The European Union: Questions and Answers
Kristin Archick
Specialist in European Affairs
Derek E. Mix
Analyst in European Affairs
September 25, 2009February 25, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS21372
CRS Report for Congress
Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress
The European Union: Questions and Answers
Summary
The European Union (EU) is a uniquean economic and political partnership in which 27 countries
share sovereignty over an extensive range of policy areas. With strong U.S. support and
encouragement, a group of European statesmen began this process of integration after World War
II with the hope of ensuring peace on the continent. Over the years, additional economic and
political rationale have emerged to support further integration.
Although some issues require unanimous consensus among member countries, EU decisionmaking is supranational on most economic and social issues. The three main institutions of the
EU are the European Commission (essentially the EU’s executive), the Council of the European
Union (representing the national governments), and the European Parliament (representing the
citizens of the EU). The yet-to-be-ratified Lisbon Treaty is the EU’s latest attempt to reform its
institutional arrangements and decision-making procedures. Enlargements in 2004 and 2007
increased the number of member countries in the EU from 15 to 27that represents a unique form
of cooperation among its 27 sovereign member states. The Union is the latest stage of a process
of integration begun after World War II to promote peace, stability, and economic prosperity in
Europe. The United States has strongly supported the EU and its progenitors as a means to foster
democratic states and robust trading partners.
The EU has been built through a series of binding treaties and EU member states have committed
to a process of integration by harmonizing laws and adopting common policies on an extensive
range of issues. For most economic and social issues, EU member states have largely pooled their
national sovereignty and EU decision-making has a supranational quality. Decisions in other
areas, such as foreign policy, require unanimous consensus among member states.
EU member states work together through common institutions to set policy and to promote their
collective interests. The three main institutions of the EU are the European Commission
(essentially the EU’s executive), the Council of the European Union (representing the national
governments), and the European Parliament (representing the citizens of the EU). The newly
ratified Lisbon Treaty is the EU’s latest attempt to reform its institutional arrangements and
decision-making procedures in order to enable an enlarged EU to function more effectively.
The EU has a strong common trade policy, and a developing Common Foreign and Security
Policy (CFSP) for a more united voice in global affairs. It has also been developing a European
seeking to build a
Common Security and Defense Policy (ESDPCSDP) in order to improve its military capabilities and
capacity to
act independently. Although some shortcomings exist in EU-NATO relations, the two institutions
institutions continue to seek a more cooperative and complementary relationship. Over the last
decade especially, the EU has also been working to forge common internal security measures in
the Justice and Home Affairs (JHA) field, including by boosting police and judicial cooperation
and enhancing the Union’s ability to combat terrorism and other cross-border crimes.
The United States and the EU share a large, mutually beneficial trade and investment relationship.
The global financial crisis and recession has challenged both sides to forge a common response.
The United States and EU have a number of lingering trade disputes, but have led the push to
liberalize world trade, and have sought to reduce non-tariff and regulatory barriers in the
transatlantic marketplace. With compatible worldviews on most global issues, the United States
and the EU also have a well-developed and cooperative political relationship.
This report provides a summary overview of these issues, many of which may be of interest to the
111th Congress
This report provides a summary overview of these issues, many of which may be of interest to the
second session of the 111th Congress. For more information, also see CRS Report RS21618, The
European Union’s Reform Process: The Lisbon Treaty, by Kristin Archick and Derek E. Mix, and
CRS Report RS21998, The European Parliament, by Kristin Archick and Derek E. Mix.
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
Contents
What Is the European Union?......................................................................................................1
Why Integration? .........How Does the EU Work? ...............................................................................................................1
How DoesIs the EU Work? Governed?............................................................................................................1
How is the EU Governed2
What Is the Lisbon Treaty?...........................................................................................................2
What is the Lisbon Treaty3
Why and How Is the EU Enlarging?..........................................................................................................3
How Do European Countries View the EU? 4
Does the EU Have a Foreign Policy?..............................................................................................4
Why and How Is the EU Enlarging?5
Does the EU Have a Defense Policy? ............................................................................................4
Does the EU Have a Foreign Policy?...5
What Is the Relationship of the EU to NATO?........................................................................................5
Does the EU Have a Defense Policy6
What Is Justice and Home Affairs (JHA)? ..........................................................................................5
What is the Relationship of the EU to NATO? 7
Does the EU Have a Trade Policy?.............................................................................6
Does the EU Have a Trade Policy?........................7
How Do EU Countries and Citizens View the EU? ......................................................................68
Does the United States Have a Formal Relationship with the EU? ...............................................78
Who Are U.S. Officials’ Counterparts in the EU? ........................................................................79
How Are U.S.-EU Economic Relations Doing? ...........................................................................79
Contacts
Author Contact Information ........................................................................................................8 10
Congressional Research Service
The European Union: Questions and Answers
What Is the European Union?
The European Union (EU) is an economic and political partnership that is unique in history. Built
upon a series of treaties and embodied in a set of governing institutions, the EU represents a
voluntary pooling of sovereignty among 27 countries.1 These countries have committed to a
process of integration by harmonizing laws and adopting common policies on an extensive range
of issues. Notable areas of shared sovereignty include a customs union; a common trade policy; a
single market in which goods, people, and capital move freely; a common currency (the euro) that
is used by 16 member states;2 and many aspects of social and environmental policy. EU member
states have also taken significant steps in the development of a Common Foreign and Security
Policy (CFSP) and closer police and judicial cooperation.
Why Integration?
In the 1950s, a group of European leaders hoped that by creating communities of shared
sovereignty and interdependence, another war in Europe would be made unthinkable. At first,
Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands agreed to jointly manage
their coal and steel industries. These six then began working toward increasing economic
integration and developing a common market, and also agreed to cooperate on atomic energy.
Over the ensuing decades, as integration helped underpin Europe’s post-war economic success,
peace and prosperity became the mutually reinforcing, fundamental rationale for deepening
(increasing the degree of integration) and widening (adding new countries). More recently,
additional reasons have grown in importance: proponents of integration argue that in addition to
economic challenges, problems such as terrorism, immigration, and the environment can no
longer be dealt with effectively at a national level alone. Many also believe that a united voice in
foreign policy and security matters is increasingly essential for European influence in world
affairs.
How Does the EU Work?
