Europe, the next 50 years

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Europe, the next 50 years
a conference
at Goodwood House

    held on
Wednesday 28 March 2007

to celebrate 50 years since the signing of the Treaty of Rome

The next 50 years

notes from
Professor Alan Mayhew

Jean Monnet Professor, Sussex European Institute
(continued from column 1)
Background


look at the task of predicting the next fifty years in 1957 – who could have predicted that in 2007 the EU would have 27 members, that the Berlin Wall would have been built and torn down or that we would all have personal computers!
impossible to talk about the next 50 years, things change ever faster, so I will talk about the challenges of the coming years (but not fifty)

The base year situation
Econometricians predict the future on the basis of the past behaviour and the situation at present – so I will do the same.
Above all the EU is a community of common values – underlined in the Treaty (and in the Berlin declaration)
Fact that Europe has been at peace for the last 60 years is not trivial as some seem to suggest today and it is largely thanks to the EU and wise statesmen
Now 27 MS after successful enlargements, Euro working well, internal market a success, beginnings of a serious foreign and defence policy

BUT
The EU is going through a difficult phase
    Short-term problems:
Loss of the referenda in the Netherlands and France/ problems for institutional change
EU institutions going through a period where they seem to have lost the confidence of the citizens
reform of the budget
    Medium and longer-term:
future enlargement
relatively poor economic performance in some of the core EU countries with high unemployment
lack of structural reform in some countries leading to calls for protectionism as reply to globalisation
risks for the Euro
energy and the environment
longer term demography and migration
what will be the final shape of EU
   •  first and second class - EURO as the incipient core-Europe
   •  far more flexibility
   •  dissolve into a Free Trade Association


I will look at just 3 problems:
-    future enlargement
-    economic reform
-    institutional change



continued in right-hand column

1.    Future enlargement


Fifth enlargement – was a success! New member states growing fast; EU-15 also benefited; UK migration strengthened UK economy
Who is waiting?
What is the legal position
What are the problems:
Public acceptance/unemployment/economy
Budget
Institutions and efficiency
Why we can’t stop

2.    Economic reform
 

Can we work against Globalisation?
Lack of structural adjustment leads to:
Poor competitiveness of European companies on world markets
Higher unemployment/locking people out of the labour market
Growth and prosperity depends on rising productivity, rising employment and technological progress
Problem of the European Continental Social Model
Lisbon Agenda

3.    Institutions

Institutions are still essentially those from 1957
Still operating with 27 member states and there is little sign that they are operating less effectively, though the atmosphere may have changed
But obvious limits to efficient operation as numbers grow: could be 35 or more MS in two decades time.
Problem of large and small MS
Would the draft Constitution solve the problems?
   •  More Qualified Majority voting
   •  Reduce the size of the Commission and limit that of the EP
   •  Change in Council voting system
   •  Subsidiarity etc.
   •  More radical reforms
   •  Using enhanced cooperation and increased flexibility


4.    Conclusion
 
 
The medium- and long-term challenges for the Union are severe and will not be solved overnight
Institutional change is required to maintain efficiency: the Constitution is a start but may not be sufficient
Economic reform is necessary to make the Union’s economy more flexible faced with globalisation
The demographic problem will not be solved by migration – it requires a trend rise in productivity as well as family friendly policies
Enlargement should continue
It is above all the values of the Union which are important to defend and promote
In fifty years Europe will still be here and life will still be good: what is at stake is our capacity to influence world events and our relative prosperity.

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