Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction: EMU and the European social model
- 2 The EMU macroeconomic policy regime and the European social model
- 3 Shaping a polity in an economic and monetary union: the EU in comparative perspective
- 4 Monetary integration and the French model
- 5 EMU and German welfare capitalism
- 6 Maastricht to modernization: EMU and the Italian social state
- 7 Constraint or motor? Monetary integration and the construction of a social model in Spain
- 8 The Netherlands: monetary integration and the Polder model
- 9 Belgium: monetary integration and precarious federalism
- 10 The political dynamics of external empowerment: the emergence of EMU and the challenge to the European social model
- 11 Welfare reform in the shadow of EMU
- 12 Industrial relations in EMU: are renationalization and Europeanization two sides of the same coin?
- 13 Conclusions
- References
- Index of names
- Index of subjects
3 - Shaping a polity in an economic and monetary union: the EU in comparative perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction: EMU and the European social model
- 2 The EMU macroeconomic policy regime and the European social model
- 3 Shaping a polity in an economic and monetary union: the EU in comparative perspective
- 4 Monetary integration and the French model
- 5 EMU and German welfare capitalism
- 6 Maastricht to modernization: EMU and the Italian social state
- 7 Constraint or motor? Monetary integration and the construction of a social model in Spain
- 8 The Netherlands: monetary integration and the Polder model
- 9 Belgium: monetary integration and precarious federalism
- 10 The political dynamics of external empowerment: the emergence of EMU and the challenge to the European social model
- 11 Welfare reform in the shadow of EMU
- 12 Industrial relations in EMU: are renationalization and Europeanization two sides of the same coin?
- 13 Conclusions
- References
- Index of names
- Index of subjects
Summary
The system of governance in the EU gives national governments a central role. Brussels has not supplanted nor replaced national capitals, and thus the EU co-exists with powerful national political systems. While governance takes place in Brussels, government takes place in the member states. It is there that electoral accountability, legitimacy, and identity are anchored (Sbragia 2002). Even those who argue that the EU “bears a growing institutional resemblance to the established multi-tiered systems of traditional federal states” accept that national governments “remain extremely powerful” (Pierson and Leibfried 1995: 6).
Federalism has been an attractive referent for scholars precisely because the national governments retain so much power within a system of governance in which an important “center” is nonetheless present (Sbragia 1992b: Rodden 2002). That center is so strong that the EU is no longer simply a sophisticated international organization, but it is weaker than the center found in the decentralized federations of Canada and Switzerland (McKay 2001, 2002; Nicolaidis and Howse 2001: Börzel and Hosli 2002).
Although placing the EU within the universe of federal states certainly presents analytic problems, it does permit useful although not rigorous comparisons. In particular, it highlights features of the process of European integration which might not seem significant if analyzed in isolation.
The issue of policy change is particularly interesting in both the EU and the US. Both systems of governance must cope with a large population, a territorially diverse economy, and the dispersal rather than the centralization of power.
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- Euros and EuropeansMonetary Integration and the European Model of Society, pp. 51 - 75Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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