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This book traces the emergence of the European Free Trade
Association (EFTA) from 1955 to 1963 amid the broader reshaping of
the institutional architecture of post-war Europe. It considers the
ill-fated Free Trade Area (FTA) proposal, the subsequent creation
of EFTA, and the resulting division of Western Europe into two
distinct trading blocs. At its core, the book provides an
international history of a formative moment of post-war and
European integration history, and explores the intense technical
discussions among European states as they grappled with the
prospect of deeper economic and political unity. It thus provides
the first detailed analysis combining the FTA and EFTA
negotiations, considering both state and non-state actors. Drawing
on archives from Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland,
Norway, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the US, as well
as the records of the OEEC and EFTA, it examines the
decision-making processes of those intimately involved as well as
the institutional settings within which they were forced to
reconcile their positions. At a key moment of contemporary European
friction, the book offers a dialogue between the past and those
trying to make sense of events that continue to shape Europe today.
This authoritative volume traces the creation and development of
the EEC as an institution and assesses its impact on the economic
development of Europe and the policy areas under its control.The
book includes a thorough discussion of the background and origins
of the European Economic Community. In the early years of post-war
Europe, the continuous search for a multilateral commercial
agreement resulted in various plans for European commercial
cooperation. These schemes were proposed less in a desire for
European integration and supranational institutions, than in
response to real economic problems and were the precursors to the
formation of the EEC. The next section investigates the process of
creating the EEC including the road to integration of the major
founding members, and the attitude of the United States to European
integration. Finally, it discusses the economic development of the
EEC since 1957. It explores major themes including the impact of
the Community on trade and agriculture and on competition and
financial policy, as well as the effects of its own enlargement.
The study ends with the steps towards closer union embodied in the
Treaty of Maastricht, which signalled the transformation of the
European Economic Community into the European Union.
Since the end of the World War II, nation states have formed
regions to give them some protection from the processes of
globalization and internationalization. Against this background,
the contributors consider the position of China in the processes of
regional competitive interdependency. This book offers analysis at
three levels: internal, regional, and global. Chapters consider
China's position in regional post-socialist associations such as
the BRICS, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), the
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), the Silk Road Economic Belt and the
'One Belt, One Road' (OBOR). Contributors discuss how membership in
these regional bodies is likely to enhance China's economic power,
strategic position, and political importance. A major theme
addressed is whether these new powers will become complementary to
the American-led economic core countries or evolve as
countervailing powers. Contributors suggest that linkages favored
by China's regional associations are more 'network' based and
informal in character. They are more in keeping with
regionalization rather than regional blocs such as the European
Union, which have 'locked in' members to market-driven
institutions. Thus, these new developments move away from a
neo-liberal market perspective and satisfy the needs of members to
retain their economic and political sovereignty. This book
considers whether these new regional blocs led by China will
perform a 'transformative' process for the international order or
become an alternative-supplementary to, but not replacing, the
existing institutions of the North. An important topic is the
relationship of Russia and China to the Central Asian countries of
the former USSR and the interaction between the Russia-led Eurasian
Economic Union and the Chinese initiative of the Silk Road Economic
Belt. There is potential for the evolution of an alliance between
China and Russia against the neo-liberal order led by the USA.
Concurrently, they bring out possible the tensions between Russia's
and China's conflicting interests over influence in Central Asia.
Reactions to China's rise include the Trump administration's
movement from a multilateral to a bi-lateral trade policy and the
threat of discriminatory tariffs for China. The contributors seek
to promote a better appreciation of China's role in regional
associations, and the implications of contemporary developments in
economic, geo-political, and international political affairs in the
21st century.
On 26 September 1936, deep in the night, the Dutch cabinet took the
decision to cut the guilder's link with gold and to devalue its
currency. It was the last of the increasingly isolated and
beleaguered 'gold bloc' countries to do so, having outlasted
Switzerland by less than a day; the last country in Europe in which
holders of a currency could exchange it for gold at the rate which
had prevailed before the First World War; the last country to leave
the gold standard. The reason why the 'Gold Bloc', which in
September 1936 comprised only France, Switzerland and the
Netherlands, should have hung on so long is something of a puzzle
to historians since it has become virtually axiomatic that their
recoveries would have begun sooner and proceded more strongly had
they cut the link with gold and devalued their currencies much
earlier. The fact that the decision not to do so has been seen as
perverse, combined with the fact that in order to cope with the
consequences of that decision governments chose to adopt
deflationary policies to 'correct' the economy, has led historians
for a long time to dismiss a whole generation of politicians and
their' advisors' as stubborn, conservative and short-sighted. The
Keynesian revolution and the long post-war economic boom had
consigned them and their ilk to the dustbin of history for ever.
Richard T. Griffiths has been writing about questions of European
integration for decades, and this volume gathers the most important
of those writings. Topics covered include the early days of the
Marshall Plan, the difficulties and opportunities brought by the
development of the European Economic Community in the 1970s and
'80s, the role of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development, and the emergence of the European Union. Commanding
and compelling, the collection serves as a fitting capstone to a
long, engaged career.
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