ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001. As economic integration touches ever more areas of society, more and more people are confronted by the bewildering complexity of the functioning of the European Union. Rather than merely focusing on the description of EU policies, this study of the economics of European integration seeks to: select the most relevant aspects and developments; place the wide variety of issues in a robust conceptual structure; integrate theoretical developments with the results of empirical research and of policy analysis; explain the logic of the dynamic processes; describe the structural features of the European economy; highlight the response of private companies to changes in the regulatory environment; depict the historical developments so as to give a sound basis for the understanding of the present situation and the likely future development; and set the European developments in the light of global developments. In practice Western Europe is the focus of major parts of this book.

part I|90 pages

General Issues

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|30 pages

Dynamics of the Integration Process

chapter 3|24 pages

Short History

chapter 4|24 pages

Institutions

part II|121 pages

Common Market

chapter 5|32 pages

Goods

chapter 6|17 pages

Services

chapter 7|28 pages

Labour

chapter 8|41 pages

Capital

part III|117 pages

Sectors of Activity

chapter 9|23 pages

Agriculture

chapter 10|31 pages

Manufacturing

chapter 11|22 pages

Energy

chapter 12|19 pages

Services

chapter 13|17 pages

Transport

part IV|128 pages

Conditions for Balanced Growth

chapter 14|34 pages

Allocation, Internal Market Policies

chapter 15|28 pages

Stabilisation: Economic and Monetary Union

chapter 16|33 pages

Redistribution: Cohesion Policies

chapter 17|30 pages

External Relations

part V|33 pages

Conclusion

chapter 18|31 pages

Evaluation and Outlook