EU policy areas are conceptually divided into three “pillars.” Pillar One includes a wide range of
economic (e.g., trade, agriculture, customs union, single market,) and social (e.g., health,
research, education, immigration, environment, consumer protection) policies. Integration in
these areas is the most developed and far-reaching. Pillar One decision-making is supranational—
EU institutions hold executive authority and can impose binding decisions on national
governments. Pillar Two is the EU Common Foreign and Security Policy, and Pillar Three is
police and judicial cooperation in criminal matters. Decision-making in Pillar Two and Pillar
Three is intergovernmental—agreement between member state governments must be unanimous
and any one may veto a decision.
1
The member countries of the EU are Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands,
Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
2
The members of the Eurozone are Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy,
Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain.
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
How is the EU Governed?
Three institutions are central to EU decision- and policy-making. They do not correspond exactly
to the traditional branches of government or division of power in representative democracies.
•
The European Commission upholds the common interest of the EU as a whole.
The Commission is essentially the EU’s executive: it implements and manages
Council decisions and common policies, ensuring that member states adopt and
abide by the provisions of EU treaties, regulations, and directives. The
Commission is the EU’s primary administrative entity. In most cases, the
Commission has the sole right of legislative initiative and proposes legislation to
the Council. The 27 commissioners, one from each country, are appointed by
member state consensus to five-year terms. One is selected to lead and represent
the Commission as the Commission President. The others hold a distinct
portfolio (e.g., agriculture, energy, external relations), with five double-hatted as
Vice Presidents in addition to their portfolios. On many issues, the Commission
represents the EU internationally and handles negotiations with outside countries.
•
The Council of the European Union (also called the Council of Ministers)
represents the national governments. The main decision-making body of the EU,
the Council enacts legislation, usually based on proposals put forward by the
Commission. A minister from each country takes part in Council meetings, with
participation configured according to the subject under consideration (e.g.,
foreign ministers would meet to discuss the Middle East, agriculture ministers to
discuss farm subsidies). Most decisions are made by qualified majority vote, but
some areas—such as foreign and defense policy, taxation, amending EU treaties,
or accepting new members—require unanimity. 3 Council decisions are often
taken in consultation or “co-decision” with the European Parliament. The
Presidency of the Council rotates among the member states, changing every six
months. The presidency country sets agenda priorities and organizes the work of
the Council.
•
The European Parliament represents the citizens of the EU. The Parliament
consists of 736 members who are directly elected in each member state for fiveyear terms. Each member state holds a number of seats approximately
proportional to the size of its population. Members of the European Parliament
(MEP) caucus according to trans-national groups based on political affiliation,
rather than by country.4 The Parliament cannot initiate legislation, but it has
numerous important powers of oversight and supervision. It shares “co-decision”
3
In qualified majority voting, countries are allotted a number of votes in rough proportion to their population size.
Passage of a measure requires a double majority: at least half of the member states (two-thirds if not a Commission
initiative) and 255 out of the 345 total votes. Votes must also represent at least 62% of the total EU population.
4
There are currently 7 political groups in the European Parliament: the Group of the European People’s Party
(Christian Democrats) (265 MEPs); the Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European
Parliament (184); the Group of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (84); the Group of the
Greens/European Free Alliance (55); the European Conservatives and Reformists Group (54); the Confederal Group of
the European United Left-Nordic Green Left (35); and the Europe of Freedom and Democracy Group (32). There are
also 27 non-attached MEPs.
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
power with the Council of Ministers in many areas, can amend and reject the
EU’s budget, and can vote to dismiss the Commission.
•
A number of other institutions also play important roles in the EU. The European
Council is composed of the Heads of State or Government of the member states
plus the Commission President. Meeting at least twice a year (in what are often
termed “EU Summits”), the European Council acts principally as a strategic
guide for EU policy. The Court of Justice interprets EU laws and rules on
compliance; a Court of Auditors monitors financial management; the European
Central Bank manages the euro and monetary policy; and advisory committees
represent economic, social, and regional interests.
What is the Lisbon Treaty?
In December 2007, EU leaders approved the Lisbon Treaty, seeking to amend existing EU treaties
with a number of significant reforms. In order to come into force, the treaty must be ratified by all
27 member states. Leaders had initially hoped that ratification would be complete in the first half
of 2009, but Ireland’s rejection of the treaty in a June 2008 national referendum threw the
timetable for adoption into disarray. Three other countries have not completed formal ratification,
but Ireland is the only country to decide ratification of the Lisbon Treaty by referendum. Ireland
plans to try again with a second vote on October 2, 2009.
The major aims of the Lisbon Treaty are to streamline institutional decision-making, to give the
EU a stronger and more coherent global voice and identity, and to increase democracy and
transparency within the EU. Supporters argue that these reforms are needed for an EU of 27
members to function more efficiently and effectively. The treaty would create a new position,
President of the European Council, who would serve as coordinator and spokesman for the work
of the 27 Heads of State or Government. This individual, who would be elected to a oncerenewable term of two-and-a-half years, would also manage relations between the EU
institutions. A modified system of rotating national presidencies would continue to organize much
of the work of the Council of Ministers. Another new position would make a single representative
for EU foreign and security policy, combining the duties of the Council’s High Representative for
CFSP and the Commissioner for External Relations. The Lisbon Treaty would increase the
number of areas decided by qualified majority voting—although issues such as CFSP and
taxation would still be subject to unanimous intergovernmental consensus. The treaty would also
increase the power of the European Parliament by expanding use of the co-decision procedure,
give national parliaments more of a role in EU policy-making, and allow for new proposals based
on citizen initiatives. The Lisbon Treaty would do away with the “pillar” structure and give the
EU a single legal personality.
The Lisbon Treaty follows the failure of the EU constitutional treaty, a major reform effort that
was shelved after its rejection in referendums held in France and the Netherlands in 2005. Legally
speaking, the constitutional treaty would have wholly replaced, rather than amended, existing EU
treaties; however, analysts have noted that the Lisbon Treaty preserves over 90% of the substance
of the constitutional treaty.
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
How Do European Countries View the EU?
All member states hold that the EU brings them important political and economic benefits.
Nevertheless, tensions have long existed within the EU between those seeking an “ever closer
union” through greater integration and those that prefer a more intergovernmental footing.
