JUDY ASKS: SHOULD THE CORONAVIRUS ACCELERATE THE
EUROPEAN INTEGRATION?
It should, but it won’t. The EU’s post-pandemic
recovery fund will help the union’s economies get off the ground. But as for
integrating Europe’s foreign, security, and digitization policies, the
political will and strategic ambition are absent.
·
March 04, 2021
KRZYSZTOF
BLEDOWSKI SENIOR COUNCIL DIRECTOR AND ECONOMIST AT THE
MANUFACTURERS ALLIANCE FOR PRODUCTIVITY AND INNOVATION
Recent European integration efforts are littered with
high-flown concepts. Senior politicians have been boasting for years of a
political or fiscal union and, more recently, of strategic or digital
sovereignty. What these starry-eyed ideas all have in common is imprecision and
utter impracticality. Rather than accelerating integration yet again, the EU
would do better to address just a few pressing problems.
China threatens to subjugate some European countries
as tributary dependencies. With the professed neutrality championed by some EU
members, this could become a reality sooner than many expect. The EU would be
wise to take a page out of the policies of Australia, Canada, India, Japan,
South Korea, Taiwan, and the UK—to name just a few countries that are closing
ranks with the United States to work out policies to push back against Beijing.
Then, Europe is being slowly eclipsed by rising tech
powers in developing new technologies. A look across the Atlantic might help
here, too. America’s challenges in environmental protection, fair trade, and
security largely match those of Europe. The Americans are practically screaming
at the Europeans to unite and meet these challenges together.
The EU would do well to advance its integration by
devising a coordinated approach to tackling global challenges jointly with
the United States.
RALUCA
CSERNATONI VISITING SCHOLAR AT CARNEGIE EUROPE
The coronavirus has certainly caused an exogenous
shock to the EU, testing member states’ solidarity and the overall resilience
of the European integration process. Yet, contrary to popular belief, the
pandemic has not pushed the EU to the verge of an existential crisis. Rather,
it is an opportunity for renewed momentum in EU-level governance building,
especially in the areas of security and defense. EU leaders’ commitment to
strategic autonomy, coupled with recent efforts to build technological
sovereignty, remains steadfast.
The funding allocated in the EU’s long-term budget to
defense research and development underwent considerable cuts. Experts also
expressed fears that investment in civilian and cutting-edge military
capabilities will be less of a priority given the socioeconomic ramifications
of the ongoing pandemic.
However, amid a fast-deteriorating geostrategic
landscape, the EU and its member states are now even harder pressed to move
forward on defense technological and
industrial cooperation and develop a common strategic culture.
For this to happen, the coronavirus is not enough to
drive EU member states to overcome the political and strategic hurdles that
have plagued the EU’s Common Security and Defense Policy. But the pandemic
might well be the much-needed nudge to encourage a higher level of political
buy-in from member states into the EU as a stronger and more credible security
and defense actor.
CAROLINE DE
GRUYTER EUROPEAN AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT FOR NRC HANDELSBLAD
It should, but it won’t. The EU’s post-coronavirus recovery
fund has broken taboos and could be a channel for progress in
the future, provided it is seen as a success in a couple of years. But in the
short term, dark clouds are gathering.
It’s a typical EU cycle: First, the European
Commission comes up with an innovative scheme to support pharmaceutical
companies in return for future deliveries. It works, and a coronavirus vaccine
is available in a matter of months instead of years.
Then, pharmaceutical companies have production
problems, and the wind turns. The EU’s vaccination strategy is declared a
failure. But it is member states that are in charge of vaccinations, in part
because they have always refused to give the union any power in public health.
Still, no national government takes political responsibility.
Finally, Brussels is left struggling with a
communications disaster—the innocent behaving like the guilty. This is fertile
ground for solidarity to crumble and for some EU countries to start dealings
with Russia, China, or Israel.
Will all this accelerate integration? No. Even if
member states agree to give Brussels more power in health matters, they would
do so in such a way that it would be unworkable anyway: giving with one hand
while withholding with the other. Progress would be for national politicians to
take responsibility and practice plain talk and honesty. That’s a long shot.
LIANA FIX PROGRAM DIRECTOR FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS AT
KÖRBER-STIFTUNG
The coronavirus vaccination rollout has been a
challenge in itself for the EU. But the most daunting task ahead will be the
post-pandemic economic recovery. This will require further European
integration, especially of member states’ fiscal policies. The economic
recovery package on which the EU agreed in 2020 was an important first step,
but it will not be enough to lead Europeans out of the
crisis.
Fiscal integration is the missing piece in the
architecture of the EU’s economic and monetary union. At the same time, many
wealthier member states resist a loosening of EU fiscal rules and a further
deepening of the debt union that was agreed on in 2020, out of concern for
being held responsible for the weak economic performance of their neighbors.
The alternative, however, is even less appealing, as Southern member states
argue. Economic disparities in the EU—especially between North and South—would
increase, which, in turn, could provide fertile ground for populists.
The EU must maintain its appeal as a convergence machine,
particularly in times of crisis. Otherwise, it will lose legitimacy in the eyes
of European citizens. If the historic coronavirus crisis does not accelerate
European integration, especially in the fiscal realm, what else can?
