Assoc. Prof. Laura Elena Marinas, PHD Dept. For International Business and Economics
Assoc. Prof. Laura Elena Marinas, PHD Dept. For International Business and Economics
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Lectures and discussions on:
◦ 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
◦ Common Agricultural Policy
◦ Environemntal policy
◦ EU competitiveness, inovation and development tools and
strategy
◦ EU enlargement policy
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Laura Elena Marinas, European economic
integration – Reader and ppt presentations,
2016;
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.
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Final grade will be assigned as follows:
-final exam: 60%
-seminars: 40%
◦ participation, assignments and exercises: 20%
◦ essay: 20%
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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
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“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:
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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
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Custom union + freedoms of movements
(goods, services, captials,
workforce/citizens)
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Common market +common policies
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
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