Concerns about the impingement of the EU on national sovereignty have played out in decisions
to “opt out” of certain aspects of integration, such as passport- and visa-free travel within the EU
(UK and Ireland), the euro (UK, Denmark, and Sweden), Justice and Home Affairs issues (UK,
Ireland, and Denmark), and the common defense policy (Denmark). Another classic divide in the
EU falls along big versus small state lines—small states are often cautious of initiatives that they
fear could allow a few large states to dominate decision-making. In addition, the newer member
states of central and eastern Europe have recent histories of Communism and Soviet domination,
which impact their view on issues such as relations with Russia, EU treaties and decision-making
arrangements, and even climate change policy. At times, such differences have caused frictions
with Western European member states and slowed EU decision-making.
The prevailing view among European citizens is likewise favorable toward the EU, and many
assert a general perception that the EU benefits them in important ways. Some observers have
noted that, owing largely to the EU, many of the continent’s citizens describe a European identity
layered on top of national, regional, and local identities. However, there is also a certain amount
of “Euro-skepticism” among a significant portion of Europe’s citizens. Concerns over the loss of
national sovereignty are one central element of this sentiment. Some citizens assert that there is a
“democratic deficit”—a feeling that one has no say over decisions taken in far-away Brussels.
Others view the EU as a giant bureaucracy that delivers few concrete benefits. Some observers
suggest that the benefits and founding ideals of the EU—peace and prosperity—may not ring as
loudly among younger generations with no experience of war or economic hardship.
Why and How Is the EU Enlarging?
Many observers have regarded EU enlargement as crucial to expanding stability and prosperity
across Europe. In order to be eligible for membership, countries must first meet criteria for
democracy, rule of law, and economic policy. Observers have noted that the prospect of
membership can act as an incentive for countries to adopt beneficial reforms in order to qualify.
Once a country becomes an official candidate, accession negotiations are a long and complex
process in which the applicant must adopt and implement a massive body of EU laws, treaties,
and regulations that now cover 35 “chapters” (subject areas).
In 1973, Denmark, Ireland, and the United Kingdom joined the six pioneer countries (Belgium,
France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands). Greece joined in 1981, Spain and
Portugal in 1986, and Austria, Finland, and Sweden in 1995. In 2004, the EU welcomed eight
formerly communist countries of central and eastern Europe—the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia—plus Cyprus and Malta. Bulgaria
and Romania joined in 2007. Following these latest rounds, some Europeans have spoken of
“enlargement fatigue” and advocated pausing enlargement pending the enactment of internal
reforms that allow an EU of 27-plus members to function more smoothly.
Further enlargement is likely to focus on the Balkans—Croatia and Macedonia are officially
considered candidates for accession, and Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, and
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
Serbia are potential candidates down the road. There are indications that Iceland may apply for
membership, an effort that would likely receive quick approval. Turkey has also had a longstanding bid for EU membership. Whether owing to its demographic, geographic, economic, or
cultural characteristics, many Europeans are opposed to the idea of Turkish EU membership.
Many analysts believe that the final outcome of EU accession negotiations with Turkey is
uncertain. The status of Turkey’s application is a frequent source of tension between Turkey and
the EU.
Does the EU Have a Foreign Policy?
The EU has a Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) in which member states agree to
adopt shared positions, undertake joint actions, and pursue coordinated strategies. Since CFSP
decision-making is intergovernmental and requires unanimity, all 27 members must agree that a
common EU stance is the most desirable and effective approach to a given issue, and all 27
members must agree on the terms of that stance. CFSP does not preclude individual member
states pursuing their own national foreign policies or conducting their own national diplomacy.
Proponents of expanding CFSP assert that the EU must increasingly speak with one voice in
foreign and security policy if its global weight and influence are to match its economic clout.
Skeptics argue, however, that the reach and credibility of CFSP too often suffers from an inability
to reach consensus. While EU countries do often have similar worldviews and international goals,
some differences in viewpoint are inevitable among 27 countries that still retain different
approaches, cultures, histories, and relationships—and often different national interests—when it
comes to foreign policy.
Currently, two major positions represent the EU externally. The High Representative for CFSP
(Javier Solana) represents the Council of the EU in CFSP matters, such as negotiations with Iran,
EU military missions, counterterrorism policy, sanctions, and a wide range of other issues on
which CFSP declarations have been agreed. The Commissioner for External Relations (Benita
Ferrero-Waldner) represents the EU in general dialogue and cooperation with outside countries,
including aid and development support and European Neighborhood Policy, in which the EU
seeks to build close partnerships with its southern and eastern neighbors. The Lisbon Treaty, if
approved, would combine these posts into a single position—High Representative for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy/Vice President of the Commission. The treaty would also create an
EU diplomatic corps (European External Action Service) to support the High Representative.
Does the EU Have a Defense Policy?
The EU has been developing its European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP), which was
formally launched in 1999. The main purpose of ESDP is twofold: to help build up European
military capabilities, and to give the EU a capacity for separate action in cases where NATO is
not engaged. Through a series of “Headline Goals,” the EU has set targets for the development of
forces and capabilities. Forces under development include a rapid reaction force and
multinational “battlegroups.” ESDP does not mean a standing “EU army,” but rather a catalogue
of forces that member countries could make available for EU missions. ESDP operations focus
largely on tasks such as peacekeeping, crisis management, and humanitarian assistance. ESDP
missions are also often civilian, rather than military, in nature, with objectives such as police and
judicial training (“rule of law”) or security sector reform. The EU is currently engaged in some 12
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
ESDP missions in the Balkans, Africa, Caucasus, and the Middle East, and has completed an
additional 10 missions in previous years. However, improving military capabilities has been
difficult, especially given flat or declining European defense budgets. Serious capability gaps
continue to exist in areas such as strategic airlift and sealift, and a relatively low percentage of
European forces are deployable for expeditionary operations. Some analysts have suggested asset
pooling and a greater focus on national niche capabilities as a way forward for European defense.
Reflecting such thinking, the EU created the European Defense Agency in 2004 in order to help
coordinate defense-industrial and procurement policy.
What is the Relationship of the EU to NATO?