REM KORTEWEG SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOW AT THE CLINGENDAEL INSTITUTE
It already has. The Next Generation EU fund,
aimed at boosting the union’s post-pandemic recovery, is a major step for
European integration. Of course, it is not undisputed, particularly among
frugal member states, but the EU has crossed a Rubicon.
The coronavirus has also illustrated the need for
greater European coordination to deal with health emergencies. It is clear that
after the crisis, the EU institutions will play larger roles in preparing for
future pandemics. Despite the difficulties the European Commission has
confronted—and lessons will need to be learned here—it was correct for the
commission to procure vaccines on behalf of the member states. If it hadn’t, it
would have sparked a bidding war in the EU’s internal market, which would
inevitably have resulted in tremendous friction among the member states.
Another outcome of the pandemic will be a new economic
balance of power in the union between those that could keep their economies
afloat and those that could not. Economic imbalances after the coronavirus—and
the fact that most competitive sectors will have benefited from subsidies or
state aid in some form—will create fresh problems for the EU’s internal market
and require stronger oversight.
And then there is China. Beijing will emerge from the
pandemic as a stronger geopolitical force. Only a more coherent and capable EU
will be able to answer that challenge.
JACEK
KUCHARCZYK PRESIDENT OF THE EXECUTIVE BOARD OF THE
INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
In EU member states such as Poland and Hungary, the
coronavirus has accelerated the process of democratic backsliding, which
started well before the current crisis.
In the case of Poland, the pandemic has allowed the
ruling authoritarian populists to tinker with the country’s electoral law—and
constitution—under the cover of extraordinary anti-coronavirus legislation. The
ruling coalition has indulged in shameless pro-government propaganda, using
generously funded public and pro-government private media while trying to
starve—or buy out—the remaining independent media.
The populists in power have attacked sexual minorities
and passed a near-total ban on abortion to rally their electoral base and
divide the opposition, again using pandemic legislation to break up protests
with excessive police force and curtailing civil rights.
Last but not least, the pandemic has served as an
excuse to circumvent procurement regulations and waste public resources for the
self-enrichment of the ruling elite. The EU has not been able to react to such
developments and defend democracy, the rule of law, and other core values.
The so-called rule-of-law mechanism attached to the
EU’s new long-term budget and post-coronavirus recovery fund is
a step in the right direction. But the Polish and Hungarian authoritarians
managed to water it down by threatening to veto the arrangement, which would
have starved their struggling economies of a necessary cash injection.
Accelerating European integration by creating
effective instruments to ensure cohesion on basic EU values is needed but
unlikely under the current circumstances.
STEFAN LEHNE VISITING SCHOLAR AT CARNEGIE EUROPE
The old idea that the EU always emerges from crises
strengthened is pious nonsense. But Jean Monnet, one of the union’s founding
fathers, was right that sometimes it takes the experience of a common threat to
convince member states to move toward deeper integration. The coronavirus could
be such a case, but this is not clear yet because the most plausible and
best-intentioned plans for doing more together first have to pass the brutal
test of practical experience.
Currently, the EU seems to be failing this test when
it comes to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s grand project
of a health union. Massive delays in the EU’s coronavirus vaccination rollout have prompted
some countries to resort to national procurement. Austria and Denmark are even
envisaging a vaccine alliance with Israel. If the EU program gathers momentum
over the coming weeks, these setbacks can still be reversed. Otherwise, the
dream of a more united health policy appears doomed.
In the implementation of its post-pandemic recovery
fund, the EU faces an even bigger test. This project could be the beginning of
a common debt instrument that would enhance solidarity among member states and
consolidate the EU’s monetary union—a genuine breakthrough. But that will
happen only if the funds are used to enable green and digital transitions and
modernize economies. If the money is used to shore up national budgets or even
ends up in the wrong hands, this would lead to a massive backlash and bury the
prospect of a fiscal union for the foreseeable future.
DENIS MACSHANE SENIOR ADVISER AT AVISA PARTNERS BRUSSELS AND FORMER
UK MINISTER FOR EUROPE
Yes, but it won’t. Health has always been an
exclusively national responsibility in the EU, as each member state’s health
priorities and healthcare financing are deeply rooted in national cultures and
histories. The European Commission cannot make life-and-death decisions, nor
should it seek to.
The European commissioner for health is not strong.
Member states went their own ways in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic.
Sweden experimented with herd immunity. Mediterranean countries wanted to keep
tourism open for the sake of their economies. France still remembers the
infected blood scandal in the 1980s, when hemophiliacs were given blood
products contaminated with HIV.
The EU had no common policy on coronavirus
vaccinations and has made some really bad errors, for example when French
President Emmanuel Macron denounced the AstraZeneca vaccine as “quasi-ineffective”
for older people. Nor was there a common EU policy on testing and tracing,
airport controls, or the suspension of the Schengen Area of free movement.
Greece called for vaccination passports; France opposed them.
