Lect. Laura Elena Marinas, PHD Dept. For International Business and Economics
This document outlines the course topics and materials for a class on European economic integration. The class will cover basic concepts and theories of economic integration, the history of European integration, the EU regulatory framework and decision-making processes, the single market, economic and monetary union, competition and cohesion policies, and EU enlargement. Students will be evaluated based on a final exam worth 70% of the grade and seminar participation, assignments, and an essay worth 30% of the grade. Key reading materials for the class are also listed.
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Lect. Laura Elena Marinas, PHD Dept. For International Business and Economics
This document outlines the course topics and materials for a class on European economic integration. The class will cover basic concepts and theories of economic integration, the history of European integration, the EU regulatory framework and decision-making processes, the single market, economic and monetary union, competition and cohesion policies, and EU enlargement. Students will be evaluated based on a final exam worth 70% of the grade and seminar participation, assignments, and an essay worth 30% of the grade. Key reading materials for the class are also listed.
Basic concepts and theories of economic and monetary
regional integration History of European economic integration EU regulatory and institutional fraemwork. Decision making in the European Union. EU single market Economic and monetary union. The Stability and Growth Pact. EU competition and cohesion policies EU competitiveness, inovation and development tools and strategy EU enlargement policy European economic regionalization 2
Laura Elena Marinas, European economic
integration Reader and ppt presentations, 2015; Baldwin R., Wyplosz C., The Economics of European Integration, McGraw Hill Higher Education. 2010 De Grauwe, P., Economics of Monetary Union, Oxford University Press, 2012 Pelkmans J., European Integration: Methods And Economic Analysis, 3rd eds. inancial Times/Prentice Hall, 2006.
Final grade will be assigned as follows:
-final exam: 70% -seminars: 30%
participation, assignments and exercises: 20%
essay: 10%
Microenomic vs. Macroeconomic
Static view vs. Dynamic view Positive integration (pro active approach, harmonization of policies etc.) vs. Negative integration (liberalization, removal of barierrs etc.). Both targeting freedoms of movements and harmonization Deeper integration vs. enlargement
economic integration is mainfold:
refers to the absorption of a company in a larger concern (e.g. Dacia - Renault) refers to the integration of regional economies in a national one (has a spatial aspect) related to international economic relations, (to indicate the combination of the economies of several sovereign states in one entity (EU).
Economic integration is not an objective in
itself, but serves higher objectives: Economic, objective (immediate objective): to raise the prosperity of all cooperating units.
Peace policy (farther-reaching objective):
to lessen the chance of armed conflicts among partners.
Two or more countries when they
reduce their respective duties on imports of all goods (except services of capital) from each other, retaining their original tariffs against the outside world
Two or more countries when they remove
import duties and quantitative restrictions in their mutual trade in all goods (except services of capital); maintaining country based tarrifs against third parties
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Two or more countries remove import duties
on their mutual trade in all goods and or/services (and, in addition, adopt a common external against third parties
If common monetary policies and/or common/single currency added= monetary union If both monetary and economic policies become common = economic and monetary union If all policies become common (monetary policy included) = full economic union
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Economic regional integration = the integration of markets.
Basic principles:
Free movement of goods and services - the obvious welfare
gains from the liberalisation of product markets are a good economic reason to start integration with that object. Free movement of production factors - another basic element of economic integration (allows optimum allocation of labour and capital).
A second argument is that an enlarged market of
production factors favours new production possibilities which in turn permit new, more modern or more efficient uses of production factors (new forms of credit, new occupations, etc.). Policy approximation: In an economy which leaves production and distribution entirely to the market, the elimination of obstacles to the movement of goods and production factors among countries would suffice to achieve full economic integration.
The static sense of economic integration:
a situation in which the national components of a larger
economy are no longer separated by economic frontiers but function together as an entity. the static meaning of the expression will apply in full once the integration process has passed through its stages and reached its object. elimination of economic frontiers at one moment for all member states
The dynamic sense of economic integration:
indicates the gradual elimination of economic frontiers among
member states (the abolition of national discrimination), with the formerly separate national economic entities gradually merging into a larger whole. the dynamic interpretation is the more usual. Gradual elimination of economic frontiers, and member states merge step by step.
the elimination of obstacles
measures taken are often of the simple Thou shalt not' type: they can be clearly defined, and once negotiated and laid down in treaties, they are henceforth binding on governments, companies and private persons. There is no need for permanent decision-making machinery. Whether these measures are respected is for the courts to check, to which individuals may appeal if they consider their interests damaged.
Negative Integration:
the creation of equal conditions
for the functioning of the integrated parts of the economy It may take the form of vaguely defined obligations requiring public institutions to take action, leaving room for interpretation as to scope and timing. May be reversed if the policy environment changes; consequence: uncertainty for private economic agents (who cannot derive any legal rights from them) Is the domain of politics and bureaucracy rather than law and it doesnt present a built-in stimulus for progress. Politicians are more likely to opt for positive rather than negative integration - progress is slower, the higher the stage of integration is.
Positive Integration:
IMPORTANT: all member states have to
agree upon the issues and measures taken for policy integration! For an efficient policy integration, common institutions (international organisations) are created. For the higher forms of integration (common market) the transfer of power from national to union institutions is required.
All forms of integration diminish the
freedom of action of the member states' policy-makers. (the higher the form of integration, the greater the restrictions and loss of national competences).
The higher the integration, the greater the
restrictions Information (national competence unaltered) Consultation (national competences affected) Co-ordination (limitation of national competence) Unification (national competence abolished) 19
Realism states folllows own interest and
cooperation is possible if it can give states possibilities to better pursue interest Intergovernamentalism states set up limits of competences for regional institutions; pursuit of common goals of security and economic development, formalization in the treaties, principle of conferral Supranationalism transfer of decision making to regional institutions Functionalist/neofunctionalist view spillover effects
Freer Markets Within the Usa: Tax Changes That Make Trade Freer Within the Usa. Phasing-Out Supply-Side Subsidies and Leveling the Playing Field for the Working Person.