Euintegration 1
Euintegration 1
Euintegration 1
A Multi-dimensional Crisis
In tro d u ctio n
The ‘age of crisis’ for the EU began in 2009-10 with the onset of what
quickly came to be called the euro or eurozone crisis. This crisis, whose
severity has ebbed and flowed over the years that have followed, is the
most obvious manifestation of the EU in crisis. It has threatened the
very existence of one of the EU’s main policy achievements: the single
currency - the apotheosis of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) -
which 19 of the EU’s 28 member states had adopted as. of 2016. At
various times during the eurozone crisis, the membership, governing
structure, and operating rules of the single currency system have been
fundamentally questioned and challenged.
Apart from the eurozone crisis, the most recognizable feature of
the EU in crisis has been the migration crisis, which greatly escalated
in 2015 when vast numbers of migrants - eventually numbering over
1 million - mostly consisting of asylum-seekers from war-torn Syria,
Iraq, and Afghanistan, together with irregular migrants from North
Africa, flooded into the EU. This wave became a perfect storm (that
is, a situation caused or greatly aggravated by, an unanticipated and
very rare set of circumstances) in September 2015 when Chancellor
Angela Merkel announced that Germany would not limit the number
of refugees entering the country, thereby unintentionally encouraging
many more arrivals. Migrants benefit from one of the EU’s main policy
achievements: the free movement of people facilitated by the Schengen
system. The migration crisis has put severe strains on free movement
within the EU and, indeed, has led to a partial breakdown of Schengen.
Another dimension of the crisis pertains to EU governance. The
handling of the eurozone and migration crises has demonstrated poor
EU leadership, often slow and insufficient decision-making, harden
ing national positions, uneven burden-sharing, and fraying solidarity
among member states. Crucially, in respect of fraying solidarity, there
has been a near fracturing of some membership arrangements, notably
with Greece’s continuing membership of the eurozone being much dis
cussed in EU circles in the summer of 2015 and then the UK, building
on an already considerable number of policy ‘opt-outs’, holding a ref
erendum on membership in June 2016, which resulted in a decision to
leave the EU.
These features of EU governance have, in turn, fuelled euroscepti
cism and put the credibility and democratic legitimacy of the EU system
increasingly in question. Originally, public attitudes towards European
integration were characterized as constituting a ‘permissive consensus’
or benign indifference, but that changed in the 1990s as the European
Community evolved into the European Union and the impact of EU
policies and programmes on the everyday lives of Europeans became
more evident and intrusive. Support for European integration gradually
declined after the Maastricht Treaty of 1992, which launched EMU and
ushered in the EU (Eichenberg and Dalton, 2007). Since the beginning
of the crisis this has continued to be the case, with growing doubts about
the desirability and effectiveness of EU initiatives and increasing irrita
tion with the cumbersomeness of the EU itself. The apparent hollowing-
out of national political institutions and the strengthening of European
institutions, which to many people seem remote and technocratic, have
exacerbated the EU’s inherently weak legitimacy. The EU’s democratic
credentials have been further undermined as apparently unaccountable,
Brussels-based technocrats have been seen to impose, or try to impose,
policy solutions that have often been unwanted and/or thought to be
inappropriate.
So, too, has the EU’s chronic economic underperformance contrib
uted to the crisis. Peace and prosperity are the twin pillars of the EU’s
existence, but the EU’s economic performance has varied greatly over
time. The internal market, the core policy field of the EU, has had mixed
results. Monetary union, an addendum to the internal market and a
highly symbolic undertaking in its own right, was supposed to have
facilitated economic convergence among participating countries and
stimulated further growth. Yet far from converging, the economies of
eurozone countries have diverged and experienced, at best, only mod
est growth following the introduction of the euro in 1999. Since the
outbreak of the crisis, economic performances have become even worse,
with most of the economies of eurozone countries having experienced
sharp recession. The impact of austerity policies pushed by eurozone
creditor states (especially Germany) has intensified economic hardship
in debtor states, stoked social tensions, and deepened political divi
sions. High unemployment, especially among young people, has sapped
morale and nurtured a sense of deep despair.
Inevitably, these internal problems have weakened the EU’s stand
ing on the world stage. By definition, the migration crisis has had an
external dimension, while the eurozone crisis has been closely related to
global financial developments. The EU’s seeming inability to deal force
fully and effectively with events in Ukraine has constituted a further
external dimension of the crisis.
The Ukraine crisis, which erupted in 2014, represents the point at
which the aspirations of the EU to extend its influence eastwards col
lided with Russia’s determination to rebuild power and status following
the collapse of the Soviet Union. This keenly felt loss impelled President
Vladimir Putin to try to regain control of Russia’s near abroad and
restore Russia’s global standing. Putin’s pressure on Ukraine to reject a
proposed association agreement with the EU in favour of a Russian-led
customs union foundered on popular protest in Kiev, which resulted in
the ousting of Ukraine’s pro-Russian president. This, in turn, triggered
violent resistance in eastern Ukraine against the new, pro-Western gov
ernment, and Russia’s annexation of Crimea. Chancellor Merkel took
the lead in managing the EU’s response, which helped to bring about a
fragile peace - the Minsk Accord - and included sanctions against Russia.
