European Union: Difference between revisions

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The principal advantage of membership to a country has been seen as the unrestricted  access that it provides to wider markets for its products. The adoption of a common currency as part of the Economic and Monetary Union was seen as  further lowering  barriers to those markets by reducing transaction costs and eliminating [[exchange rate risk]]s. It was generally accepted  that there could be  offsetting  disadvantages arising from  loss of control over the domestic economy, but  most of the continent's governments  judged the balance to be positive. Some have since come to question that judgement because of the unsymmetrical impact of recent [[demand shock]]s upon the domestic economies of member countries.
The principal advantage of membership to a country has been seen as the unrestricted  access that it provides to wider markets for its products. The adoption of a common currency as part of the Economic and Monetary Union was seen as  further lowering  barriers to those markets by reducing transaction costs and eliminating [[exchange rate risk]]s. It was generally accepted  that there could be  offsetting  disadvantages arising from  loss of control over the domestic economy, but  most of the continent's governments  judged the balance to be positive. Some have since come to question that judgement because of the unsymmetrical impact of recent [[demand shock]]s upon the domestic economies of member countries.


==Organisational structure==
==Structure==
The principal institutions of the European Union are
The principal institutions of the European Union are
* The European Council<ref>[http://www.european-council.europa.eu/the-institution.aspx?lang=en  The website of the European Council]</ref> Heads of State or Government of the Member States, together with its President and the President of the Commission (and the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy if required.)
* The European Council<ref>[http://www.european-council.europa.eu/the-institution.aspx?lang=en  The website of the European Council]</ref> Heads of State or Government of the Member States, together with its President and the President of the Commission (and the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy if required.)
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* The European Parliament<ref>[http://www.europarl.europa.eu/parliament/public/staticDisplay.do;jsessionid=756E9EF0889F65EDEE3F57F1B2B2BEF7.node1?id=146&language=en The European Parliament's website]</ref> - a directly-elected body that takes legislative decisions on some issues jointly with the Council of Ministers.
* The European Parliament<ref>[http://www.europarl.europa.eu/parliament/public/staticDisplay.do;jsessionid=756E9EF0889F65EDEE3F57F1B2B2BEF7.node1?id=146&language=en The European Parliament's website]</ref> - a directly-elected body that takes legislative decisions on some issues jointly with the Council of Ministers.
* The European Commission<ref>[http://ec.europa.eu/about_en.htm The website of the European Commission]</ref> - the driving force in proposing legislation (to Parliament and the Council), administering and implementing EU policies, enforcing EU law (jointly with the Court of Justice) and negotiating in the international arena.
* The European Commission<ref>[http://ec.europa.eu/about_en.htm The website of the European Commission]</ref> - the driving force in proposing legislation (to Parliament and the Council), administering and implementing EU policies, enforcing EU law (jointly with the Court of Justice) and negotiating in the international arena.
* The European Central Bank<ref>[http://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/html/index.en.html The website of the European Central Bank]</ref> - conductsthe EUs [[monetary policy]].
* The European Central Bank<ref>[http://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/html/index.en.html The website of the European Central Bank]</ref> - executes the EU's [[monetary policy]].
 
==Policies==
 
==History==
One of the main proponents was [[Robert Schuman]], foreign minister of [[France]]. Schuman proposed a European federation, and the first step would be the integration of the coal and steel industries of Western Europe. This led to the creation of the [[European Coal and Steel Community]], formed in 1951. The original six members were [[France]], [[Germany|West Germany]], [[Italy]], [[Belgium]], [[Luxembourg]], and the [[Netherlands]].


{{Image|Europa.jpg|right|450px|Countries of the EU as of January 1, 2007}}
{{Image|Europa.jpg|right|450px|Countries of the EU as of January 1, 2007}}
===Foundation===
The [[Treaty of Rome (1957)]]  formed the first common European market, the [[European Economic Community]] (EEC). The EEC guaranteed "the four freedoms": the free movement of goods, services, capital, and people. In 1967, the Economic Community, the Coal and Steel Community, and the [[European Atomic Energy Community]] were merged into the [[European Community]] (EC). The EC created a single [[European Commission|Commission]], a single [[Council of Ministers]], and the [[European Parliament]].