Despite overlapping membership and interests, NATO and the European Union have struggled to
establish a cooperative and complementary relationship.5 In the United States and some other
NATO countries such as the UK, support for ESDP as a means for Europe to develop security
capabilities has mostly overcome initial concerns that ESDP would mean decoupling/delinking
(from NATO strategy and decision-making), duplication (of NATO structures and resources), and
discrimination (against non-EU members of NATO). The 2003 Berlin Plus agreement, allowing
EU-led missions access to NATO assets and planning capabilities, remains the biggest step
forward to date and the cornerstone of EU-NATO relations. Berlin Plus reflects a pragmatic
conclusion that NATO and the EU need not be competitors, but are better served as partners
sharing a pool of resources and offering each other an array of complementary capabilities.
While EU-NATO cooperation exists at the tactical level, procedural blockage related to EUTurkey tensions and the issue of divided Cyprus prevents the two institutions from sharing
sensitive intelligence information, thereby hindering their ability to cooperate on matters of
strategic importance. Some analysts argue that this impasse needs to be resolved to allow greater
EU-NATO cooperation. An enhanced EU-NATO relationship might include joint planning in
areas such as crisis management, defense policy, and procurement, as well as more formal
coordination of complementary capabilities for expeditionary missions, stabilization and
reconstruction operations, and security sector reform programs.
Does the EU Have a Trade Policy?
Yes. EU member states have a common external trade policy in which the European Commission
negotiates trade deals with outside countries and trading blocs on behalf of the Union as a whole.
The EU’s trade policy is one of its most well-developed and integrated policies. It evolved along
with the common market, which provides for the free movement of goods within the EU—
preventing one member state from importing foreign goods at cheaper prices due to lower tariffs
and then re-exporting the items to another member with higher tariffs. The scope of the common
trade policy has been extended to include negotiations on services and intellectual property in
some cases. The Council of Ministers has the power to establish objectives for trade negotiations
and can approve or reject agreements reached by the Commission. EU rules allow the Council to
make trade decisions with qualified majority voting, but in practice the Council tends to employ
5
21 countries belong to both NATO and the EU. There are six non-NATO members of the EU (Austria, Cyprus,
Finland, Ireland, Malta, and Sweden) and seven non-EU members of NATO (Albania, Canada, Croatia, Iceland,
Norway, Turkey, and the United States).
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
consensus. The Commission and the Council work together to set the common customs tariff,
guide export policy, and decide on trade protection or retaliation measures where necessary. The
EU also plays a leading role in the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Does the United States Have a Formal Relationship
with the EU?
Yes. For decades, the United States and the EU (and its progenitors) have maintained diplomatic
and economic ties. Washington has strongly supported European integration, and U.S.-EU trade
and investment relations are extensive. The 1990 U.S.-EU Transatlantic Declaration set out
principles for greater consultation, and established regular summit and ministerial meetings. In
1995, the New Transatlantic Agenda (NTA) and the EU-U.S. Joint Action Plan provided a
framework for promoting stability and democracy together, responding to global changes, and
expanding world trade. The NTA also sought to strengthen individual ties across the Atlantic, and
launched a number of dialogues, including for business leaders and legislators. The Transatlantic
Legislators’ Dialogue (TLD) has been the formal mechanism for engagement and exchange
between the U.S. House of Representatives and the European Parliament since 1972.
The United States also maintains strong bilateral ties with individual EU member states. Some
observers call for a further strengthening of the U.S.-EU relationship, arguing that U.S.
engagement at the EU level—rather than bilaterally with individual capitals—is the most relevant
and effective approach in a large and growing number of issues.
Who Are U.S. Officials’ Counterparts in the EU?
U.S.-EU Summits occur at least once a year, with the U.S. president meeting with the president of
the European Commission and the Head of State or Government of the country holding the
rotating Council presidency. The U.S. Secretary of State’s most frequent interlocutors in the EU
context are the High Representative for CFSP, the External Relations Commissioner, and the
foreign minister of the EU presidency country. The U.S. Trade Representative’s key interlocutor
is the European Commissioner for Trade, who directs the EU’s common external trade policy.
Other U.S. cabinet-level officials interact with Commission counterparts or member state
ministers in the Council of Ministers context as issues arise. Many working-level relationships
between U.S. and EU officials also exist. A delegation in Washington, DC, represents the
European Commission in its dealings with the U.S. government, while the U.S. Mission to the
European Union represents Washington’s interests in Brussels.
How Are U.S.-EU Economic Relations Doing?
Comprising nearly 60% of global gross domestic product (GDP), the U.S.-EU trade and
investment relationship is the largest and most influential in the world. In 2007, the value of the
two-way transatlantic flow of goods, services, and income receipts from investment totaled more
than $1.6 trillion. U.S. and European companies are also the biggest investors in each other’s
markets: total stock of two-way direct investment exceeded $2.6 trillion by the end of 2007.
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The global financial crisis and recession have posed difficult challenges to both sides and raised
concerns about the adoption of protectionist policies. While leaders have pursued a coordinated
response through the G-20, different preferences have emerged in the process. At the April 2009
G-20 Summit in London, European leaders resisted U.S. calls for further stimulus spending,
focusing instead on efforts to reform regulation of the global financial system. Leaders agreed to
a package worth around $1 trillion in extra resources for the International Monetary Fund and
financing for global trade.
Although an inability to reach a transatlantic agreement on agricultural subsidies has contributed
to stalling the Doha Round of trade negotiations, U.S.-EU cooperation has been the key driving
force behind efforts to liberalize world trade. Transatlantic trade disputes persist over poultry,
subsidies to Boeing and Airbus, hormone-treated beef, and bio-engineered food products. The
United States and the EU have made a number of attempts to reduce remaining non-tariff and
regulatory barriers to trade and investment. The Transatlantic Economic Council (TEC) was
created at the 2007 U.S.-EU summit and tasked with advancing the process of regulatory
cooperation and barrier reduction. Many analysts note that resolving U.S.-EU trade disputes has
become increasingly difficult, perhaps partly because both sides are of roughly equal economic
strength and neither has the ability to impose concessions on the other. Another factor may be that
many disputes involve differences in regulatory frameworks, political priorities, and domestic
values and preferences.