The conflict is now frozen, but could escalate at any time. Accordingly,
the EU faces instability on its eastern border in addition to the instability
caused by the migration crisis on its southern border.
There are thus many aspects to the EU crisis. It is truly multi
dimensional in nature, spanning politics and economics, touching on
cultural and identity issues, and covering both internal and external
affairs.
General origins
The origins of the EU’s crisis are many, various, and often - as the sec
tions below on the EMU, migration, and the Brexit crises show - specific
to particular dimensions of the crisis. However, in addition to specific
factors, some of which have already been mentioned, three general
sources can also be identified.
The first is the weak foundations of aspects of the EU’s system of gov
ernance and of some of its key policies. The lack of clear, accountable,
and treaty-based EU leadership has been an important factor behind
the legitimacy/democracy crisis and may even have contributed to what
could be called a leadership crisis. Similarly, the weak foundations of
two of the EU’s core policies - EMU and the Schengen system - have
been at the heart of the eurozone and migration crises. The rules of these
policies were laid down in relatively good times, when the focus of the
EU was on making integrationist advances with great steps forward.
Insufficient attention was given to whether the arrangements that were
established were sufficiently robust to withstand the pressures of less
good and more difficult times.
The second general source of the crisis is that the EU’s member states
are, in numerous respects, significantly different from one another in
terms of national needs and preferences. While it was possible to manage
many of these differences in good times, and with fewer member states,
it has become much less so in a far larger EU that is being buffeted by
severe shocks and policy challenges.
Being part of a highly interconnected global system, the EU is suscep
tible to what happens elsewhere in the world. As such, external factors
constitute the third general source of the crisis. So, for example, it was
the sub-prime mortgage crisis and the ensuing recession in the USA that
sparked the eurozone crisis. Continuing global financial and economic
uncertainty has made it more difficult to stabilize the situation in Europe.
It was developments in Iraq, Libya, and Syria that triggered the migration
crisis. The global threat of Islamic extremism has reverberated in Europe,
most dramatically with the terrorist attacks in France in 2015 and 2016,
and Brussels in 2016, and has contributed to the EU crisis in that there
have been great uncertainties about how best to deal with this partly inter
nal and partly external security threat. So, too, have Russia’s actions in
Ukraine added to the crisis. The reasons for the Russian intervention are
largely rooted in Russia’s view of the world and in domestic Russian poli
tics, but they have presented the EU with a major foreign policy problem.
Institutional effects
Institutionally, the severity and suddenness of the crisis have required
a response at the highest political level. This has ensured the elevation
of the European Council, which officially became an EU institution
in December 2009 when the Lisbon Treaty came into effect - coinci
dentally at the start of the eurozone crisis. European Councils - and
on euro-only issues Euro Summits, which bring together the leaders of
countries in the eurozone - have met frequently during the crisis in an
effort to provide overall political direction and thrash out agreements on
specific crisis-related issues.
It is within the European Council that Germany’s preponderance has
been most noticeable, and where resentment of Germany’s role has been
most pointed. Traditionally, the leaders of France and Germany domi
nated meetings of the European Council, but since the onset of the crisis
Germany alone has been predominant, though Chancellor Merkel, who
has been in office since 2005, prefers to act in concert with others. This
does not mean that Merkel always has had things her own way, but
Germany’s preferences have most often prevailed. However, hegemons
are rarely popular and tend"to generate countervailing force. Austerity,
Germany’s preferred remedy for the eurozone crisis, has been hugely dis
liked in countries that have had to accept the strings attached to the bail
outs, and has aroused resentment throughout much of the EU, especially
among political parties on the left. The economic and social pain of auster
ity has gradually eroded the consensus that initially existed in its favour.
The European Commission remains at the institutional heart of
the Union and has acquired new powers, notably with regard to fiscal
governance, as the crisis has progressed. But the political influence of
the Commission, which traditionally has been most clearly expressed
through the office of its President, has somewhat receded. Neither José
Manuel Barroso, Commission President until November 2014, nor his
successor, Jean-Claude Juncker, has been a favoured interlocutor of
Merkel, nor a particularly effective actor in the European Council.
Whereas the Commission’s technical expertise and executive authority
have been essential in advancing detailed proposals for combatting the
eurozone and migration crises, the Commission has not been a suc
cessful trailblazer for major political decisions - such as those concern
ing the size of and conditions to be attached to bailouts to the heavily
indebted countries. .
For many years the European Parliament (EP) has been in the ascend
ant institutionally and its powers were further strengthened by the pro
visions of the Lisbon Treaty. However, it has exercised only very limited
influence in helping to resolve the various dimensions of the EU crisis.
Even the novelty of linking the outcome of the 2014 EP elections to the
selection of the incoming Commission President did not arouse much
public interest. Not only did voter turnout continue its downward trend
since the first elections in 1979, but also eurosceptics made large gains.
This was symptomatic of growing opposition to austerity and increasing
disillusionment with the EU in many member states.
Supplying Solutions
Conclusions