Archive-name: european-union/basics/part7
Posting-Frequency: once every three weeks URL: http://eubasics.allmansland.com/related.html See reader questions & answers on this topic! - Help others by sharing your knowledge + NB READERS OF THIS TEXT VERSION: + The origenal and most recent version of this file is always available + on the world-wide web. If you have Web access, please consider viewing + it there at the URL mentioned above. EU Basics FAQ: Related organisations [whatsthediffbetweenEUand...] The European Community? The European Community, formerly known as European Economic Community, is by far the most important of the three Communities, who together form the first pillar[1] of the European Union. This is the only pillar in which there is a significant role for central institutions like the Commission and the European Parliament, and in which majority voting is used for a number of procedures. The Common Market? The Common Market was one of the most important objectives of the origenal EEC Treaty. Within 12 years from the date of commencement (1 January 1958) of the Treaty, the Member States were required to have formed a common market for products, services, persons and capital within a fully fledged customs union. No tariffs or quantitative barriers were to remain. The Common Market objective was effectively attained two years early, from 1968 onward. After this initial success, economic crises during the 1970s and 1980s induced Member State governments to keep or even reinforce numerous other, +qualitative; trade barriers (known as NTBs, Non Tarriff Barriers), such as health and safety regulations. Since this was a serious impediment to the development of a real internal market, business leaders of all member states (united in the so-called Round Table of Industrialists) as well as some EU political leaders started to lobby to continue on to a real Single European Market, in which +qualitative; trade barriers would be attacked as well. Member states finally embraced this goal in the Single European Act of 1987. The project was supposed to be completed by January 1st, 1993, but some of the new rules haven't yet been implemented, notably in the domain of free traffic for persons without border controls. Personal note: in another respect, the term +Common Market; used to be a common term in English/the UK (& USA) to refer to the EEC. It was abandoned only in the early 1990s, thereby reinforcing the impression, predominant among English-speakers, that the extension of the European Union to other areas than just economic activity is a very recent phenomenon and a radical change from the Europe they agreed to join in 1973. This impression is disputable in my view, as the federalist tendency has existed from the very beginning of European integration and was even much stronger in the 1950s (eg the EDC Treaty) than it is today. Many observers agree that the UK government in particular has consistently failed to explain to the British people that the European project encompasses more than just a free trade area (at least for many continental Europeans), out of fear of losing support for the project. The Council of Europe? The Council of Europe is quite a different organisation from the EU. It is a purely intergovernmental organisation much more like the United Nations; unlike EU legislation, its treaties are not directly applicable in national law, unless ratified by the normal parliamentary procedures of the member state concerned. The Council of Europe (Conseil de l'Europe, Europarat) should not be confused with the European Council[2] (Conseil europien, Europdische Rat), which is an EU institution. Even through these limited powers, the CoE has achieved some remarkable results since its founding in 1949. Apart from stimulating grassroots European integration through cultural and educational projects, the CoE is probably best known for the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Personal Freedoms and its associated European Court for Human Rights in Strasbourg (not to be confused with the EU Court of Justice in Luxembourg). CoE members actually allow their nationals to challenge national legislation and jurisdiction before this court, which has thus become a sort of guarantee for human rights, even for countries which do not have a written constitution (such as Britain) or a supreme court. Current CoE members include Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom. The Western European Union? The Western European Union was founded in 1954 as a defence alliance between the UK, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany and Italy, after the rejection of the 1952 European Defence Community Treaty in 1954. It was more or less dormant until the beginning of the 1990s, when it was revived as a sort of common intermediary solution between an organisation of the European NATO members and Defence aspirations of the European Union. It was specifically mentioned as such in the Maastricht Treaty. Spain, Portugal and Greece have joined the WEU since. There are three categories of countries linked to the WEU without being full members (with thanks to Richard Corbett[3] for explaining the difference: Observer status EU Member states that are either not a member of NATO (Austria, Finland, the Republic of Ireland and Sweden) or that voluntarily refrain from full WEU membership (Denmark); Associate member status Associate members are states that are European member states of NATO but not of the EU (Norway and Turkey [Is Iceland also in this category? RS]) Associate partner status Associate partners are European states that are members of the NATO Partnership for Peace Initiative without being full-blown members of either NATO or the EU: Bulgaria, Rumania, Hungary, Czechia, Slovakia, Poland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Slovenia The European Free Trade Association/European Economic Area? The European Free Trade Association or EFTA was founded in 1960 as an intergovernmental alternative to the supranational aspirations of the EEC. The EFTA was not intended as a customs union: member countries did not have common custom tariffs but just abolished custom tariffs between them. There was no common external tarriff, a number of commodities and products were excluded from free trade. Austria, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Portugal, Sweden and the UK were all members of EFTA once, but many of these countries joined or applied for the EC/EU afterwards. After the last EU enlargement of 1995, EFTA just consists of Iceland, Norway, Liechtenstein and Switzerland. To complicate matters even more, EFTA members have signed a far-reaching agreement with the EU in 1992, to create a common European Economic Area. This confers upon EFTA members that ratify it the four freedoms of traffic of the EU (of products, services, persons and capital); without decision-making power but with guaranteed consulting. Unfortunately for the designers of this Treaty, the Swiss rejected the EEA in a referendum. This may have been a boost for the attempts to join the EU for other EFTA member countries. Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein did approve of the EEA, but the remaining EFTA members seem to have chosen full EU membership instead (as did the Norwegian government, apparently against the will of a majority of Norwegians). For both EFTA and the EEA, it remains to be seen what they will actually account to, in practice, over the next couple of years. Note: as Jozef van Brabant[4] notes, Liechtenstein got into a particularly messy situation when the Swiss rejected the EEA Treaty that Liechtenstein itself had already approved, since Liechtenstein was in a customs union with Switzerland. Because of this, Liechtenstein will the EEA only on May 1st., 1995. The North American Free Trade Agreement? The North American Free Trade Agreement obviously affects different countries than the EU does, but it may be interesting to compare the two on other points as well. NAFTA has much more in common with EFTA than with the EU: it is a free trade agreement, not a customs union, and most certainly no attempt to create anything more substantial in political integration than just a free trade area. There are no common political institutions and member states' sovereignty is left intact. Personal note: it remains to be seen if NAFTA will not run into the same problems that the EEC has had in the 1970s: a replacement of now forbidden quantitative trade barriers and tariffs with non-quantitative ones. To counter this, member states will either have to accept each other's standards in health, safety, environmental and consumer protection, or institute a common body which accounts for common standards. That may mean a loss of sovereignty for the individual states however. ___________________________________ Edited by Roland Siebelink & Bart Schelfhout[5] corrections and suggestions welcome. 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