Author Contact Information
Kristin Archick
Specialist in European Affairs
karchick@crs.loc.gov, 7-2668
Congressional Research Service
Derek E. Mix
Analyst in European Affairs
dmix@crs.loc.gov, 7-9116
8represents a unique form
of cooperation among its 27 sovereign member states (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy,
Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom). The Union is the latest stage of a process of
integration begun after World War II to promote peace and economic prosperity in Europe. Its
founders hoped that by creating communities of shared sovereignty and interdependence—
initially in areas of coal and steel production, economics and trade, and nuclear energy—another
war in Europe would be unthinkable. Since the 1950s, this European integration project has
expanded to encompass many economic sectors, a customs union, a single market in which
goods, people, and capital move freely, a common trade policy, a common agricultural policy, a
common currency (the euro) that is used by 16 member states,1 and many aspects of social and
environmental policy. Since the mid-1990s, EU member states have also taken significant steps
toward political integration, with decisions to develop a common foreign policy and closer police
and judicial cooperation.
How Does the EU Work?
The EU has been built through a series of binding treaties and EU member states have committed
to a process of integration by harmonizing laws and adopting common policies on an extensive
range of issues. EU member states work together through common institutions (see next question)
to set policy and promote their collective interests.
Until recently, EU policy areas were conceptually divided into three “pillars” and decisionmaking processes differed in each. Pillar One was the European Community, which encompassed
a multitude of economic and social policies ranging from trade and agriculture to education and
the environment. In Pillar One areas, integration was (and remains) the most developed and farreaching; member states have largely pooled their national sovereignty and EU institutions hold
executive authority. Policy decisions in Pillar One areas often had a supranational character
because most were subject to a complex majority voting system. Pillar Two established a
Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) to permit joint action in foreign and security
affairs. Pillar Three sought to create a Justice and Home Affairs (JHA) policy to foster common
internal security measures and closer police and judicial coordination. Under Pillars Two and
Three, member states agreed to cooperate but decision-making was intergovernmental and
required unanimity. As a result, member states retained more discretion over their participation as
any one member could veto a decision.
However, the EU’s newly ratified Lisbon Treaty (see below) technically does away with this
“pillar” structure. In an effort to improve the efficiency of EU decision-making, the Lisbon Treaty
extends the use of the EU’s majority voting system beyond the traditional Pillar One field to
many additional policy areas, including most JHA issues. Unanimous decision-making is retained
1
The 16 members of the EU that use the euro are: Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain.
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The European Union: Questions and Answers
in some areas, including for most aspects of foreign and defense policy (i.e., the former Pillar
Two), as well as tax matters and social security.
In effect, the Lisbon Treaty attempts to make the need for unanimity in EU decision-making the
exception rather than the rule. Nevertheless, in practice, member states will likely still strive for
consensus on sensitive policy issues (such as police cooperation, immigration, and countering
terrorism) that are usually viewed as central to a nation-state’s sovereignty. At the same time, the
mere possibility of a vote may make member state governments more willing to compromise and
reach a common policy decision.
How Is the EU Governed?
Three institutions are central to EU decision- and policy-making. They do not correspond exactly
to the traditional branches of government or division of power in representative democracies.
Rather, they embody the EU’s dual supranational and intergovernmental character:
• The European Commission upholds the common interest of the Union as a whole.
The Commission is essentially the EU’s executive: it implements and manages EU
decisions and common policies, and ensures that member states adopt and abide by the
provisions of EU treaties, regulations, and directives. In most cases, the Commission has
the sole right of legislative initiative. The 27 Commissioners, one from each country, are
appointed by agreement among the member states to five-year terms. One is selected to
lead and represent the Commission as the Commission President. The others hold a
distinct portfolio (e.g., agriculture, energy, trade). On many issues, the Commission
represents the EU internationally and handles negotiations with outside countries. The
Commission is also the EU’s primary administrative entity.
• The Council of the European Union (also called the Council of Ministers) represents
the national governments. As the main decision-making body of the EU, the Council
enacts legislation, usually based on proposals put forward by the Commission. A minister
from each country takes part in Council meetings, with participation configured
according to the subject under consideration (e.g., foreign ministers would meet to
discuss the Middle East, agriculture ministers to discuss farm subsidies). Most decisions
are subject to a complex qualified majority voting system, but some areas—such as
foreign and defense policy, taxation, amending EU treaties, or accepting new members—
require unanimity. The Presidency of the Council rotates among the member states,
changing every six months. The presidency country sets agenda priorities and organizes
most of the work of the Council.
• The European Parliament represents the citizens of the EU. The Parliament currently
consists of 736 members who are directly elected in each member state for five-year
terms. Each member state holds a number of seats approximately proportional to the size
of its population. The Parliament cannot initiate legislation like national parliaments, but
it shares “co-decision” power with the Council of Ministers in many areas, and can
amend or reject the EU’s budget. The Parliament must also approve incoming
Commissions and can vote to dismiss the entire Commission. Members of the European
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Parliament (MEPs) caucus according to transnational groups based on political affiliation,
rather than by nationality.2
• A number of other institutions also play key roles in the EU. The European Council
is composed of the Heads of State or Government of the member states, plus its President
as well as the President of the European Commission. Meeting at least four times a year
(in what are often termed “EU Summits”), the European Council acts principally as a
strategic guide and driving force for EU policy. The Court of Justice interprets EU laws
and rules on compliance; a Court of Auditors monitors financial management; the
European Central Bank manages the euro and monetary policy; and advisory committees
represent economic, social, and regional interests.
What Is the Lisbon Treaty?
On December 1, 2009, the EU’s latest institutional reform endeavor—the Lisbon Treaty—came
into force following its ratification by all 27 member states. The Lisbon Treaty was initially
approved by EU leaders in December 2007; it is the final product of an effort begun in 2002 to
reform the EU’s governing institutions and decision-making processes in order to enable an
enlarged Union to function more effectively. The history of the Lisbon Treaty is replete with
contentious negotiations among the member states and numerous ratification hurdles. The Lisbon
Treaty evolved from the proposed EU constitutional treaty, which was rejected in French and
Dutch national referendums in 2005. The future of the Lisbon Treaty was also thrown into doubt
when Ireland initially rejected it in a referendum in June 2008. In a second referendum in October
2009, Irish voters approved the treaty after securing some modifications. Although all other EU
member states ratified the Lisbon Treaty through their parliaments, it also faced objections in
some national legislatures, which contributed to the delay in its entrance into force. The Czech
Republic was the last EU member state to ratify the Lisbon Treaty in November 2009.3
The major aims of the Lisbon Treaty are to streamline EU decision-making, to give the EU a
stronger and more coherent voice and identity on the world stage, and to increase democracy and
transparency within the EU. To help accomplish these goals, the treaty creates two new EU
leadership positions. The new President of the European Council will serve as coordinator and
spokesman for the work of the 27 Heads of State or Government. This individual, elected to a
once-renewable term of two-and-a-half years, will also manage relations between the EU
institutions. A modified system of rotating national presidencies will continue to organize much
of the work of the Council of Ministers. The treaty also creates a single representative for EU
foreign and security policy to serve, essentially, as the EU’s chief diplomat.
