Title: History and Theory of European Integration
1History and Theory of European Integration
2Lecture 7
-
- From the European Community to the European
Union - (1989-1993)
3Contents
- The relation between the disintegration of the
USSR, German unification and the acceleration
processes in integration - The Treaty on the European Union (the IGCs and
the Maastricht summit, 1992) - Structure and the three pillars of the EU
- Ratification hurdles
4Recommended Readings
- Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An
Introduction to European Integration. Second
edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave.
Chapter 6, chapter 13 - L.Tsoukalis. The Economic and Monetary Union
The Primacy of High Politics (1996). The European
Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of
European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C
G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998 - 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.
5- Completing, deepening and widening
- On the agenda again?
- The pace of change is gathering momentum
- Will the Community prove equal to the challenges
of the future?
6Jacques Delors
- economic and monetary union is a necessary
step which will strengthen European integration
and guarantee political dynamism
7June 1988 Hanover Council
- Helmut Kohl / Karl Otto Pohl
- Francois Mitterand / Eduard Balladur
- Margaret Thacher / Nigel Lawson and Geoffrey
Howe - Committee to study and propose concrete stages
leading to EMU
8April 1989 Delors report
- EMU an essential complement (condition) to the
Single market success - Monetary union will be acceptable and feasible
only if there is parallel progress towards
increased convergence of our economies so that
policies are more consistent and harnessed to an
agreed objective. - National economic policies would have to be
placed in an agreed macroeconomic frame work and
be subject to binding rules and procedures - Irrevocably fixed exchange rates between
national currencies and, finally, a single
currency - European Monetary Institute
- European Central Bank
- IGC to consider changes to the Treaty of Rome
9June 1989 European Council Madrid meeting
- The report endorsed
- Stage one to be launched on July, 1, 1990
- Free movement of capital
- Membership of the Exchange Rate Mechanism
- IGC to be convened once stage 1 underway
10Thatchers opposition to EMU and vision of the EC
future
- Willing and active cooperation between
independent sovereign states without suppressing
nationhood and concentrating power at the center
of a European conglomerate Working more closely
together does not require power to be centralized
in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an
appointed bureaucracy. - Reform of the ineffective Community practices and
policies. - Community policies should encourage enterprise
through getting rid of barriers and making it
possible for companies to operate on a Europe
wide scale. Action to free markets, widen choice,
reduce government intervention. - Community should lead the process of removing the
barriers to trade in GATT.
11 12November 1989
- Fall of the Berlin Wall
- Extraordinary summit in Paris
- Helmut Kohl programme for German and European
Unification - EC and CSCE the two pillars of a united Germany
- Architecture of Germany to be fitted into the
future architecture of Europe as a whole
13December 1989 Strasbourg Council
- Political challenges of German Unification
- Thatchers fear of the united Germany resurgence
and opposition - Thatchers support for EC eastern enlargement to
prevent deepening - Mitterands concerns of Kohls haste and
unilateralism - Delors endorsement of unification and advocacy
of deeper integration - IGC on EMU to be convened
- Thatcher outvoted and isolated
- Franco German leadership weakened
-
14German unification, EMU and European Political
Union
- Thatchers persistent distrust of German
unification and EMU - Delors speech to the EP calling for a more
effective procedure for Foreign Policy
Cooperation - Belgian formal proposal for EPU
- Gianni de Michelis call to launch a IGC on EPU
- German elections of March 1990 in East Germany
- Mitterrands political swing after Christian
Democrats March victory - Kohl-Mitterand April letter to the EC President
to transform relations among the member states
into a European Union
15April 1990 Dublin European Council meeting
- Preparation for the IGC on EMU
- Decision on the IGC on EPU postponed
- Decision that former GDR to be incorporated into
EC on reunification
16June 1990 Dublin EC agreement on two parallel
IGCs to be launched by Rome summit
- EPU
- Stronger democratic legitimacy
- More efficient institutions
- Coherence of economic, monetary and political
action - Extending Community competencies
- Strengthening subsidiarity
- Common Foreign and Security policy
17August 1990 Commission Communication One
Market, One Money
- A single currency is the natural complement
of a single market. The full potential of the
latter is not achieved without the formerthere
is a need for economic and monetary union in part
to consolidate the potential gains from
completing the internal market, without which
there would be risks of weakening the present
momentum of the 1992 progress
18Based on Delors Report
- Stage 1 (to start no later than July 1, 1990)
- free capital movement in the EC and closer
monetary and macroeconomic cooperation between
member states and their central banks - Stage II
- Launch of ESCB to monitor and coordinate national
monetary policies - stronger supervisory powers of the EP and EC
- progressive narrowing of fluctuations margins
within the ERM - Stage III
- establishment of irrevocably fixed exchange
rates parities - granting of full monetary policy authority to EC
institutions
19October, 3, 1990 Germany Unification Treaty
effective
- Acquis communautaire to apply in former GDR
states - Alignment of policies and practices in line with
the Community - Observers from former FDR states incorporated
into EP - QMV in other institutions unchanged!!!
