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Europe United we stand, divided we fall ….. but what are we at present?. Racial, religious & territorial issues in Europe. ONGOING VIOLENCE Spain: Basques. UNEASY TRUCE Balkans: Muslims - Serbs. CEASEFIRE - CESSATION Ireland: Protestants - Catholics. DORMANT or EXTINCT
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EuropeUnited we stand, divided we fall …..but what are we at present?
Racial, religious & territorial issues in Europe ONGOING VIOLENCE Spain: Basques UNEASY TRUCE Balkans: Muslims - Serbs CEASEFIRE - CESSATION Ireland: Protestants - Catholics DORMANT or EXTINCT France: Bretons - French ECONOMIC &/or POLITICAL Belgium: Walloons - Flemish Germany: East-west Italy: North - South Greece: Macedonia Greece/Turkey: Cyprus Britain/Spain: Gibraltar New Europe: Olde Europe
The Races of Europe Immigration Problems Turks - Germany Arabs - France/Spain Pakistanis - UK Albanians etc - Italy
European Languages
Religion Christianity: - Protestant - Catholic Islam Jewish Religion
The Iron Curtain
THE BALKANS F.Y.R.O.M.
CYPRUS • small country, but major problem for Europe; Turkish entry depends on resolution • should Turkey be admitted to EU? Is it "European"? • strategic geographical position • large, but non-extreme Muslim country • large number of Turks in Germany (Gastarbeiter) • entry contentious within & between European states • human rights problems: death penalty etc • Turkey's attitude to its past: Kurdish problem, Armenian massacre - 1915 to 1918
CYPRUS • Ottoman Turks ruled Cyprus for over three centuries; ceded to Britain in 1878 • Independence from Britain achieved August 1960, after four-year military struggle between UK and guerrillas of EOKA (National Organization of Cypriot Fighters) who sought ‘enosis’ (union with Greece) - which was anathema to Turkish community • political leader of liberation movement, Archbishop Makarios - also head of island’s Greek Orthodox Church - returned from exile and elected President December 1959 • island’s new constitution was elaborate compromise between British and rival Greek and Turkish communities, between whom considerable distrust remained • as part of deal, British kept two large tracts of land for military purposes, known as ‘Sovereign Base Areas’ and accounting for 5 per cent of island’s total area • deal fell apart in July 1974, when Makarios was deposed by military coup (allegedly backed by military regime in power in Greece) • within days, Turkish troops arrived on northern coast of Cyprus, ‘invited’ by Turkish Cypriot leader, Rauf Denktash, to intervene in order to protect Turkish community on island • Greeks failed to respond effectively, not least because of simultaneous collapse of military junta in Athens, besides which Greek-Cypriot-controlled National Guard was insufficiently equipped to combat fully mobilized army • after Turkish army had taken control of northern third of island, ceasefire arranged under UN auspices
CYPRUS • island partitioned ever since and UN peacekeeping forces maintain truce • in November 1983, Turkish part of island proclaimed itself Kuzey Kibris Turk Cumhuriyeti (‘Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus’, TRNC) - however, formal recognition of self-styled country only granted by Turkey and a few statelets • ‘TRNC’ still run by Rauf Denktash - dominant political figure in enclave for almost 30 years - at last two presidential elections - April 1995 and April 2000 - re-elected with comfortable majorities • for vast majority of international community, legitimate government of Republic of Cyprus (Kiprikai Demokratika) is Greek-Cypriot administration in Nicosia - until February 2003 led for a decade by President Glafkos Clerides - that month, he was deposed at most recent presidential election by Tassos Papadopoulos, candidate of center-right Komma Dimokratika (Democratic Party) • present government is coalition of DIKO, AKEL - Communist Party which has long been single largest force in Greek-Cypriot politics - and smaller KISOS party • principal issue for Greek-Cypriot government remains same; how to normalize relations with ‘TRNC’ and reunify island. • numerous diplomatic initiatives ended in failure - main sticking points are: • - balance and concentration of power within any unified government • - Turkish troop concentrations in north • - return of property relinquished by Greek refugees and since occupied by Turkish settlers
The Disunited States of Europe? BELGIUM Flemish Walloons
