. Third resource. Part of Value added Tax Revenue from the member States.
Created as a closing resource. We want to spend more, but we can't spend more than our revenue, so in order to “ close”
that space between the revenue and the expenditure, to balance this quantity, they created this third resource. The VAT is a
national tax, but a small percentage of it goes to the European budget.
It was set at the level necessary to balance the budget, a 1% of the harmonised national VAT base, a measure or
consumption, to avoid differences in national tax rates.
Type of taxes:
Regressive: the more money you have, the smaller the percentage of tax that you pay on income.
Proportional: you pay according
Progresive: the more money you have, the bigger the percentage of tax you pay on income.
Revenue VAT= rate (21%) * Base (value of your consumption).
Problem: VAT taxes only consumption, so it is a regressive tax. Low incomes are taxed more strongly, due to lack of
savings.
Diminishing importance of this resource, since 1988 it isn’t the closing resource. 12% of total revenue in 2019.
○ In the future:
1. New priorities: need for more expenditure in R+D, education and climate change.
2. Multiannual financial framework: finally main efforts devoted to fighting the COVID crisis and the new priorities
in spending not growing much in the ordinary common budget. In the common budget there are no new priorities,
but in the Next generationU NGEU (to fight the pandemic), a new project, which is outside the ordinary budget,
most of the money is going to be spend in these new priorities (technological advance, digital and green
transition). It is a momentary solution, but in the future when this programme ends, the common budget will
continue not to have these new priorities from the extraordinary programme.
REMEMBER: The financial transfers involved in the EU budget ARE ONLY A MINOR PART, although very VISIBLE,
of the consequences of EU MEMBERSHIP for a member country: Single Market and monetary integration (euro) are
much more important.
SPANISH NET BALANCE: positive BUT DECREASING. Before Eastern enlargement, top recipient (in millions, not as
% GDP).Almost disappearing (2.000 million euros per year).
Eastern enlargement (without increasing resources enough) = more countries and regions with a right to receive regional
and cohesion funds… And “STATISTICAL EFFECT”, new members reduce AVERAGE per capita income.
Annual budgetary procedure: in the conciliation committee they have to reach a compromise so that in the 2nd reading the
council and the parliament approve it.
(Common budget/ GDPEU27) * 100 = 1% of the European GDP. Must be balanced by law every year. G=T no deficit, no
debt because there is no need to finance any deficit, as you spend only your revenue. Common budget is small (1%).
National budgets are much larger.
JUSTIFICATIONS:
A) EUROPE'S ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY.
GOAL: reduce regional inequality, so that growth is spread all over the EU. Avoid that some regions left behind. But
ARE REGIONAL INEQUALITIES SIGNIFICANT IN EUROPE? YES.
Europe's economic geography is very centralised, economic activity highly concentrated.
Western Germany + Benelux + NorthEastern France + South-Eastern England + Northern Italy= 1/7 area, 1/3 population,
½ economic activity EU-28.
Europe´s economic “CORE”, centre. Concentration of economic activity drops as one moves away from the core, towards
the “PERIPHERY”
Not only dispersion ACROSS NATIONS; also WITHIN REGIONS of the same country. Egs.: - Spain: Madrid –
Extremadura. - Italy: Milan – Naples and Sicily. - UK: London – Northern Scotland
In EU, there has been CONVERGENCE (in per capita income) ACROSS NATIONS, narrower national differences. At
the same time, WIDER REGIONAL DIFFERENCES within nations, more concentration of economic activity in certain
areas. Therefore, REGIONAL APPROACH needed to design policies.
