It
is in times of crisis when the EU makes the biggest steps towards
integration. Once again it is proven that the European
integration is driven by necessity and not by intelectual curiosity.
We are living the times of faster economic integration since the
Maastricht treaty . During the last 2 years the EU has created the European Semester,
the European Financial Stability Facility (to be followed by the
European Financial Mechanism, a mini European Monetary Fund) together
with other surveillance authorities and committees in order to give a
short term answer to the crisis. More in the mid-term, the door is open
to raise own resources for the union in the shape of taxes on capital or
carbon or VAT, financing the EU debt with Eurobonds and the creation of an EU treasury .
The steps in this direction –specially after the European Council
meeting of July 21st- have been the only way to show the people and the
markets that the EU has a grasp on the crisis and can face the repayment
of the accumulated debt.
Before the meeting of July 21st Germany and France have been doing
everything in their hands to pospone doing what needed to be done; the
result beeing a constant increase in the numbers of vulturs profiting
from the European economies. It is not a tabu anymore, President Sarkozy
himself acknowledged last month that “We can’t keep having a currency disconnected from economic policy“. Chanciller Merkel with all her reservations finally seems to agree to walk the path towards an European Economic policy.
What we are seeing is that the current generation of European
leaders, after having tested any other option on the table, are finally
realising –at a high cost in credibility for Europe and themselves- that
the only way forward is more Europe, the federalist way. These “New
Federalists” have in common that none of them have lived a war and hence
their vision for Europe is different from those fathers of Europe
-Adenauer, Schuman, Churchill, Monnet…- from whose heritage the EU has
lived until today. If there was any doubt, today we have the
confirmation that the “old” federalism is over. Whether we like it or
not, the pragmatic federalism of the style of Merkel and Sarkozy is what
has to drive the European integration in the years to come.
The “old” federalists were visionaries; they were arguing in favour
of more European economic integration only when followed at the same
pace by political integration, democratically legitimated by the
European people. They defended that the sharing of sovereignty between
local, national and supranational levels is necessary but no delegation
of sovereignty should take place without democratic control. This is why
institutions like the European Parliament representing the European
citizens and tools such as a European Constitution were conditio sine
qua non to advance in the path of further economic integration. Economic
integration without political integration –i.e. the people have no
control on setting the rules that regulate the markets- would lead to a
lack of legitimacy of the European project. They were visionaries but
they were right; current EU legitimacy crisis has its roots in the lack
of popular identification with the European project.
The “old” federalists argued from the beginning that a common
monetary policy cannot survive without a common economic policy. During
the last decade greeks and spanish have been borrowing money at german
interest rates which didn’t match their productivity; this time of
living beyond their possibilities has created an indebtment that now
they can’t pay back. With an EU treasury, backed with Euro-bonds and a
proper European budget the current crisis could have been a lot better
managed and the current bailouts would not have happened because this
over-indebtment would not have been allowed.
But let’s go back to the “new” federalists. The “new” federalists are
hardcore realists –the same realists that 4 years ago were saying that
more integration was not necessary and that an EU treasury would never
happen-.
The problem with “realists” is that, contrary to visionaries, they
are in a constant state of improvisation –no vision = no plan-. Our
European leaders have been grossly improvising since 2008 and the
financial markets are punishing us all for the chaos linked to
improvisation at 27. Secondly there is the problem of democratic
legitimacy; the measures adopted during the last 3 years have been taken
behind closed doors and observed with scepticism by the majority of
europeans. This constant improvisation rules out any public
participation in the current process of European construction; not even
the European Parliament -already seen by many as being to far away-
hasn’t been allowed to participate in the creation of the latest
institutional fixes such as the European Financial Mechanism. What is
worst is that so far the “new” federalists haven’t expressed any regret
or worry about this current lack of democracy in the current shape-up of
the EU. Not surprisingly the EU is in the lowest popularity rates since its creation.
Many claim that the time for visionaries has passed, and with it went
also the first chance to build a political EU capable of controlling
the economic sphere; an EU governed by the people and for the people. It
is claimed that the realists have imposed their lack of vision; the
result being that the necessity of more integration is driving the
agenda but the democratic nature is missing in most of the decisions.
Something is wrong when to save the European peoples they have to be
locked outside the decision room…
It is true that we are in the path of a transfer union which will
lead us to a fiscal union and which will bring with it a European
treasury and European bonds. Eventually, having an European fiscal and
monetary policy might force the creation of a political union. After
all, the political integration in Europe after WWII has followed the
economic integration, and it is important to underline that the
political union has been a consequence, and not a cause, of the economic
integration. Regretably, it can be argued that the failed results of
the referendums on the EU Constitutional Treaty in France and the
Netherlands and after the failed Lisbon treaty referendum in Ireland
also prove that political integration cannot preceed economic
integration. Yet political integration has to be encompassed –even when a
bit delayed- with any progress in European integration. Therefore, the
latest developments in the creation of tools of economic policy should
open the door to further participation of the European people in the EU
decision making. Failing to do so puts the credibility of the european
project at stake.
A lot less romantic than one could have imagined, the path towards an
European federation is not led by the European people, not even by
strong leaders with a vision, it is led by markets alone. However we
have learnt from history that democracy doesn’t happen if people don’t
ask for it. It is therefore of high importance to pursue the vision of
an “European democracy”, and this cannot be done by our “new
federalists” alone. Against all odds the people of Europe have to retake
control of the European process and for this visionaries are still very
much needed!