The Disunited States of Europe? BELGIUM - the Walloons (wŏlūnz'), • group of people living in S Belgium who traditionally spoke dialect of French called Walloon, but who today mostly part speak standard French • Walloons, numbering some 3.5 million, reside mostly in provinces of Hainaut, Liège, Namur, Luxembourg, and Walloon Brabant, in contrast to Dutch-speaking Flemings of northern provinces • movement for reviving Walloon literature centered in Liège in the 19th cent.; today the language is considered moribund • since medieval times economic and social background of Walloons has differed radically from that of Flemings, and cleavage became even more pronounced with Industrial Revolution • Walloon part of Belgium contains major mining areas and heavy industries, while Flemings engage mainly in agriculture, manufacturing (particularly textiles), and shipping • tension between Walloons and Flemings has long been critical political issue; in 1970 plan was approved recognizing cultural autonomy of Belgium's three national communities: Dutch-speaking Flemings of the north, the French speaking Walloons of the south, and bilingual Brussels
The Disunited States of Europe? GERMANY • reunification 1990 • massive economic gaps • OstMark given parity with Dmark • billions transferred west to east • special tax on "Wessies" • not only economic, but cultural gulf • bureaucracy • high social benefits • endemic unemployment • public refusal to give up "acquis" • socialist/capitalist divide still strong ….
The Disunited States of Europe? ITALY North of Rome • industrial - bulk of economy • many small/medium business • many family-owned business • fashion, style, engineering adaptability was trump card • large black market (27%?) • serious competitivity problems • some call for return of lira … South of Rome • agricultural - little industry • earthquake-prone • Vesuvius!!
GIBRALTAR ceded to Britain in perpetuity by the Treaty of Utrecht, 13 JULY 1713
BASQUE COUNTRY many Basques want independence long-running "terrorist" (or "liberation") movement considerable autonomy granted by Central government
European Languages
European Nation States
The Iron Curtain
The CAP & the Budget Money, money, money!!!!
The Common Agricultural Policy A Success? • introduced in 1960 - aim to provide a reasonable standard of living for farmers and reasonably-priced food for all • intention also (especially in France) to maintain traditional pattern of farming - avoid massive drift away from country to cities • facilitated free movement of farming products within the EU • after lean war years, concern to ensure reliable food supply and self-sufficiency • this aim succeeded; in fact, there is now oversupply • oversupply has led in past to so-called "butter-mountains" and food dumping
The Common Agricultural Policy A Failure? • medium and larger farms are paid not to produce; smaller ones rely on subsidies • some rich farmers are paid to leave their fields fallow (unused) • subsidies do not go to all farmers; mainly to dairy farming • the CAP accounts for 42% of the EU budget, limiting investment in other areas • it distorts world trade in agriculture; developing countries are particularly penalised; they can't penetrate the EU • cost of subsidizing poor farmers in new EU countries will put unbearable strains on budget; reform is essential • reform will be strongly resisted by current beneficiaries • Britain and France in particular have immovable positions
The British & French positions on agriculture • Britain said it will veto any cut in the 4.4bn euro (£3bn) rebate unless farm subsidies are overhauled, a stance which puts it at loggerheads with France. • French President Jacques Chirac refused to discuss any cut in farm subsidies and says the rebate should "under no circumstances be linked to a reform of farm expenditure." From the EU summit meeting in June, 2005 Where the money goes --->
The Subsidization of Farming in the World limits this places on African exports to rich countries now a hot, political topic
Symptomatic of EU budgetary problems …The British rebate French President Jacques Chirac defends French EU farming subsidies against the British, wielding their famous rebate … "The problem is the imbalance of the budget: 40% of the budget goes to meet the needs of 5% of the population and 2% of European jobs." Tony Blair, July 2005