- High costs of transition and unification
20October 1990 Rome European Council
- Decision to launch EMU stage II on January 1,
1994 - Thatchers opposition / Sir Geoffrey Howe
resignation - Leadership crisis in the Conservative Cabinet /
Thatchers resignation
21IGCs From Rome to Maastricht (December 1990
December 1991)
- EMU was seen as the main instrument of
strengthening of the EC, which was linked
directly to German unification and the creation
of a new political and economic order in the
East - Driving forces
- European Commission
- The French Government
- Procedure
- Intergovernmental
- Multilevel
- Congruent
22Positions and scope for coalitions formation
Germany
- Happy with the status quo in economic terms
- Need to reaffirm the countrys commitment to
European unification in the wake of unification - Linking EPU and EMU
- EMU objectives determined by Karl Otto Pohl
- Gradual approach
- Need for economic convergence
- Indivisibility of the monetary policy
- ECB
- Price stability objective
- Multi speed approach
- EU of a federal type
- More powerful EP
- Bundesrat pressing for subsidiarity
23Positions and scope for coalitions formation
France
- Keen on EMU
- Advocating a strict timetable for the single
currency - ECB early in Stage II
- EPU to tie Germany to the EC partners
- Stronger European Council versus EP and
Commission
24Positions and scope for coalitions formation
Britain
- Opposed to single currency
- Western Europe is not an optimum currency area
where the gains from a common currency can
outweigh the losses resulting from the
abandonment of the exchange rate as a policy
instrument for correcting external imbalances - Protested against the federal goal equating
federalism with excessive power centralization in
Brussels - Denouncing the federal goal of the Luxembourg
draft treaty - Minimalist on the CFSP
- Advocating subsidiarity principle as a means to
limiting the EC competencies
25Positions and scope for coalitions formation
Italy
- EU of a federal type
- Supportive of the EPU
- Keen on the EMU
- concerned with the multi speech approach
- advocating gradual and lengthy transition
26Positions and scope for coalitions formation
Commission
- Advocated ECB at the EMU stage II beginning
- Supported informal multi speed and opt out option
- Advocating an EMU timetable
- Calling for closer cooperation on Security and
Defense - More power for the Commission in international
trade relations and policy implementation - Defense of the Commission exclusive right to
initiate legislation - Fight against the Council right to amend the
Commission proposals by QMV instead of unanimity - Unitary structure of the Treaty
27European Parliament Committee on Institutional
Affairs
- Legislative co-decision
- Right to initiate legislation
- Central Bankers
- Negotiating the specific arrangements and details
- Closely involved in strategy design and drafting
the relevant articles
28 29Luxemburg Presidency June 1991 European Council
- Three pillared structure of the draft Treaty
instead of the unitary structure - Supranational EC EMU
- Intergovernmental Cooperation on
Foreign and Security Policy second pillar Capped by the European Council
Justice and Home Affairs third pillar Capped by the European Council
30- Provisions for EMU
- Stage II to be short
- Coordination of national monetary policies by the
Committee of the Central Banks governors - Informal acceptance of two speed monetary union
- Possibility of an opt out from stage III
31The Netherlands Presidency The Maastricht
Council, December, 1991
- The unitary structure of the Dutch draft
reflecting commitment to federalism and deeper
integration - EMU
- Explicit provisions for two speed system
- Exclusion of the lagging member states from
decision making on stage III - Black Monday of September 30, 1991, at the
foreign ministers meeting -
32The Maastricht Treaty Treaty on European Union
Seven sections/17 protocols/33
declarationsdeepening and narrowing
- Temple structure of the Treaty
- Extension of Community competencies
- EP enhanced legislative powers
- Social policy provisions separated in Protocol
- EMU as a means by which the Union will promote
economic and social progress which is balanced
and sustainable Article 2 - multi speed tendencies reinforced
33 34EMU The most important part of the Treaty on
European Union revision
- Back loaded approach
- A long transitional period
- Only minor changes in the early stages
- Transfer of power from national to European level
delayed
35EMU A typical Community compromise
- The French securing a clear commitment
- The Germans delay of the date and convergence
criteria - The British an opt out roots of a variable
geometry in the Community - Single currency to be launched in the beginning
of Stage III with a deadline of January, 1, 1999 - the irrevocable fixing of exchange rates
leading to the introduction of a single currency,
the ECU, and a single monetary policy and
exchange rate policy Article 32
