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POLH 1035: The Economic history of European integration

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Title: POLH 1035: The Economic history of European integration


1
POLH 1035 The Economic history of European
integration
2
  • 2 books, 4 ECTS
  • Baldwin, R., Wyplosz, C., The Economics of
    European Integration (McGraw Hill, London, 2006)
  • Grant, W., The Common Agricultural Policy
    (Basingtoke, Macmillan, London, 1997)OR
    Padoa-Schioppa, T., The Euro and its Central
    Bank Getting united After the Union (Cambridge,
    MIT Press, 2004)

3
  • For the Finns, one course
  • Course A3.4.4 is made of a choice between 2
    courses POLH1035 or POLH 1036
  • Then one of these two book exams can be chosen as
    a supplementary course.
  • For Exchange students, the possibility to choose
    both courses

4
  • Book-exam and self-study
  • A book-exam is a self-study exam which serves an
    auxiliary role, helping students to deepen their
    knowledge in a particular field or issue.
  • Book exams are taken once a month on the regular
    exam day of the Faculty of Social Sciences,
    normally on Friday, 12.00-16.00.
  • The exam takes the form of questions, one
    question per book.
  • Look for reading and learning methods from the
    Internet
  • Registration
  • Registration for the book exams takes place
    through NettiOpsu (https//ssl.utu.fi/nettiopsu)
    or by filling an envelope form available from the
    Department, at least one week before the exam.

5
  • The questions
  • A good knowledge of the main points of the book
  • Finding the main points of the book
  • Answering the question through the use of
    elements found in the book
  • Open questions, closed questions
  • Example Odysseus
  • Open question Ulysse loses his compagnons along
    his journey. Elaborate on the signification of
    this.
  • Closed question While Ulysse navigates, what
    happens in Ithaca?
  • Closed and open question Describe the role of
    the Gods in Ulysses journey, and elaborate on
    the signification of this role
  • A capacity to organize your thoughts on the book
    clearly and understandably
  • Language
  • Understandable, clear, to the point
  • If understandable, I will not take it into
    account

6
  • To find the books
  • The Nelli portal through the website of the
    University library
  • Browsing libraries in Turku
  • E-books
  • The textbook library of the Faculty of Social
    Sciences
  • In the Educarium building
  • ASK!
  • My own copy
  • Buying the book?

7
European integration as an economic project?
  • Goal of the course is to study
  • The economic incentives of psot-WW II European
    integration
  • The various stages through of European economic
    and monetary integration from the 1951 European
    Community for Coal and Steel to the 1992
    Maastricht treaty
  • Economy was an incentive in many former attempts
    at integration in Europe Zollverein, customs
    union, etc
  • The idea of economic integration as something
    reasonable
  • Jean Monnet and sectorial integration
  • start with economic solidarities, economic
    projects, and then increasingly integrate more
    and more sectors, with in the long term political
    integration as well
  • The political wrapped in the economic?
  • Long-term threads Prosperity (emphasis on
    economic growth), free trade inside Europe
    (construction of a European market), economic
    planification (controlled change)
  • Direction the strengthening of economic
    integration has been continuous, the EU being
    mostly an economic reality
  • Common market, common laws and regulations, the
    Euro, etc

8
  • The main steps of this project?
  • The 1950s the
  • The 1960s crisis and strenthening of the Common
    Agricultural Policy
  • The 1970s stagflation, energy crisis, the
    European Monetary System
  • The 1980s more harminzation in economic and
    monetary policy
  • The importance of the choice by the French in
    1983-84 of a specific economic and European
    policy that allowed for a measure of economic
    integration the end of classical keynesian
    economics, the beginning of a different economic
    era
  • Economic regulation and regulation of the market
    is the only dimension of the states prerogatives
    that is to a large extent europeanized
  • Debates in the current days
  • The role of the Central Bank and the debate over
    the Stability pact
  • Is budget discipline and a strong Euroe the right
    method?
  • The role of the EU in economic governance
  • Globalization-induced fears the EU as the
    liberal monster? On the contrary, the EU as too
    dirigist?