SCANDINAVIA detached,calm uncorruptible business-oriented high taxation common market SPAIN PORTUGAL EU cash business rapid development South American leanings The EuroTango UK common market close to USA "liberal" economy anti-regulation anti-Brusselslower taxation EAST EUROPE fears Russia pro-USA - anglophile low taxation lots to catch upbusinessEU moneydevelopment IRELAND incoming investment favourable business climate grab the money while it lasts … GERMANY industrial powerhouse major exporter unemployment East-West divide political turmoil over-regulated high tax less anti-US "Olde Europe" FRANCE anti-USA, statist powerful lobbies (farmers, civil servants) high taxation cultural fears"social model" France's place in world insular tendancy ITALY style, chic small businesses big North/South divide struggling to compete call for lira return dodgy politics HOLLAND usually the good guys business-oriented fed up immigration paying too much taken for granted BALTICS dynamic, go-ahead ambitious anti-regulation high potential fear Russia
A View from the USA Robert J Samuelson, "Washington Post" - June 15th, 2005 • Europe is slowly going bust - not just because it's overshadowed by Asia and USA • Europe's birthrates have dropped well below the replacement rate of 2.1 children for each woman of childbearing age • for Western Europe as a whole, rate is 1.5 - it's 1.4 in Germany and 1.3 in Italy • already about 17% of the population is 65 and older • by 2030 that would be 25%, and by 2050 almost 33% How can European economies support so many old people?
The European Economy …. • Europe's economy already weakening - in 1970s annual growth for the Euroland countries averaged almost 3%; from 2001 to 2004 the annual average was 1.2 percent • in 1974 those countries had unemployment of 2.4 percent; in 2004 the rate was 8.9% • Western Europeans feel their way of life threatened. • one solution to low birthrates is higher immigration • but many Europeans don't like the immigrants they have and don't want more • one way to revive growth would be to reduce social benefits, taxes and regulations • but that would imperil Europe's "social model," which supposedly blends capitalism's efficiency and socialism's compassion
What about the USA, as reported by OECD? • unemployment:with high unemployment benefits, almost half of Western Europe's jobless out of work a year or more; U.S. figure about 12 percent • early retirement:in 2003 about 60 percent of Americans aged 55 to 64 had jobs. comparable figures for France, Italy and Germany were 37%, 30% and 39% Europeans like early retirement, high jobless benefits and long vacations • sources of this benevolence (high taxes, stiff regulations) weaken economy - with ageing populations, contradictions will only grow • some research suggests that high old-age benefits partly explain low birthrates - with the state paying for old age, who needs children as caregivers? • high taxes may also deter couples from assuming added costs of children • other countries are also aging and face problems similar to Europe's, but the ageing is more pronounced in Europe and a few other nations (e.g. Japan), precisely because birthrates are so low • U.S. birthrate, for example, is 2.1; even removing births to Hispanic Americans, it's about 1.9
What about the USA, as reported by OECD? • Europeans could do something about their predicament - but mostly they're not • some countries (Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands) have acted, and there are differences between East and West Europe But in general Europe is immobilized by its problems • classic dilemma of democracy - too many people benefit from status quo to change it; but status quo isn't sustainable • status quo in France called "les acquis" (e.g. train drivers, school & university teachers) • even modest efforts in France and Germany to curb social benefits have triggered backlashes and government cave-ins • many Europeans - maybe most - live in a state of delusion: believing things should continue as before; they see almost any change as menacing All this bad for Europe - and the United States: a weak European economy is one reason the world economy is shaky and so dependent on American growth
Europe is preoccupied with divisions at home, but is looking to the past • Europe not strong American ally, not only because it disagrees with some U.S. policies but also because it doesn't want to make the commitments required • unwilling to address their genuine problems, Europeans become more reflexively critical of America • this gives the impression that they're active on the world stage, even as they're quietly acquiescing in their own decline • French fear of cultural swamping adds to the mixture as does "Olde Europe's" search for a role on world stage • France traditionally anti-American (Anglo-Saxon): de Gaulle prevented UK entry into EU and once withdrew from NATO and find alternative to it France's schizophrenia towards UK and USA …. Iraq …..