ABSTRACT

To what extent is business activity governed at a European scale? Since the advent of the recent economic crisis, the EU’s choices about the euro, debt ratios and interest rates have caught the headlines and highlighted the importance of EU decision-making arenas. However, these macro-economic events actually tell us only part of the story about the extent to which business activity is now governed at a European scale.

Based upon original research on four manufactured or processed goods industries (cars, wine, pharmaceuticals and aquaculture), and driven by theory that is constructivist, institutionalist and sociological, this book sets out to analyse just what Europe governs, by whom and why. In doing so, it reveals three recurrent features of the European government of industries: its omnipresence, its incompleteness and its de-politicization. The authors show that the many gaps in the EU’s mode of governing industries stem from struggles over economic doctrine as well as the continued unwillingness of many actors to accord the EU a legitimacy to act politically in the name of industrial government.

This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of European Studies and Political Economy as well as those studying Political Science, Economics, Sociology and Business Studies.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

Studying the EU's government of industries

part I|105 pages

The view from specific industries

chapter 1|22 pages

The EU's government of wine

Switching towards completeness

chapter 2|27 pages

The EU's government of automobiles

From ‘harmonization' to deep incompletenes

chapter 3|31 pages

The EU's government of aquaculture

Completeness unwanted

chapter 4|23 pages

The EU's government of pharmaceuticals

Incompleteness embraced

part II|127 pages

The view from trans-industry regulations

chapter 5|24 pages

Competition policy

Ever present but not all-conquering

chapter 6|25 pages

Sustainable development policy

‘Competitiveness' in all but name

chapter 7|26 pages

Employment policy

Desperately seeking a flexibility-security equilibrium

chapter 8|25 pages

EU trade policy

All pervasive but to what end?

chapter |25 pages

Conclusion

The EU's government of industries, its causes and effects