Among other key measures, the Lisbon Treaty simplifies the EU’s qualified majority voting
system and expands its use to policy areas previously subject to unanimity. In addition, the treaty
increases the relative power of the European Parliament by extending the use of the “co-decision”
2
There are currently 7 political groups in the European Parliament: the Group of the European People’s Party
(Christian Democrats); the Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament;
the Group of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe; the Group of the Greens/European Free Alliance; the
European Conservatives and Reformists Group; the Confederal Group of the European United Left-Nordic Green Left;
and the Europe of Freedom and Democracy Group. There are also several non-attached MEPs.
3
The Lisbon Treaty amends, rather than replaces, existing EU treaties. Despite the failure of the EU constitutional
treaty, experts say the Lisbon Treaty preserves over 90% of the substance of the original treaty.
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procedure to more policy areas, including agriculture and home affairs issues.4 It also gives
national parliaments a degree of greater authority to challenge draft EU legislation and allows for
the possibility of new legislative proposals based on citizen initiatives.
Why and How Is the EU Enlarging?
The EU views the enlargement process as an extraordinary opportunity to promote stability and
prosperity in Europe. Since 2004, EU membership has grown from 15 to 27 countries, bringing in
most states of central and eastern Europe and fulfilling an historic pledge to further the
integration of the continent by peaceful means. In order to be eligible for EU membership,
countries must first meet a set of established criteria, including having a functioning democracy
and market economy. Observers have noted that the prospect of membership can act as an
incentive for countries to adopt beneficial reforms. Once a country becomes an official candidate,
accession negotiations are a long and complex process in which the applicant must adopt and
implement a massive body of EU laws, treaties, and regulations.
The EU began as the European Coal and Steel Community in 1952 with six members (Belgium,
France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands). In 1973, Denmark, Ireland, and the
United Kingdom joined what had then become known as the European Community. Greece
joined in 1981, followed by Spain and Portugal in 1986. In 1995, Austria, Finland, and Sweden
acceded to the present-day European Union. In 2004, the EU welcomed eight former communist
countries—the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, and
Slovenia—plus Cyprus and Malta. Bulgaria and Romania joined in 2007.
Following these latest rounds of EU expansion, some Europeans have spoken of “enlargement
fatigue” and have suggested a pause in the process. The EU maintains that the enlargement door
remains open. Some observers expect that Iceland may soon apply for EU membership, an effort
that would likely receive relatively quick approval.
Further enlargement will likely focus on the Balkans. The EU named Croatia as an official
candidate in 2004 and began accession negotiations in 2005. Macedonia was given candidate
status in late 2005, but has not yet secured a start date for accession negotiations because of an
ongoing dispute with Greece over the country’s official name. The remaining western Balkan
states of Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, and Serbia are all recognized as
potential EU candidates in the longer term, but their accession timetables and prospects vary.
Turkey also has a long-standing bid for EU membership. Turkey was recognized as an EU
candidate in 1999 but remained in a separate category for years as it sought to comply with the
EU’s political and economic criteria for membership. In 2005, the EU opened accession talks
with Turkey, but these are expected to take at least a decade to complete. The EU has cautioned
that negotiations with Turkey are an “open-ended process, the outcome of which cannot be
guaranteed.” Observers note that some EU members and many EU citizens remain wary about
Turkey’s possible accession given its large size, relatively poor economy, and Muslim culture.
The status of Turkey’s membership application is a frequent source of tension between Turkey
and the EU.
4
The Lisbon Treaty technically renames the “co-decision” procedure as the “ordinary legislative procedure.”
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Does the EU Have a Foreign Policy?
The EU has a Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), in which member states adopt
common policies, undertake joint actions, and pursue coordinated strategies in areas in which
they can reach consensus. CFSP was established in 1993; the eruption of hostilities in the Balkans
in the early 1990s and the EU’s limited tools for responding to the crisis convinced EU leaders
that the Union had to improve its ability to act collectively in the foreign policy realm. Previous
EU attempts to further such political integration had foundered for decades on member state
concerns about protecting national sovereignty and different foreign policy prerogatives.
CFSP decision-making is dominated by member states and requires unanimity; all 27 member
states must agree that a common EU stance on a given issue is desirable and all 27 must agree on
the terms of that stance. Member states must also ensure that national policies are in line with
agreed EU strategies and positions (e.g., imposing sanctions on a country). However, CFSP does
not preclude individual member states pursuing their own national foreign policies or conducting
their own national diplomacy.
CFSP remains a work in progress. Although many view the EU as having made considerable
strides in forging common policies on a range of international issues, from the Balkans to the
Middle East peace process to Iran, others argue that the credibility of CFSP too often suffers from
an inability to reach consensus. The launch of the U.S.-led war in Iraq in 2003, for example, was
extremely divisive among EU member states and they were unable to agree on a common EU
policy position. Others note that some differences in viewpoint are inevitable among 27 countries
that still retain different approaches, cultures, histories, and relationships—and often different
national interests—when it comes to foreign policy.
The EU’s new Lisbon Treaty seeks to bolster CFSP by increasing the EU’s visibility on the world
stage and making the EU a more coherent foreign policy actor. The treaty establishes a new High
Representative for the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy to serve essentially as the
EU’s chief diplomat. This new post combines into one position the former responsibilities of the
Council of Ministers’ High Representative for CFSP and the Commissioner for External
Relations, who previously managed the European Commission’s diplomatic activities and foreign
aid programs. In doing so, the new position seeks to marry the EU’s collective political influence
with its economic power. The Lisbon Treaty also creates a new EU diplomatic corps (the
European External Action Service) to support the High Representative.