The pandemic has proved yet again that the EU has
difficulty in sharing power, even temporarily. The response to the coronavirus
got mixed up with Brexit and unease that the UK, with its centralized and
state-funded National Health Service, could order vaccines and vaccinate tens
of millions of people in a way that sixteen regional health ministries in
Germany could not.
The crisis may lead to a new common approach, but
memories of power grabs, poor coordination, and still unacceptably low rates of
vaccination mean the last twelve months have not been the EU’s finest hour.
POL MORILLAS DIRECTOR OF THE BARCELONA CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS
There’s a parallel between the ways in which Brussels
has reacted to its two most recent crises: Brexit and the coronavirus pandemic.
The European Commission took over the reins of the
Brexit negotiations with London. Today, it is leading on the joint procurement
and rollout of vaccines. In principle, unity in negotiations—either on Brexit
or with pharmaceutical companies—guarantees a stronger EU position and avoids
free riding and rifts between member states. But whereas the commission
negotiated a trade deal after Brexit fully in line with its exclusive powers,
it has overstretched itself in coping with the health crisis, for which it
lacks experience and full responsibility.
As a result, some will say that the union has further
integrated by stealth or that if member states had taken the reins, the vaccine
rollout would not have been as slow as it has. Others will say that if the EU
is to have a stronger role in future pandemics, it must be given the powers to
do so.
Further integration cannot happen by accident or
default. It must be a conscious choice by member states aware of broader
geopolitical dynamics and Europe’s declining relative power. Integration must
also fulfill the democratic needs of a more politicized European public.
Above all, further integration must go hand in hand
with a refurbishment of the EU’s current institutional architecture and
policymaking. The question is not only whether the coronavirus should accelerate
European integration but also whether European states and citizens are willing
to take the necessary political steps to make that happen.
TESSA
SZYSZKOWITZ SENIOR ASSOCIATE FELLOW AT THE ROYAL
UNITED SERVICES INSTITUTE
Since the German daily Bild wrote on
February 23, “Liebe Briten, we beneiden you!” (Dear Brits, we envy you!), a
question needs answering: Why was the UK faster at procuring and rolling out
coronavirus vaccines than the EU? Brexit fans might think it was because
Britain had left the EU. This is not the case: the UK could have done the same
as an EU member.
But the EU could learn from the British experience.
The UK benefits from a strong relationship among scientific expertise, business
awareness, and entrepreneurial prowess. Oxford University, in cooperation with
the Swedish-British company AstraZeneca, got a fast offer from the UK
government and took a risk to serve the public purpose and help stop the
pandemic. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson seemed to have taken a lesson from
economist Mariana Mazzucato and her recent book Mission Economy: A
Moonshot Guide to Changing Capitalism.
The EU should do the same. While the union has done
well not to let vaccine nationalism take over, the European Commission needs to
move faster next time. Procurement could be left to member states, with the EU
acting in solidarity with all members in distributing vaccines. European
integration would accelerate because solidarity combined with efficiency
creates trust. Pandemics cannot and should not be fought on a national basis
alone.
PAUL TAYLOR COLUMNIST AT POLITICO EUROPE
Europe’s responses to the coronavirus pandemic show
that EU integration can’t stand still in the face of cross-border crises that
hit the bloc symmetrically or asymmetrically. Either the EU moves forward
together or each country goes its own way, unraveling the existing level of
integration.
When the coronavirus pandemic struck, national
measures to control borders, restrict exports of key supplies, and hand out
emergency aid to businesses without coordination threatened to tear apart the
EU’s single market, Schengen open-travel zone, and single currency.
The collective response of a recovery fund backed by
joint borrowing and joint procurement of vaccines through the European
Commission was a turning point. It would be foolish to revert to a
beggar-thy-neighbor scramble for vaccines now.
If the spending is timely and well managed, the
recovery fund will demonstrate the benefits of closer EU fiscal integration.
The logical next step should be to raise new forms of common revenue to
reimburse the joint coronavirus debt and create a permanent European debt stock
serviced by those revenues. That would give financial markets a euro safe asset
and provide the eurozone with a fiscal stabilizer.
PIERRE VIMONT SENIOR FELLOW AT CARNEGIE EUROPE
The coronavirus is generally considered to have accelerated negative trends.
Could it be different for Europe?
At first glance, the pandemic could be seen as having
stirred a more upbeat Europe. Despite a poor start and, more recently, heavy
criticism of the European Commission’s mishandling of vaccine purchases, the EU
has performed well on tackling the challenges stemming from the virus crisis.
Several achievements make for unprecedented progress
by the EU: a new capacity to raise money on the financial markets and the
prospect of increased EU resources to fund a significant recovery plan;
flexible budget norms that were unthinkable only a year ago; and a
comprehensive public health policy in the making that was not even foreseen in
the Lisbon Treaty, the union’s last major institutional upgrade.
But will the EU go the distance? Some of the union’s
recent financial progress could well end up as a one-shot policy when the
economic recession ebbs and ordoliberal orthodoxy reintroduces all traditional
parameters on the euro.
As
for the geopolitical front, European diplomacy has so far shown no signs of
being beefed up by the pandemic, and EU strategic autonomy is still to
materialize. Both will require more than a virus to live up to expectations.
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