Has the EU Become Uncontrollably Divergent? : Analysis of EU Governance, from the Treaty of Rome to the Treaty of Lisbon

Jun Inoue
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Abstract

Political will has been essential to European Union (EU) projects; economic integration projects are no exception. The experiences of the European Coal and Steel Community, the Customs Union, the Common Market, and the Economic and Monetary Union indicate that European economic integration projects have also been driven by political will. Thus, in facing economic difficulties such as economic underdevelopment, lowered competitiveness, and financial and fiscal turmoil, it is fairly persuasive to say that Europe needs political leadership (i. e., firm will on the part of politicians) to achieve further cooperation and overcome these economic difficulties. However, the author believes that such arguments have recently come to have more significance than ever, since the vectors and extent of divergence in the EU are approaching a “danger zone”in other words, the EU has both prepared a variety of modes of governance on a variety of issues and come to emphasize input legitimacy (democracy), both at the expense of its uniformity. The main purpose of this paper is to show that the EU has tended to be too divergent, by outlining changes in governance within the EU. This paper especially focuses on the fundamental treaties of the EU: the Treaty of Rome, the Maastricht Treaty (Treaty of the European Union), the Treaty of Amsterdam, and the Treaty of Lisbon. It assesses the features of governance provided in these treaties, in light of (1) asymmetrical economic fundamentals and performance among member states, (2) the number of differentiation measures, (3) the public nature of EC/EU policies, and (4) the extent of concerns for democracy within the EU. Analysis of these fundamental treaties shows us that, recently, the EU has tended to be too divergent to make it controllable solely through political will.
欧盟的分歧是否变得无法控制?:欧盟治理分析,从《罗马条约》到《里斯本条约》
政治意愿对欧洲联盟(EU)项目至关重要;经济一体化项目也不例外。欧洲煤钢共同体、关税同盟、共同市场和经济与货币联盟的经验表明,欧洲经济一体化项目也受到政治意愿的推动。因此,在面对经济不发达、竞争力下降、金融和财政动荡等经济困难时,欧洲需要政治领导(即政治家的坚定意志)来实现进一步的合作并克服这些经济困难,这是相当有说服力的。然而,作者认为,这些论点最近变得比以往任何时候都更有意义,因为欧盟内部分歧的向量和程度正在接近一个“危险区域”,换句话说,欧盟既准备了各种各样的治理模式,又开始强调输入合法性(民主),这两者都是以牺牲其统一性为代价的。本文的主要目的是通过概述欧盟内部治理的变化来表明欧盟往往过于分歧。本文特别关注欧盟的基本条约:《罗马条约》、《马斯特里赫特条约》(欧盟条约)、《阿姆斯特丹条约》和《里斯本条约》。它根据(1)成员国之间不对称的经济基本面和表现,(2)差异化措施的数量,(3)欧共体/欧盟政策的公共性质,以及(4)欧盟内部对民主的关注程度,评估了这些条约中提供的治理特征。对这些基本条约的分析表明,最近,欧盟往往分歧太大,无法仅仅通过政治意愿来控制它。
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