36Stage I launched on July 1 1990 by decision of
the Madrid Council June 1989
- Removal of exchange controls
- Inclusion of currencies in the narrow band of the
ERM - No new institutions
- Measures to encourage convergence criteria
- high degree of price stability average rate of
inflation not exceeding by more than 1,5 percent
that of the three best performing member states - budgetary discipline
- excess of expenditure over revenue within 3
percent of GDP - total government debt not exceeding 60 percent of
GDP - currency stability observance of the normal
fluctuation margins within the ERM for at least
two years without currency devolution - interest rates convergence long term interest
rate should not exceed by more than 2 percent the
average interest rates in the three best
performing member states (7.8)
37Stage II began on 1 January 1994
- European Monetary Institute set up to start
technical preparation for Stage III - EC QMV decision on satisfying the convergence
criteria - EC decision in consultation with the EP on
transition to Stage III - December 1995 Madrid Council a turning point in
EMU fortunes - adopting 1 January 1999 as Stage III starting
date - EURO decision
- June 1997 Amsterdam Council
- Growth and Stability Pact
- ERM II
- May 1998 Brussels Council
- decision on ECB
- decision on the Euro zone member participants
- row between Chirac and Kohl over the Wim
Duisenberg Jean Claude Trichet swap - June 1998 ECB set up in Frankfurt
38Stage III January, 1, 1999
- Irrevocably fixed rates for euro substituting
the national currencies - European System of Central Banks with a primary
objective of maintaining price stability - January 2002 start of the Euro circulation
39Off to an Embarrassing Start September 1992 ERM
crisis
- Steady growth of the mark and Bundesbank high
interest rates - Removal of exchange controls and free movement of
money - Devaluations in Italy, Portugal, Spain
- Pressure on the frank
- Black Wednesday of September 16 - pound
sterling pull out -
40- October 1992 OECD Financial Market Trends
- Rather than casting doubts on the prospect of
monetary unification, recent events should
strengthen the EC members resolve to conclude
EMU as quickly as possible. - August 1993 emergency meeting of the Finance
Ministers - Decision to expand the ERM band from 2, 5 to 15
percent of the parity with the mark
41Ratifications DenmarkStart of a protracted
crisis
- June 1992 Danish referendum negative result (50.7
against to 49.3 in favor) - May 1993 second referendum 56.7 percent vote in
favor - After December 1992 Edinburgh Council decisions
on opt outs for Denmark - Opt out from EMU stage III
- Opt out from CFSP where defense implications are
inherent
42Ratifications Ireland apprehensive expectations
- June 1992 Irish referendum positive outcome
- (69.0 in favor to 31.0 against)
43Ratifications France Mitterrands gamble
- September 22, 1992, French narrow yes vote
(51.0 in favor against 48.95 against) - Mitterrands risky decision for a referendum
instead of an easily obtainable three fifth in
the Parliament - Gamble on comfortable majority to breathe life
into the Treaty - EC policy failure in the Balkans
- Economic slump and rise of unemployment in France
- Bundesbank high interest rates
- EMS crisis
44Ratifications Britain
- Major - hostage to labor opposition and
conservative Euroskeptics - August 1993 narrow ratification
- Britain and Italy dropping out of EMU in
September 1992 - Delay of ratification until the second Danish
referendum
45Ratifications Germany legal claim of the Treaty
unconstitutionality
- December 1992 Bundesrat and Bundestag majority
voting in favor - October 1993 Karlruhe judgement
- Federal Constitutional Court ruling on the
Treatys constitutionality - Two points of substance
- Compatibility of the Treaty provisions for
transfer of power with the Grundgesetz in the HJA
and CFSP - Compromise of the democratic guarantees in EMU by
transfer of power from the national to European
level
46June 1992 Lisbon European Council
- Assessing the Danish blow
- Commitment to press ahead with the Treaty
ratifications - Extension of Delors term
- Discussion of the Commission report on
subsidiarity - in areas which do not fall within its exclusive
competence the Community shall take action only
if and insofar as the objectives of the proposed
action cannot be sufficiently achieved by the
Member States, either at central level or at
regional and local level, but can rather, by
reason of the scale or effects of the proposed
action, be better achieved by the Community - Article 5 of the Maastricht Traty
47October 1992 special Birmingham Council
- decisions must be taken as closely as possible
to the citizens. Greater unity can be achieved
without excessive centralization. It is for each
member state to decide how its powers should be
exercised domestically. - The Community can only act where member states
have given it power to do so in the treaties.
