Title: Adressing Internal Market Barriers in the EU
1Adressing Internal Market Barriers in the EU
- Jacques Pelkmans
- College of Europe CEPS, Brussels
- Â Â Presentation at the conference
- Adressing Internal Market Barriers, Toronto,
- 1st February 2010, Forum of Federations,
- C.D. How Institute, Industry Canada
-
2Structure
- Purpose and background
- EU fundamentals, an introduction
- Economic salience of the EU internal market
- Constitutional legal provisions
- Major barriers in the internal market
- Adressing the barriers process and means
- Lessons learned
3Purpose and background
- PURPOSE
- Quasi-federal character of EU I.M.
- Vital importance of EU I.M.
- Far-reaching, though incomplete, I.M.
- BACKGROUND
- EU is not a country (despite selective
pooling of sovereignty) - EU ? unity in diversity
- EU ? (mainly) rules, not money
- MS still huge spending ( taxing) powers
- MS still considerable local regulatory powers
- EU centralisation sensitive beyond status-quo
4EU fundamentals an introduction
- Building blocks of todays EU
- Economic structure of Rome treaty
- Central principles
- EU Developments, stylized
- Internal Market Diamond
- Internal Market ties in Common Policies
5Building blocks of todays EU
foreign policy / defence
justice home affairs
common values subsidiarity
monetary union, the euro
economic union
- Competitive internal market
- (cross-border) LIB
- mutual recognition
- harmonisation
- common policies (for IM)
inter govt coop. among MS (Lisbon)
cohesion flanking policies other common
policies
6Economic Structure of the Rome Treaty
7Central principles
- non-discrimination
- ? between nationals or goods/services/companies
- of different national origin
- ? very powerful principle, ECJ very strict
- Subsidiarity
- ? functional principle for the (optimal)
allocation of powers to 2 gov.t. levels - ? starting point close to the citizens, if
objective can still be effectively pursued - ? ultimate decision political (accountability)
-
8Central principles (2)
-
- free movement/ establishment
- ? not just free trade or exchange
- ? but.. a RIGHT to enter other (EU)- markets
- ? establishment setting up a company or even a
- non-profit-centre
- ? note free movement of workers unfree
- supremacy of EU Law
- ? ECJ acts like a (federal) supreme court
- ? of course only for EU aspects of law
- ? can imply financial sanctions
- ? but no (federal) army, only political
embarrassment! - the economic order
- ? micro free market/open economies
- ? macro (price) stability culture (both
monetary fiscal) -
-
9EU developments
- DEEPENING
- accomplishments or commitment
- with harder binding, fewer exceptions,
- more credible
- both MS constraints EU policies
- WIDENING
- larger scope of commitment policies
- wider domains, new areas of policies
- ENLARGEMENT
- new Member States
- six enlargements thus far
10INTERNAL MARKETDIAMOND
-
- liberalisation
- (free movements,
- establisment)
- mutual proper
competition - recognition functioning
policy - IM
- regulation
- (approx common
- policies)
11The Internal Market interface with the EU
Common policies
competition policy (incl. state aids)
agricultural fisheries policy
A
Trade policy
- econ freedoms
- SHEC regulations
- IPRs
- Internal Market
- investor protection
- labour market reg.
- public procurement
A
transport policy (6 modes) (incl. TENs)
A
A
A-B
environmental policy
energy policy (incl. TENs)
B
C
B
Immigration policy (incl. asylum)
regional policy Cohesion
B
C
Industrial policy
EU Research area
B
important for IM, yet, has other powerful
drivers, too
A
critical for IM
critical for IM, but partly not at EU level
A-B
C
(currently) of minor important for IM
12Economic salience of EUs I.M.
- success story, with ups and downs
- intra-EU trade ratios up, steadily
- intra-EU services trade poor, however
- East-West intra-EU trade supergrowth
- FDI inside EU strong, with NMS growing fast until
crisis - intra-NMS trade fully recovered
- Declining home bias, though still rather high
- I.M., playground for happy few performing
companies
13Constitutional legal conditions
- greater salience of subsidiarity in Lisbon
treaty - attribution of powers, responsibilities and
objectives - treaty making and binding effects
- Legal rights with respect to the I.M.
- IM intergovernmentalism in EU
14Attribution of powers
- principles of conferral, subsidiarity and
proportionality - subsidiarity esp. via RIAs
- Enumeration of competences
- exclusive EU (CU, competition, monetary, trade)
- shared EU/MS competences
- IM (but overlaps mostly what follows), social
very limited, cohesion, agri-fisheries,
environment, transport, TENs, energy, area of
FSJ, public health (contagious diseases only) - Specific coordination cooperation on economic,
employment and social policies - EU merely supports, help coordinate, supplements
MS human health, education, industrial
competitiveness, culture, civil protection
(disasters)
15Treaty-making binding effects
- EU has treaty-making power
- in TRADE and a host of IM-related aspects (SHEC)
- Many RTAs, FTAs and WTO
- economic treaties signed by COM MS
- treaties are binding on MS and economic agents
- Negotiations Council mandate (proposed by COM)
needs Council concent can require EP consent
COM keeps in touch with Council during
negotiations - EU bound by many treaties
16Legal rights in the I.M.
