Research

Europe After the ‘No’ Votes


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Regulation

The 2006 title in the IEA's annual series looking at the state of utility regulation and competition policy

Research

An incisive analysis of the future of the railways

Trade, Development, and Immigration

Professor Patrick Messerlin plots an economic future for the EU.

https://iea.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/upldbook314pdf.pdf
In Europe After the NO Votes , Professor Patrick Messerlin of the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris, argues that the NO votes in the French and Dutch referenda on the proposed EU constitution highlight the need to design an economic agenda for the future of the EU congruent with its fundamental purpose. The NO votes show that the EU cannot be a European ‘super-state’ providing a wide range of social policies, but must return to the modest role originally set out in the slim Treaty of Rome. Professor Messerlin shows how liberalisation of agriculture, manufacturing and services, and engagement with widely held fears about globalisation, must be an essential part of future reform of the EU.

Former European Commissioner Lord Brittan and leading European scholars Professor John Gillingham and Professor Pedro Schwartz provide commentaries on Messerlin’s analysis.

This book will prove essential reading for those concerned with the future of the European Union as it maps out a positive way forward for the EU after its turbulent recent past.

2006, Occasional Papers 139, ISBN 978 0 255 36580 2, 96pp, PB

See also:

The European Institutions as an Interest Group by Roland Vaubel

Should Britain Leave the EU? by Patrick Minford, Vidya Mahambare and Eric Nowell

The ECB and the Euro: The First Five Years by Otmar Issing

The Euro as Politics by Pedro Schwartz

The 2006 Essential Guide to the European Union by Ruth Lea.

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