Does the EU Have a Defense Policy?
Since 1999, the EU has been working to develop a Common Security and Defense Policy
(CSDP), formerly known as the European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP).5 CSDP seeks to
enhance European military capabilities, to improve the EU’s ability to respond to crises, and to
give the EU’s common foreign policy a military backbone. The EU has created three defense
decision-making bodies, has set targets for improving capabilities, and has developed a rapid
reaction force and multinational “battlegroups.” Such EU forces are not a standing “EU army,”
5
ESDP was renamed CSDP by the Lisbon Treaty.
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but rather a catalogue of troops and assets drawn from existing national forces that member states
can make available for EU operations.
CSDP operations focus largely on tasks such as peacekeeping, crisis management, and
humanitarian assistance. CSDP missions are also often civilian, rather than military, in nature,
with objectives such as police and judicial training (“rule of law”) or security sector reform. The
EU is currently engaged in some 13 CSDP missions in the Balkans, Africa, Caucasus, and the
Middle East, and has completed an additional 10 missions in previous years.
However, improving European military capabilities has been difficult, especially given flat or
declining European defense budgets. Serious capability gaps continue to exist in strategic air- and
sealift, command and control systems, intelligence, and other force multipliers. Also, a relatively
low percentage of European forces are deployable for expeditionary operations. Some analysts
have suggested pooling assets among several member states and the development of national
niche capabilities as possible ways to help remedy European military shortfalls. In 2004, the EU
established the European Defense Agency to help coordinate defense-industrial and procurement
policy in an effort to stretch European defense spending farther.
What Is the Relationship of the EU to NATO?
Despite largely overlapping memberships and interests, NATO and the EU continue to struggle to
establish a cooperative and complementary relationship.6 Since its inception, the EU has asserted
that CSDP is intended to allow the EU to make decisions and conduct military operations “where
NATO as a whole is not engaged,” and that CSDP is not aimed at usurping NATO’s collective
defense role. The United States has supported EU efforts to develop CSDP provided that it
remains tied to NATO, does not rival or duplicate NATO structures or resources, and does not
weaken the transatlantic alliance. The 2003 Berlin Plus agreement, which allows EU-led military
missions access to NATO assets and planning capabilities, was designed to help ensure close
NATO-EU links and prevent a wasteful duplication of European defense resources. Since then,
two Berlin Plus missions have been conducted in the Balkans, and NATO and the EU have sought
to coordinate their activities on the ground in operations in Africa and Afghanistan.
Nevertheless, closer and more extensive NATO-EU cooperation at the political level on a range
of issues—from matters of strategic importance (such as terrorism or weapons proliferation) to
improving coordination of crisis management planning and defense policies—has been stymied
largely by EU tensions with Turkey (in NATO but not the EU) and the ongoing dispute over the
divided island of Cyprus (in the EU but not NATO).7 Many analysts argue that until a political
settlement is reached over Cyprus, enhanced NATO-EU cooperation is unlikely. Others suggest
that additional reasons exist for strains in the NATO-EU relationship, including bureaucratic
6
Twenty-one countries belong to both NATO and the EU. There are six non-NATO members of the EU (Austria,
Cyprus, Finland, Ireland, Malta, and Sweden) and seven non-EU members of NATO (Albania, Canada, Croatia,
Iceland, Norway, Turkey, and the United States).
7
Turkey, a non-EU NATO member, has objected to Cyprus, which joined the EU in 2004, participating in NATO-EU
meetings on the grounds that it is not a member of NATO’s Partnership for Peace (PfP) and thus does not have a
security relationship with the alliance. The absence of Cyprus from PfP also hinders NATO and the EU from sharing
sensitive intelligence information. In the current political climate, Cyprus essentially cannot join PfP because it would
require the consent of all NATO allies, including Turkey.
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rivalry and competition between the two organizations and varying views on both sides of the
Atlantic regarding the future roles and missions of both NATO and the EU’s CDSP.
What Is Justice and Home Affairs (JHA)?
The JHA field seeks to foster common internal security measures while protecting the
fundamental rights of EU citizens and promoting the free movement of persons within the EU
zone. JHA encompasses police and judicial cooperation, immigration, asylum, border controls,
fighting terrorism and other cross-border crimes such as drug trafficking, and combating racism
and xenophobia. For many years, however, EU efforts to harmonize policies in the JHA field
were hampered by member states’ concerns that such measures could infringe on their legal
systems and national sovereignty. The 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, the subsequent
revelation of Al Qaeda cells in Europe, and the terrorist bombings in Madrid and London in 2004
and 2005, however, helped give new momentum to many initiatives in the JHA area. Among
other measures, the EU has established a common definition of terrorism, an EU-wide arrest
warrant, and new tools to strengthen external EU border controls.
The EU’s new Lisbon Treaty gives the European Parliament “co-decision” power over the
majority of JHA policy areas. The Treaty also makes most decisions on JHA issues in the Council
of Ministers subject to qualified majority voting, rather than unanimity, in a bid to strengthen JHA
further and speed EU decision-making. In practice, however, the EU will likely still seek
consensus as much as possible on sensitive JHA policies. Moreover, for some issues in the JHA
area, the EU has added an “emergency brake” that allows any member state to halt a measure it
believes could threaten its national legal system and ultimately, to opt-out of it. Despite these
safeguards, the UK and Ireland negotiated the right to opt-out of all JHA policies. The Lisbon
Treaty technically renames JHA as the “Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice.”
Does the EU Have a Trade Policy?
Yes. EU member states have a common external trade policy in which the European Commission
negotiates trade deals with outside countries and trading blocs on behalf of the Union as a whole.
The EU’s trade policy is one of its most well-developed and integrated policies. It evolved along
with the common market—which provides for the free movement of goods within the EU—to
prevent one member state from importing foreign goods at cheaper prices due to lower tariffs and
then re-exporting the items to another member with higher tariffs. The scope of the common trade
policy has been extended partially to include trade in services, the defense of intellectual property
rights, and foreign direct investment. The Council of Ministers has the power to establish
objectives for trade negotiations and can approve or reject agreements reached by the
Commission. EU rules allow the Council to make trade decisions with qualified majority voting,
but in practice the Council tends to employ consensus. The Commission and the Council work
together to set the common customs tariff, guide export policy, and decide on trade protection or
retaliation measures where necessary. The new Lisbon Treaty extends the right of “co-decision”
to the European Parliament on trade agreements, giving it an enhanced role in this area. The EU
also plays a leading role in the World Trade Organization (WTO).
