He starts off strongly:
“People do not agree with the EU in its present form… people feel that the idea has become a bureaucracy and they reject it…As a young man I've always fought for the United States of Europe. Today I know that this is not possible. We will not turn Germany and France into California and Florida.”He continues even stronger:
“The EU must focus on the essentials and the leave the labelling of Hessian apple wine to the Hessians.”Hear hear.
He also proposes a move towards a free trade area in the Mediterranean - which we also have argued for:
“In the 21st century the population of North Africa will exceed 300 million people who need infrastructure, education, hospitals and sustainable agriculture...Why do not we create an economic area in the Mediterranean? Instead, we'd rather bicker about what fertilizer for farmers to deploy.”But from there he starts to go downhill, and fast and steep at that:
“The euro is one of the greatest icons [of an integrated Europe] which expresses the economic strength of the still richest continent through a common currency… .”Right...
Continuing downhill he argues that thr EU budget ought to be spared the kind of austerity that member states are having to implement, saying:
“when it comes to growth, the [structural and cohesion funds] are the most successful project of the EU. There are certainly some highways built incorrectly, but the cohesion policy has recently led to enormous economic growth in Eastern Europe and before that in the South.”It seems that Schulz must have mislaid his copy of our recent report on the effectiveness (or lack thereof) of the structural funds. He's right that the funds should be focussed on the EU's new memebr states, but totally wrong that the funds have categorically have had a positive impact in Europe's south - there's no conclusive evidence for that.
Schulz also includes a tongue in cheek defence of Chancellor Angela Merkel - showing that despite presiding over a rather dull institution, he can afford a joke or two:
“I must acknowledge [Merkel’s crisis management] without envy, it's a great achievement. It's like in football. The game lasts ninety minutes and the end Germany always wins, as they say in England, even if this is not true. In the European Council, it is usually 26 against one. In the end, however everyone agrees with Mrs. Merkel.”
4 comments:
How sad that Martin Schulz has any position of authority in the EU, given his totally unrealistic view of the single currency. It may well be an icon, but not of success.
His ideas about a Mediterranean trade area are also worrying. Any dealings with the fundamentalist Islamic governments of North Africa will be a disaster, whatever they are. The EU wouldn't be able to do right for doing wrong, as the saying goes.
Sheona: whilst I can agree with your first paragraph, I cannot with the second. Please have a look at the website of an organisation named ANIMA and you will see what a huge amount of good has been done over the years. To place all countries within your classification is too much of a generalisation.
Thank you for your response, Peripatetic Scribe. I cannot find ANIMA. I am sure much good work has been done, but the regimes have recently changed and future projects may not be welcome. I must admit that I felt Schulz's comment had a distinctly colonial flavour.
Sheona:
The following link will show you why I made my comment:
http://www.animaweb.org/en/index.php
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