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A True History of Europe and the European Union
Beginnings |
European Union |
Common Policies |
The Single Market |
The Single Currency |
The Growing Family
Also known as the European Economic Community, the Common
Market provides member European countries with free trade among
other members. It was originally set up in 1956 between the
members of the European Coal and Steel Community: France,
Belgium, West Germany, Italy, Luxemburg, and the Netherlands. It
has since grown to include the United Kingdom, Denmark, Ireland,
Greece, Portugal, Spain, Austria, Finland, and Sweden.
For centuries, Europe was the scene of frequent and
bloody wars. In the period 1870 to 1945, France and Germany
fought each other three times, with terrible loss of life. A
number of European leaders became convinced that the only
way to secure a lasting peace between their countries was to
unite them economically and politically.
So, in 1950, the French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman
proposed integrating the coal and steel industries of
Western Europe. A a result, in 1951, the European Coal and
Steel Community (ECSC) was set up, with six members:
Belgium, West Germany, Luxembourg, France, Italy and the
Netherlands. The power to take decisions about the coal and
steel industry in these countries was placed in the hands of
an independent, supranational body called the "High
Authority". Jean Monnet was its first President.
From three communities to the European Union
The ECSC was such a success that, within a few years,
these same six countries decided to go further and integrate
other sectors of their economies. In 1957 they signed the
Treaties of Rome, creating the European Atomic Energy
Community (EURATOM) and the European Economic Community
(EEC). The member states set about removing trade barriers
between them and forming a "common market".
In 1967 the institutions of the three European
communities were merged. From this point on, there was a
single Commission and a single Council of Ministers as well
as the European Parliament.
Originally, the members of the European Parliament were
chosen by the national parliaments but in 1979 the first
direct elections were held, allowing the citizens of the
member states to vote for the candidate of their choice.
Since then, direct elections have been held every five
years.
The Treaty of Maastricht (1992) introduced new forms of
co-operation between the member state governments - for
example on defence, and in the area of "justice and home
affairs". By adding this inter-governmental co-operation to
the existing "Community" system, the Maastricht Treaty
created the European Union (EU).
Economic and political integration between the member
states of the European Union means that these countries have
to take joint decisions on many matters. So they have
developed common policies in a very wide range of fields -
from agriculture to culture, from consumer affairs to
competition, from the environment and energy to transport
and trade.
In the early days the focus was on a common commercial
policy for coal and steel and a common agricultural policy.
Other policies were added as time went by, and as the need
arose. Some key policy aims have changed in the light of
changing circumstances. For example, the aim of the
agricultural policy is no longer to produce as much food as
cheaply as possible but to support farming methods that
produce healthy, high-quality food and protect the
environment. The need for environmental protection is now
taken into account across the whole range of EU policies.
The European Union's relations with the rest of the world
have also become important. The EU negotiates major trade
and aid agreements with other countries and is developing a
Common Foreign and Security Policy.
It took some time for the Member States to remove all the
barriers to trade between them and to turn their "common
market" into a genuine single market in which goods,
services, people and capital could move around freely. The
Single Market was formally completed at the end of 1992,
though there is still work to be done in some areas - for
example, to create a genuinely single market in financial
services.
During the 1990s it became increasingly easy for people
to move around in Europe, as passport and customs checks
were abolished at most of the EU's internal borders. One
consequence is greater mobility for EU citizens. Since 1987,
for example, more than a million young Europeans have taken
study courses abroad, with support from the EU.
In 1992 the EU decided to go for economic and monetary
union (EMU), involving the introduction of a single European
currency managed by a European Central Bank. The single
currency - the euro - became a reality on 1 January 2002,
when euro notes and coins replaced national currencies in
twelve of the 15 countries of the European Union (Belgium,
Germany, Greece, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg,
the Netherlands, Austria, Portugal and Finland).
The EU has grown in size with successive waves of
accessions. Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom joined
in 1973 followed by Greece in 1981, Spain and Portugal in
1986 and Austria, Finland and Sweden in 1995. The European
Union welcomed ten new countries in 2004: Cyprus, the Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta,
Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. Bulgaria and Romania expect
to follow in 2007; Croatia and Turkey are beginning
membership negotiations in 2005.To ensure that the enlarged
EU can continue functioning efficiently, it needs a more
streamlined system for taking decisions. That is why the
Treaty of Nice lays down new rules governing the size of the
EU institutions and the way they work. It came into force on
1 February 2003. It will be replaced, in 2006, by the new EU
Constitution - if all EU countries approve this.
Beginnings |
European Union |
Common Policies |
The Single Market |
The Single Currency |
The Growing Family
External Links:
www.eu-true-history.org.uk
www.eu-real-history.org.uk
European Union or common market many countries forming a single
europe made from member countries with a common community policy
for trade begining with coal and steel
www.euro-history.org.uk
This site also briefly explores the true History which preceded
the secretive stealthy formation of the EU. After the ECSC was
formed in April 1951, there evolved a mythology which the EU
refers to as part of its formation history.
www.vote-veritas.org.uk
This independent site supports any political party that wants
Britain to withdraw from the European Union including the
charismatic Robert Kilroy-Silk who heads Veritas.
European Union on line
Europa provides an access to information (press releases,
legislation, fact-sheets) published by the European Union and
its institutions: European Parliament, Council of the EU,
European Commission, Court of Justice, Court of Auditors,
Economic and Social Committee, Committee of the Regions,
European Central Bank, European Investment Bank, Agencies and
other Bodies
Institute
for War and Peace
Independent news from the Balkans, Caucasus and former Soviet
Union, in several languages
European Common Fisheries Policy
The European commission, fisheries and maritime affairs,
homepage.
Artography Web Design
Artography in Woodley near Reading and Wokingham Berkshire has
been designing business websites since 1997. We focus on
Internet business results with marketing and web design.
History of Europe and the
European Union |
European Economic Community European Union, Structure and
evolution | Europe
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