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Single European Market. Ideally When an economy produces more output it will be based on two outcomes – The economy should be experiencing full employment.

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Presentation on theme: "Single European Market. Ideally When an economy produces more output it will be based on two outcomes – The economy should be experiencing full employment."— Presentation transcript:

1 Single European Market

2 Ideally When an economy produces more output it will be based on two outcomes – The economy should be experiencing full employment – The real GDP per capita should be growing so that the population can reap the gains and the workers can receive greater compensation

3 What happened in Europe From the 1970s to the 1990s they had economic growth or increases in output But they had high levels of unemployment there was no increase in jobs And the Labor Compact prevented gains from increases in wages

4 The Economy of the European Union in Perspective By 1993, treaties set up the European Union – EU-15 (The first big group) United Kingdom Ireland Spain Portugal Germany Belgium Netherlands Luxembourg France Austria Italy Greece Sweden Denmark Finland

5 More Joined in May 2004 Eastern Europe and Baltic States – Cyprus – Czech Republic – Estonia – Hungary – Latvia – Lithuania – Malta – Poland – Slovakia – Slovenia

6 Two more in January 2007 – Bulgaria – Romania 2013 – Croatia By 2013, we are up to 28 members Note that the definition of what it means to be Europe is evolving over time—many are beyond the Iron Curtain

7 Major Economies Country2006 GDP (Billions of 2006 $) 2006 Population (Millions) 2006 Per Capita GDP (2006 $) Germany$2,58082$31,300 France$1,89961$31,000 United Kingdom$1,94160$32,100 Italy$1,65759$28,200 Spain$1,22544$27,800 Netherlands$57916$35,400 Sweden$3199$33,100 Belgium$30110$32,500 EU-27 (Before Croatia) $13,018 (2005)493.0$26,500 (2005)

8 Jobs and Productivity: A Trade-Off in Reverse? !970s to the !990s – High investment and high productivity growth – Low or no job growth US pattern – High job growth – Low productivity growth Europe was not following a sustainable path – Not with very high unemployment

9 Europe was experimenting with different labor market policies With different policies, countries were following different paths Germany—Bad situation getting worse – Had unemployment rates above 9% for several years in the late 90s – 2004-2006 had unemployment over 10%

10 France—Bad situation getting a little bit better – Had unemployment rates above 11% for 6 straight years in the 1990s – 200-2006 came down to about 9% Italy—Bad situation getting a lot better – Italy had unemployment rates above 11% for the last part of the 90s – By 2006, unemployment was down below 7% United Kingdom—Bad situation getting a whole lot better – Above 10% in 92 and 93 – But 2005 and 2006, they were more like 5%

11 What caused the divergences? Netherlands and the United Kingdom led the way in reforming labor market policies – Continue to protect the unemployed, but also provide incentives to find and take a job Netherlands as an example – Unemployment compensation had been 80% of previous wages – The reduced it to 70% (Way above US levels) – Made it more difficult to declare yourself disabled – Taxes for long-term sick leave were tied to number of employees that end on long-term sick leave Old way—do not lay off, but declare them sick so that they could get sick benefits. New way—that would increase corp taxes

12 General Terms Protect the worker not the job Do not discourage workers from hiring – Too high wages – Too many required benefits – Block firing – Preventing expanding

13 Where is EU behind? They are further beyond in areas of information techno Especially in areas of retail trade – Like our Walmart and Target In areas of wholesale trade In areas of financial services Other service based industries that use the new techno – Like the hospital story

14 Why is the US ahead? We are so much more flexible and willing to reorganize – Both in the front end with the customers and the back end with production

15 What could Europe do? Single Market Project – Aims to increase productivity by increasing competition across countries – Many barriers were reduced, but there were still many different rules and laws – Single European Act in 1986 – Single Market Act of 1992 To unify regulations (like safety regulation) Help to expand competition

16 More Single Market Four freedoms – People – Goods – Service – Capital Harmonized literally thousands of regulations across countries (labeling laws, testing procedures, consumer protection laws) Limited custom checks (Many rules completely elimated)

17 More Single Market Many now have the right to live, work, and study across Europe You can have your bank account in any country Use your cash card in any country Euro Easier for firms to invest in different countries Europe has anti-trust policy

18 What are the gain? The first pass shows the gains to be modest – 1986-2006: 1.8% extra GDP and 2-3 million extra jobs More Exports outside the EU – 7% of European GDP in 1992 – 12% of European GDP in 2005 – More competitive and more integrated with international markets

19 Limited, but Although the gains are limited, there is a hope – Setting the ground work for future growth and integration – Stable framework – Allow higher savings and investment – Not just a one-time boost, but a sustained increase

20 Loss in Momentum Big start in the 90s, but by the late 2000s many feel there was a loss in momentum – Cross border investment among the EU-15 in 2000 was 14 times larger than in 1992 – But by 2004 investment was only 4 times as large as in 1992 – Why? 90s had many mergers across borders But many were reversed in the early 2000s Trade growth continued to grow, but slowly

21 Why? Cont.. Very little labor movement – In the EU-15 before 2004 only 0.1% of the working-age population changes its country of residence in a given year – Only about 1% move between a region within a country in a given year – To contrast about 3% of the population in the US moves to a different state each year

22 What could Europe do? Lisbon Agenda: A European Knowledge-Based Economy? – In March 2000, as it became clear that productivity was slowing and the economy was not using the new techno as the US, – Heads of state gathered in Lisbon Make the European Union the most dynamic and competitive knowledge-based economy in the world capable of sustainable economic growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion, and respect for the environment by 2010

23 European Commission Set up to bring harmony to regulations across countries Has become a big regulator itself – About 3,500 directives per year On everything from recycling to noise pollution – Maybe it is better that the European Commission is issuing these rules as compared to each country – Attitude has been to limit and constrain business as compare to let it grow or innovate

24 Limits Limits Limits Limits on hours worked Limits on the ability of the business to expand Limits on the ability to sign certain contracts Conditions for hiring On and on They need the ability to shake themselves up

25 United States of Europe? There are people that make that claim – Helmut Kohl, former Chancellor of Germany The great goal that we and our European friends have in common—”a United States of Europe” – EU anthem – May 9 is Europe Day Less talk than a decade ago especially with the financial issues


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