9
Baldwin, R., Wyplosz, C., The Economics of
European Integration (McGraw Hill, London, 2006)
  • General introduction to the economic dimension of
    European integration
  • The authors
  • Two professors at the Geneva Graduate Institute
    of International and Development Studies
  • The book is a textbook, presenting the basic
    facts and contending interpretations. It serves
    as a good complement for the two other, more
    specialized books of the package
  • Questions will be especially on part I of the
    book
  • Development of European economic and monetary
    integration
  • Structure of the main instruments of European
    economic integration

10
Grant, W., The Common Agricultural Policy
(Basingtoke, Macmillan, London, 1997)
  • Presentation of the Common Agricultural policy
  • From the very start, an important part of the
    process
  • France, but also other countries want it
  • France especially will trigger a few crises in
    order to strengthen the CAP
  • Economic, symbolic reasons
  • Now, a financial burden for the EU?
  • An ambiguous process, with Europe appearing at
    the same time as a support for rural regions and
    agricultural forces, and a threat (opening of
    markets, the feeling of a change in the ways of
    life, etc)
  • The example of Finland farmers against the EU
    accession because of economic risks, also
    symbolic and political elements
  • Chapters 1, 2, 3, 7, 8
  • A rather critical assessment. Calls for
    significant reforms, and puts the finger on
    something important
  • For Eurosceptics, the CAP epitomizes all that is
    wrong with the EU for those who believe in the
    European vision, it demonstrates how difficult it
    is to create a new international entity through a
    process of bargaining and mutual adjustment

11
Padoa-Schioppa, T., The Euro and its Central
Bank Getting united After the Union (Cambridge,
MIT Press, 2004)
  • The author Central banker, Bank of Italy since
    1968, European Central Bank since 1998
  • Speaks largely for his instrument a strong,
    stable monetary policy, based on the Stability
    Pact. A strong, independent Central Bank
  • The single, efficient, excellent instrument (p.
    xv)
  • A Single market and free trade incompatible with
    independent, national monetary policies (1982)
  • Defense and illustration of the Banks policy and
    its existence the starting point is the
    existence, opportunity, and reason of a European
    level.
  • Plenty of room, if you have the will, to look
    into the assumptions of the book, even if they
    are laid out quite clearly
  • A German model (price stability, reduction of
    deficits), that Germany itself, on the other
    hand, broke when convenient
  • Pro-European Europe as a political project, also
    reasonable (What was to be superseded was NOT
    the power of the nation-state but its unbounded
    nature)
  • European monetary integration not to be mixed
    with a common economic policy
  • Historical part the political and economic
    process that brought the European Central Bank
    and the Euro into being
  • Technical part Central Banking, the system, etc
  • A European Central Bank that performs all three
    functions regulation, monetary policy, payment
    systems
  • Advocates yet more integration in this

12
  • Mostly the chapters 1, 2, 7, 8
  • The most historical
  • Chapter 2 proposes a vision of Central Banking
    and what it does include
  • The ones with perspectives on nowadays situation
  • Chapter 1 Presents the political road, then the
    economic road
  • Paris 1951, then 1954 the failure of the ECD,
    then Rome 1957
  • Project was political, p.4
  • The 1970s sees key developments
  • The communities are given their own resources,
    and their capacities are extended to new, largely
    economic areas (energy, industry, etc)
  • 1979 the creation of the European Monetary
    System a fixed, but adjustable, exchange rate
    system
  • 1986 the European Single Act as the sign of a
    relaunch and a new European spirit (Delors,
    Mitterrand, Kohl)
  • This is the moment when the economic promises of
    the communities are truly fulfilled in law free
    circulation of goods, persons, capitals, etc
  • End of the 1980s The Delors committee works on a
    common monetary policy. The Berlin wall falls,
    and Germany reunified engages itself firmly for a
    European project
  • Maastricht, Feb. 1992 the idea is adopted of a
    Central Bank and the Euro
  • Opt-out clauses, a start in January 1999
  • Significant progresses are made in 1994-1995,
    even if euro-skepticism has grown. The criteria
    acquire a life of their own
  • Still perfectible last year, Erkki Liikanen try
    to move capital from one country to the other
  • The importance of economic progression from the
    US dollar and gold, to flotation, to
    globalization The economic road from Rome 1957
    to Maastricht 1992 is the road from a dollar
    anchor to a proprietary anchor called the euro
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