Action at the Community level should happen only
when proper and necessary - Subsidiarity or nearness is essential if the
Community is to develop with the support of its
citizens.
48December 1992 Edinburgh Council
- Measures to promote transparency
- Principles of subsidiarity, proportianlity,
conferral - Guidelines for their application
- Call for an inter institutional agreement on its
application -
49- Subsidiarity
- the essence of federalism
- or
- a vital safeguard of national sovereignty?
50Critique
- Not sufficiently precise in point of substance or
intent - Is limited to preventing the move of union
institutions into new areas but not returning
powers already covered by the Treaties - Gives no guidance on how the assessment of
whether the objectives are better achieved by the
Community should be made -
51Draft Constitutional Treaty
- TITLE III UNION COMPETENCES
52Article 9 Fundamental principles
- The limits of Union competences are governed by
the principle of conferral. The use of Union
competences is governed by the principles of
subsidiarity and proportionality. - Under the principle of conferral, the Union shall
act within the limits of the competences
conferred upon it by the Member States in the
Constitution to attain the objectives set out in
the Constitution. Competences not conferred upon
the Union in the Constitution remain with the
Member States.
53Article 9 Fundamental principles
- Under the principle of subsidiarity, in areas
which do not fall within its exclusive competence
the Union shall act only if and insofar as the
objectives of the intended action cannot be
sufficiently achieved by the Member States,
either at central level or at regional and local
level, but can rather, by reason of the scale or
effects of the proposed action, be better
achieved at Union level. - The Union Institutions shall apply the
principle of subsidiarity as laid down in the
Protocol on the application of the principles of
subsidiarity and proportionality, annexed to the
Constitution. National Parliaments shall ensure
compliance with that principle in accordance with
the procedure set out in the Protocol. - Under the principle of proportionality, the
content and form of Union action shall not exceed
what is necessary to achieve the objectives of
the Constitution. The Institutions shall apply
the principle of proportionality as laid down in
the Protocol referred to in paragraph 3. -
54Lecture 8 The Ever Enlarging European Union
(1993-1999)
- The Eftan enlargements and its implications.
- From Maastricht to Amsterdam, from the TEU to the
Amsterdam treaty, issues and outcomes.
55Readings for the lecture
- Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An
Introduction to European Integration. Second
edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave.
Chapter 7, chapter 13, chapter 16 - Dinan Desmond (1999) Treaty Change in the
European Union the Amsterdam Experience.
Developments in the European Union, Cram L.,
Dinan D. and Neill Nugent (eds), Macmillan press
Ltd., 1999 - L.Tsoukalis. The Economic and Monetary Union
The Primacy of High Politics (1996). The European
Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of
European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C
G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998.
56Seminar 4 Methods and Significance of Treaty
Changes
- Bargaining, interests and compromises in
negotiating the TEU - The subsidiarity principle, the meaning and
application - The Amsterdam Treaty negotiations and outcomes
- New provisions
- Two presentations and a discussion
57Additional suggested reading
- Dinan Desmond Treaty Change in the European
Union The Amsterdam experience in Developments
in the European Union (1999) edited by Laura
Cram, Desmond Dinan and Neill Nugent, Macmillan
press ltd.
58