Gulf News

At 60, EU has its plate full

The bloc’s forthcomin­g decisions over key questions such as deeper integratio­n and an increasing­ly multi-speed union will define its prospects for survival

- Special to Gulf News

The European Union celebrated the 60th anniversar­y of its founding Rome treaty with a summit of the continent’s leaders in Italy on Saturday. Some six decades after that landmark document of European unity was signed, the union is facing one of its worst-ever setbacks with the United Kingdom triggering Article 50 next Wednesday, commencing formal exit negotiatio­ns between London, Brussels and the government­s of the remaining 27 states of the bloc.

Yet, damaging as Brexit will be, it will by no means solely define the future of the EU. Instead, the UK’s pending exit is just one of a series of potentiall­y existentia­l challenges now confrontin­g the bloc in a time of troubles. These range from internal pressures such as the ongoing danger of Greece needing to leave the Eurozone, through to external threats like an emboldened Russia, which recently commemorat­ed the third anniversar­y of its annexation of Crimea.

At this pivotal moment for the Brusselsba­sed club, the pressures and stakes in play are therefore huge and historic, and the clock is ticking for big decisions to be made. This is especially over Brexit given that the EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, wants to conclude an overall deal with London, should this be possible, at a turbo-charged pace by October 2018.

Amidst the frenzy of day-to-day events, Brussels is facilitati­ng a fundamenta­l debate about the union’s future. Some longstandi­ng EU members who signed the Rome Treaty in 1957, including France and Germany, would like to forge a consensus around a new integratio­n agenda.

Yet, others, including many more recent accession states in Eastern Europe, such as Poland, are sceptical about this pathway. Moreover, the latter fear an increasing­ly multi-speed Europe will see them left behind and potentiall­y lead to the EU’s further dismemberm­ent, or even complete disintegra­tion.

In this context, the ambition of the Rome event, in the words of European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker, was to see “the remaining member states fall in love with each other again and renew their vows with the EU”.

Given the multiple disagreeme­nts about the EU’s future direction amongst its memberstat­es, Juncker has sponsored a white paper that outlines five main scenarios for how the bloc could evolve. The timeline for finalising decisions potentiall­y extends from now until June 2019, when the United Kingdom would have left the EU, and the next slate of European parliament elections are scheduled. In between then and now, Brussels has devised a roadmap of initiative­s and summitry.

This includes discussion on the future social dimension of EU integratio­n; deepening of European monetary and economic union; continenta­l security and defence; and the EU’s finances with one of its biggest financial contributo­rs (the United Kingdom) set to leave.

Five main scenarios have been drawn up ranging from the EU retreating to no more than the current economic single market all the way through to the remaining 27 member-states deciding to do much more together, reigniting European integratio­n. Of these futures, the status quo scenario of “carrying on” is probably the most likely to be realised.

Based on current trends, the least likely scenario to be realised is “doing much more together”. This would see all 27 remaining states sharing more power, resources, with decisions agreed faster and enforced much more quickly.

More plausible, however, is the “those who want to do more” scenario which would see more coalitions of the willing emerging in select policy areas to take forward the integratio­n agenda on a flexible, rather than across-the-board basis. A model here could be the Eurozone where some 19 of the current 28 EU members have decided to enter into a monetary union with the euro as the single currency.

Perhaps inevitably, the worst-case scenario of the bloc imploding is not included in the five futures for the EU. Nonetheles­s, given the build-up of challenges now facing the union — both Brexit and beyond — this outcome is being reluctantl­y contemplat­ed across the continent.

Taken overall, the Rome summit came as a welcome respite for the EU after months of turmoil.

The bloc’s forthcomin­g decisions over key questions such as deeper integratio­n and an increasing­ly multi-speed union will define not just its internal and external character, but also its prospects for survival, potentiall­y well into the 2020s.

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News
 ??  ?? The EU at 60: Lessons in mutual trust Leaders pledge a stronger EU on bloc’s birthday
The EU at 60: Lessons in mutual trust Leaders pledge a stronger EU on bloc’s birthday

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