EU Enlargement: external economic implications. Bruges European Economic Policy (BEEP) Briefing 4/2003


Autoria(s): Pelkmans, Jacques; Casey, Jean-Pierre
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

Unlike some previous EU enlargements (e.g. with the UK and with Spain/Portugal) the present EU enlargement to Central Europe has not prompted much, let alone a fierce, debate about the external dimension. This BEEP briefing discusses the main economic aspects of the external dimension, in particular whether there is a threat of (how much) trade diversion. Attention is paid to the three main topics of interest for third countries: industrial trade effects, impact on FDI and agricultural trade effects. Agriculture is arguably the most sensitive of the three, given the very high CAP border protection, and although large-scale trade diversion may eventually occur under certain scenarios (such as an unreformed CAP), these fears are greatly exaggerated in the short to medium term (5-7 years): the time frame considered is therefore all-important. This conclusion becomes less surprising if one takes a closer look at the current sorry state of agriculture in the CEECs. Separate sections treat the somewhat sensitive subject of U.S.-CEEC Bilateral Investment Treaties, as well as the longterm development perspective, which addresses the prospects for catch-up growth by the accession countries. In the end, non-European stakeholders in the accession process will greatly benefit from sustained catch-up growth by the CEECs, which are locking-in deep reforms due to EU accession.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/58417/1/beep4.pdf

Pelkmans, Jacques and Casey, Jean-Pierre (2003) EU Enlargement: external economic implications. Bruges European Economic Policy (BEEP) Briefing 4/2003. [Policy Paper]

Relação

http://aei.pitt.edu/58417/

Palavras-Chave #enlargement (see Treaty reform) #international trade
Tipo

Policy Paper

NonPeerReviewed