- legal rights effectively constitutionalized for
cross-border liberalisation - consist of
- free movement (goods, services, capital, labour)
- free establishment
- non-discrimination (as to nationality)
- (economic) EU integration (ever) fewer
derogations by MS ? negative integration - ? deepening
- widening ? widening of the scope of rights
- non-economic rights ? via EU citizenship
17I.M. and intergovernmentalism in EU
- Three forms
- (a) classical intergovernamentalism
- Lisbon strategy/process
- ad hoc cooperation in EU (education/Bologna,
etc..) - (b) MS in Council
- is the voice of MS
- but its (co-)decision is part of checks
balances in . supra nationalism - no going back or reversal
- (c) in political science, shift to (Eur.) Council
power often called more intergovernmental (
less COM power) - IM ( hardcore EU) is firmly supranational
18Major barriers in the IM
- First, where are we with the IM?
- EU wants a properly functioning IM as the
principal means to achieve socio-economic aims - appropriate combinations of negative/positive
integration - goods market integration close to complete
procurement difficult military out - capital market free
- services market integration highly uneven
- labour market integration hardly exists, what
exists is severely distorted - codified technology, quite far, except patents
19Major barriers in the IM (2)
- Lingering barriers/distortions
- Corporate taxation highly diverse tax base
(rivalry) despite Primarolo - no (federal) corporate EU tax (base)
- lingering national REG barriers (esp.
services/labour) - discriminatory pricing anti-trust IM
- investment incentives ? EU state aids regime
- land ownership rules (? only Central Europe)
- labour qualification rules (de facto)
- labour union membership
20Addressing barriers, processes and means
- critical to appreciate how it works in the EU
acquire from MS step-by-step - obvious federal powers are NOT central in EU
- taxation
- infrastructure
- (funded) social policy/security
- veto removed in Single Act (1985/7)
- Council consensus (nonetheless) highly valued
- EP genuine co-legislator
- ECJ case-law quite important
21What issues most salient?
- Highlights
- at first, goods and direct investment only
- but goods, in a rather incomplete fashion
- deepening
- after 1985, goods
- widening
- 3rd gen.n financial, upshot from EMU
- network industries (7x) liberalisation since
1989 - plus a range of autonomous agencies
- some progress on labour migration postal
workers - horizontal services liberalisation (2006/9)
- 4th generation Fiancial Services prompted by
crisis
22Who drove the agenda?
- political elite and the permissive consensus
- US FDI in the 1960s (note agenda fixed in
treaty) - ECJ in the 1970s
- COM ERT in the 1980s
- MS and CBs in the 1990s for EMU
- COM, and business customers, for network
industries - MS COM (in Lisbon, 2000) for horizontal
services liberalisation, until social protests
emerged - ? thereafter, EP only
23Courts versus political processes
- national courts
- ? can side with economic agents against
national governments - mostly COM, though ? and ECJ behind it
- national courts can ask a preliminary ECJ
ruling - COM, Council EP ? (re-)act on case-law
- Council convicted on transport in 1985
- COM occasionally rebuked, but also many victories
over MS (telecoms, hor. services) - political (co-) decision most prominent, with COM
and the European Council leading
24In ECJ, private parties or governments?
- the first step of economic agents (or citizens)
is the national courts (if one has standing) - but most goes via COM (can suffice) to the ECJ
(where standing is more restricted) - private litigation (e.g. in anti-trust) is still
rare, though COM is now promoting it - what has helped proper implementation is that
private agents can claims damages from
non-implementation of EU directives in a MS
25IM agenda political drivers and drummers
- for drivers forward, see slide 22
- sensitive socio-political drumbeats on IM
- examples
- recent ? REACH horizontal services lib.n.
- ? issues prompted by Eastern enlargement
- ? agriculture
- older ? steel subsidies (1977-1994)
- ? coal subsidies (1952-)
- ? shipbuilding (1957, in treaty)
- ? state-aids to banks since late 2007 have
been much LESS controversial - IM-related Agencies
26Decision-making mechanisms
- basics today co-decision (EP Council)
- after COM proposal (COM has monopoly to propose)
- sometimes QMV is replaced by veto in Council
- e.g. taxation and social security patents
- unanimity CAN be disastrous for EU, but, still,
many directives (700) had unanimity - new is enhanced cooperation however, to keep
the coalition of the willing open for the
laggards, conditionality is strict ? in actual
practice, useless
27Lessons learned
- EU between economic regionalisation economic
federalism - EU is not a (federal) country, has no government,
COM is not elected, EP does not choose the
executive - EU has no (federal) army national labour markets
and a tiny common budget, no taxing power - the MS still retain enormous spending power
- Still, EU IM much in common with federations
- far-reaching (cross-border) economic mobility
rights - extensive powers for positive market
integration - many common policies, some strong ones
- an emerging culture of EU Agencies (limited
power) - centralisation (subsidiarity) is now a key issue
- intergovernmentalism in EU is of doubtful
effectiveness