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Economic History of Integration – General Points Economic “Stuff” at the Core of Integration Definitions and Theories Hierarchy of Degrees of “Union” Static - Dynamic, Creation - Diversion Context Types of European Postwar Economies Cycles of Postwar Economic Change Stages and Timelines
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Definitions of Integration Hierarchy of “Union” Free-trade area Customs union (CET) Common market Economic union Monetary union Economic and monetary union Political/Full union
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Definitions (cont’d) Another way of “reading” Union Market integration Of “goods and services” Of “factors of production” (labor, capital) Policy integration Coordination of economic policy Related to Common Market: competition, regulation, industrial structure “Macro-economic” and monetary policy Re-distribution and other social policies Fixed currency linkage, or single currency
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Theories of Integration Classic liberal theories of international trade – “freer trade is in everyone’s interest” (comparative advantage) Static effects (“today-tomorrow”) More trade More goods Lower prices More “Welfare” Dynamic or “Restructuring” Effects (“over time”) Competition and Efficiency – Allocation of Resources Economies of Scale Potential “Downside” Trade Diversion vs. Trade Creation Need for a “balance sheet” of effects The Integration Process as a Whole Neofunctionalism and “spillover”
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The Economic Historical Context of Integration New Breed of Postwar European Economies Growth economies: export-led growth Government-intervention economies Full-employment goal as priority Welfare state Nationalizations (Britain, France): “public sector economy” Implications Huge government budgets National economic policy Break with the Past France: Modernization, Agriculture to Industry Britain: De-regulation and Privatization (Thatcher)
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The Economic Historical Context (cont’d) Economic Cycles and Turning Points Reconstruction and Recovery (1946-52) Long period of dynamic growth (1952-73) Crisis, stagnation and inflation (1973-83) Renewed growth (1984-1990) Momentary recession and recovery (1990-93) Key turning points: 1952-58, 1973, 1983-5 Main themes Dynamic growth of world trade Global currency regime changes (1972 key date) Recurring problem of unemployment
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The Elements of Economy International trade Restrictions: tariffs, quotas, non-tariff barriers (NTBs) Balance of payments (exports and imports component) Government and the economy Budget: taxes and expenditures Monetary policy: interest rates Regulation Currency value Relation to balance of payments (hence trade) The “good” and the “bad” of a “strong currency” Restrictions and their removal (currency convertibility) Fixed vs. variable “exchange rates” Bretton Woods (1944 -1972) Reserve currency, cornerstone currency: $
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The Course of Economic Integration Role of the Treaties Establish goals and priorities Provide mechanisms for achieving goals – concrete, pointed, precise, or vague Articulate timelines and deadlines Initial achievements of the EEC Customs union (1968) Common Agricultural Policy (by 1970) Kennedy Round of GATT – one voice (1963-67)
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The Course of Economic Integration (cont’d-1) Period of “Eurosclerosis” (1973 – early 1980’s) Stagnant economies: unemployment as a leading concern, along with inflation Proliferation of NTBs One exception: 1979 Cassis de Dijon Court of Justice decision “Mutual Recognition”
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The Course (cont’d-2) Breakthrough and renewal, 1985-1992 A new approach to removing barriers – the White Paper of Lord Cockfield (1985): Internal MarketInternal Market “Spillover”: from Single Market to Single Currency Grand implications of “the 4 freedoms”: from economic to political union The tortuous history of monetary union The “snake in the tunnel” (1972-4) EMS, ERM, and the ‘ecu’ (1979) Maastricht and EMU in 3 stages with deadlines (timeline): the “euro” by March 2002 European Central Bank
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The Course (cont’d-3) EEC/EU and Global Trade The “rounds” of GATT (1950-95) The special relationships With West European non-members (EFTA) With 70 “Associated States” (sub-Saharan Africa mainly) WTO (1995 – present)
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Record of Some Achievements Trade in Goods 1958-72: intra-EEC trade grows more rapidly than trade with other countries 1972-85: less dynamic intra-EEC trade; trade with third countries greater among “the Six” 1972-78 (oil imports) 1985-95: intra-EU trade grows very rapidly Germany is the largest trade partner, both as importer and exporter of other EU goods
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Achievements (cont’d) CAP A very complex program that is less “free trade” than “managed trade” A balance of political interests By a system of levies, creates: Funds to distribute to eligible regions (supposedly for improving production, but in fact to support farm interests) A European Community Budget
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Websites http://img.uoregon.edu/euro410/ Europa Commission DGs Curia
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