Less developed Member States grow faster = converge. Eastern enlargement increased national and regional inequalities
Before the eastern enlargement, Spain was one of the countries that received most. 60% of the cohesion fund. Only
extremadura now remains as the Convergence region. The rest changed into TRANSITION REGIONS (with per capita
income between 75%-90% of EU average, Andalucia, Castilla-La Mancha…)
-3 principles:
1. Market unity: Each product, same treatment (independently of the EU country where produced). - Free movement
inside the EU
2. Financial solidarity: CAP financed in common, through the Common Budget of the EU.
3. Community preference to European production, protection (high tariffs) against cheap imports
Institutions:
EAGF (European Agricultural GUARANTEE FUND). Fund for payments to farmers. Resources come from the common
budget. Initially GUARANTEE OF MINIMUM PRICES, took most of CAP expenditure and a large part of the common
budget. EAFRD (European Agricultural FUND for Rural DEVELOPMENT). SMALLER Fund that finances (also with
resources from the common budget) rural development programmes: modernization, infrastructures, innovation,
professional education, diversification of activities (eg. rural tourism), revitalise rural areas… Not to individual farmers,
to rural areas
MARKETS INTERVENTION: INITIAL DESIGN when CAP began (to understand logic, problems and reforms)
Usually intervention to GUARANTEE MINIMUM PRICE.
MINIMUM GUARANTEED PRICE, INTERVENTION PRICE “P INTERVENCIÓN” (at which EAGF – FEOGA buys
any surplus to EU farmers). well above WORLD PRICE (“P INTERN”) of 30 and even above “Price of Autarky” (where
supply and demand are equal). This causes excess supply, surplus, that EAGF buys (at the intervention price of 65).
VERY COSTLY. Only possible to do this by using also high TARIFFS (“T”). Eg. Imports enter the EU market at World
Price 30 + Tariff 40 = 70. Too expensive now to compete with European products below the intervention price. VERY
PROTECTIONIST
THE MOST IMPORTANT CASE. Normally. P at the guaranteed, INTERVENTION P, at which EAGF buys any
SURPLUS (S – D = 200 –130 = 70 tons) Expenditure due to CAP: intervention P x Surplus = 65 x 70 = 4550 euros (grey
area). Plus storage costs (not represented). THE SURPLUS IS CAUSED BY THE HIGH INTERVENTION PRICE.
Sometimes the surplus is destroyed or used for humanitarian purposes. Or exported abroad at the international price to
recover part of the cost.
NON-INTERVENTION:HIGH COSTS OF PRODUCTION in EU (climate, small size of farms, wages..). Supply curve
“up”. If AUTARKY: domestic D = domestic S of EU, but high P. If FREE TRADE, small domestic production, large
IMPORTS at world P (P intern). Agricultural lobbies and value of votes = intervention.
Without CAP, European farmers would have to compete with international prices, and this would be perjudicial for them,
as these are cheaper.
Market intervention: minimum guaranteed price, intervention price (more than double compared to the international
price). Tariffs are higher than the intervention price, to make the foreign product more expensive.
PROBLEMS of this initial design: EUROPEAN FARMERS benefit, though MAINLY the LARGER ones, are more able
to increase production responding to higher prices (20% of farms got 80% of benefits). EUROPEAN CONSUMERS
among the losers, paying high Prices. BUDGET PROBLEM, CAP very expensive for the common budget. FOREIGN
FARMERS (USA and developing countries): cannot sell in EU, even if more competitive, due to high tariffs AND suffer
competition of European exports in their own markets. WTO Rounds (Uruguay, Doha): PRESSURE TO REFORM CAP!
New CAP:
1992 Macsharry Reform. 2 components:
-Guaranteedprices lowered (end of old system) and compensated farmers with a different kind of support, giving them
income directly, through transfers not linked to production (new logic, to avoid causing a surplus and using tariffs).
Compensate with new system: direct payments to farmers, decoupled from production (completely unrelated from
production, no incentives to increase production and create surplus), payment based on a farm’s Historical (past)
production, later towards payment per hectare, independently of how much or what they produced.
FUTURE OF THE CAP: Less international pressures for reform from USA or developing countries. BUT still high
COST for common BUDGET (now of direct payments). Agriculture is a small and traditional sector (around only 2% of
EU GDP and 4% of employment). Spend instead in R&D? New (relatively poor) members benefit more from Regional
Policies. CAP tendency is to lose relative weight in the common budget (though slowly).