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How Do EU Countries and Citizens View the EU?
All EU member states believe that the Union magnifies their diplomatic and economic clout and
brings them important political and financial benefits. Nevertheless, tensions have long existed
within the EU between those members that seek an “ever closer union” through greater
integration and those that prefer to keep the Union on a more intergovernmental footing in order
to better guard their national sovereignty. Concerns about the impingement of the EU on national
sovereignty have played out in decisions to “opt out” of certain aspects of integration, such as
passport- and visa-free travel within the EU (UK and Ireland), the euro (UK, Denmark, and
Sweden), Justice and Home Affairs issues (UK, Ireland, and Denmark), and the common defense
policy (Denmark). Another classic divide in the EU falls along big versus small state lines; small
states are often cautious of initiatives that they believe could allow a few large states to dominate
EU decision-making. In addition, the recent rounds of EU enlargement to central and eastern
Europe have brought in many new members with histories of Communism and Soviet
domination. This history often colors their views on issues ranging from relations with Russia to
climate change to the Middle East. At times, such differences have caused frictions with older,
west European member states and have slowed EU policy-making.
The prevailing view among European citizens is likewise favorable toward the EU, and many
believe that the EU benefits them in important ways. Some observers have noted that, owing
largely to the EU, many of the continent’s citizens describe a European identity layered on top of
national, regional, and local identities. However, there is also a certain amount of “Euroskepticism” among a significant portion of Europe’s citizens. Concerns over the loss of national
sovereignty are one central element of this sentiment. Some citizens assert that there is a
“democratic deficit”—a feeling that one has no say over decisions taken in far-away Brussels.
Others view the EU as a giant bureaucracy that delivers few concrete benefits. Some observers
suggest that the benefits and founding ideals of the EU—peace and prosperity—may not ring as
loudly among younger generations with no experience of war or economic hardship.
Does the United States Have a Formal Relationship
with the EU?
Yes. For decades, the United States and the EU (and its progenitors) have maintained diplomatic
and economic ties. Washington has strongly supported European integration, and U.S.-EU trade
and investment relations are extensive. The 1990 U.S.-EU Transatlantic Declaration set out
principles for greater consultation, and established regular summit and ministerial meetings. In
1995, the New Transatlantic Agenda (NTA) and the EU-U.S. Joint Action Plan provided a
framework for promoting stability and democracy together, responding to global challenges, and
expanding world trade. The NTA also sought to strengthen individual ties across the Atlantic, and
launched a number of dialogues, including for business leaders and legislators. The Transatlantic
Legislators’ Dialogue (TLD) has been the formal mechanism for engagement and exchange
between the U.S. House of Representatives and the European Parliament since 1999, although
interparliamentary exchanges between the two bodies date back to 1972.
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Who Are U.S. Officials’ Counterparts in the EU?
U.S.-EU summits occur at least once a year, with the U.S. president traditionally meeting with the
president of the European Commission and the Head of State or Government of the country
holding the Council of Ministers’ rotating presidency. It is expected that with the Lisbon Treaty
now in force, the new President of the European Council will essentially assume the role at U.S.EU summits previously played by the rotating presidency representative. The U.S. Secretary of
State’s most frequent interlocutor in the EU context is the High Representative for the Union’s
Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. The U.S. Trade Representative’s key interlocutor is the
European Commissioner for Trade, who directs the EU’s common external trade policy. Other
U.S. cabinet-level officials interact with Commission counterparts or member state ministers in
the Council of Ministers context as issues arise. Many working-level relationships between U.S.
and EU officials also exist. A delegation in Washington, DC represents the European Union in its
dealings with the U.S. government, while the U.S. Mission to the European Union represents
Washington’s interests in Brussels.
How Are U.S.-EU Economic Relations Doing?
The United States and the EU share the largest trade and investment relationship in the world.
The combined U.S. and EU economies account for nearly 60% of global gross domestic product
and roughly 40% of world trade. In 2007, the value of the two-way transatlantic flow of goods,
services, and income receipts from investment totaled more than $1.6 trillion. U.S. and European
companies are also the biggest investors in each other’s markets: total stock of two-way direct
investment reached $2.7 trillion by the end of 2007. Historically, U.S.-EU cooperation has also
been a driving force behind efforts to liberalize world trade.
Although the vast majority of the U.S.-EU economic relationship is harmonious, some tensions
exist. U.S.-EU trade disputes persist over poultry, subsidies to Boeing and Airbus, hormonetreated beef, and bio-engineered food products. U.S.-EU disagreement over agricultural subsidies
has also contributed to stalling the Doha Round of multilateral trade negotiations. Many analysts
note that resolving U.S.-EU trade disputes has become increasingly difficult, perhaps partly
because both sides are of roughly equal economic strength and neither has the ability to impose
concessions on the other. Another factor may be that many disputes involve differences in
domestic values, political priorities, and regulatory frameworks. The United States and the EU
have made a number of attempts to reduce remaining non-tariff and regulatory barriers to trade
and investment. The Transatlantic Economic Council (TEC) was created at the 2007 U.S.-EU
summit and tasked with advancing the process of regulatory cooperation and barrier reduction.
The global financial crisis and recession have also posed difficult challenges for both the United
States and the EU and raised concerns about the adoption of protectionist policies. U.S. and EU
leaders have sought to pursue a coordinated response to the global economic downturn through
the G-20, which brings together industrialized and developing countries. The United States, the
EU, and many member states have supported, for example, stimulus spending measures and agree
on the need to reform regulation of the global financial system. However, analysts point out that
significant divisions exist both among EU countries and between the EU and the United States
over the specifics of such reforms and the degree of regulation required.
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Author Contact Information
Kristin Archick
Specialist in European Affairs
karchick@crs.loc.gov, 7-2668
Congressional Research Service
Derek E. Mix
Analyst in European Affairs
dmix@crs.loc.gov, 7-9116
10