By Dani Rodrik, Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government
This month the European Union will celebrate the 60th anniversary of
its founding treaty, the Treaty of Rome, which established the European
Economic Community. There certainly is much to celebrate. After
centuries of war, upheaval, and mass killings, Europe is peaceful and
democratic. The EU has brought 11 former Soviet-bloc countries into its
fold, successfully guiding their post-communist transitions. And, in an
age of inequality, EU member countries exhibit the lowest income gaps
anywhere in the world.
But these are past achievements. Today, the Union is mired in a deep
existential crisis, and its future is very much in doubt. The symptoms
are everywhere: Brexit, crushing levels of youth unemployment in Greece
and Spain, debt and stagnation in Italy, the rise of populist movements,
and a backlash against immigrants and the euro. They all point to the
need for a major overhaul of Europe’s institutions.
So a new white paper on the future of Europe
by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker comes none too
soon. Juncker sets out five possible paths: carrying on with the current
agenda, focusing just on the single market, allowing some countries to
move faster than others toward integration, narrowing down the agenda,
and pushing ambitiously for uniform and more complete integration.
It’s hard not to feel sympathy for Juncker. With Europe’s
politicians preoccupied with their domestic battles and the EU
institutions in Brussels a target for popular frustration, he could
stick his neck out only so far. Still, his report is disappointing. It
sidesteps the central challenge that the EU must confront and overcome.
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Source: euronews.
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