===Enlargement===
==Membership==
The early 1970s saw the first enlargement of the EC. The [[United Kingdom]], [[Ireland (state)|Ireland]], and [[Denmark]] joined. [[Norway]] was also invited into the EC, but the electorate rejected it in a referendum. The EC was further enlarged in the 1980s, when [[Greece]] joined in 1981 and [[Portugal]] and [[Spain]] in 1986. [[Sweden]], [[Finland]], and [[Austria]] were admitted into the Union in 1995, but the Norwegians again declined to join.


The next round of expansion came in 2004, when [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]], the [[Czech Republic]], [[Hungary]], [[Slovakia]], [[Slovenia]], [[Malta]], and [[Cyprus]] joined. This was the first time countries in [[Eastern Europe]] had joined the EU. In 2007, [[Romania]] and [[Bulgaria]] also joined the EU.
==Policies==
 
===Maastricht Treaty===
The Maastricht Treaty was signed in 1992, and transformed the European Community into the European Union.
 
===Amsterdam Treaty===
The Amsterdam Treaty of 1997 amended the Maastricht Treaty. It gave more power to the European Parliament,


==Treaties==


==Recent developments==


==Future prospects==
==Prospects==




==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 05:11, 12 December 2010

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The European Union (EU) is a political and economic entity consisting of 27 member states. In legal form, it is a complex hybrid structure with elements of federalism (such as the European Court of Justice and the European Parliament), intergovernmentalism (the Council of Ministers) and some characteristics of an international organsation (the European Commission represents the Union in certain international negotiations). It has grown from the six founding member states of the European Economic Community in 1957, through many accessions of new members — especially, in recent years, much of the former European Communist bloc.

Overview

Rationale

Determined to lay the foundations of an ever closer union among the peoples of Europe, ... we are agreed ...
preamble to the Treaty of Rome[1] by the heads of state of Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and The Netherlands.

Perceptions of the rationale for the European Union have differed among its participants. Its founders saw it as the foundation of a union of the peoples of Europe (see box), but some of its later participants have seen it solely as a union of the sovereign nations of Europe. Its member countries have not since relinquished control over their defence and international policies, and the progress toward union that has been achieved has been predominately in the sphere of economic policy. In that sphere, however, every step in the Union's evolution has involved a further partial surrender of its members' national sovereignty. The launch in 1988 of the Economic and Monetary Union[1] was a step further than some of its members were willing to take at that time. The further surrender of national sovereignty by the countries that did take that step included the total relinquishment of control over monetary policy, and submission to agreed limits upon the exercise of fiscal policy. Member countries retained limited discretion over public expenditure and taxation, however, and in that respect the integration of economic policy has so far been incomplete.

The principal advantage of membership to a country has been seen as the unrestricted access that it provides to wider markets for its products. The adoption of a common currency as part of the Economic and Monetary Union was seen as further lowering barriers to those markets by reducing transaction costs and eliminating exchange rate risks. It was generally accepted that there could be offsetting disadvantages arising from loss of control over the domestic economy, but most of the continent's governments judged the balance to be positive. Some have since come to question that judgement because of the unsymmetrical impact of recent demand shocks upon the domestic economies of member countries.

Structure

The principal institutions of the European Union are

  • The European Council[2] Heads of State or Government of the Member States, together with its President and the President of the Commission (and the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy if required.)
  • The Council of the European Union[3] - the main decision-making body of the EU (ministers of the member states - foreign affairs, finance, social affairs, transport, agriculture, etc.).
  • The European Parliament[4] - a directly-elected body that takes legislative decisions on some issues jointly with the Council of Ministers.
  • The European Commission[5] - the driving force in proposing legislation (to Parliament and the Council), administering and implementing EU policies, enforcing EU law (jointly with the Court of Justice) and negotiating in the international arena.
  • The European Central Bank[6] - executes the EU's monetary policy.
PD Image
Countries of the EU as of January 1, 2007

Membership

Policies

Treaties

Recent developments

Prospects

References