EC4333 Lecture 2 2008 Lisbon and Budgets

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Transcript of EC4333 Lecture 2 2008 Lisbon and Budgets

Lisbon

EC433 Lecture 2Dr Stephen Kinsella

BudgetCU Theory

Last Week

EU is an economic solution to a political Problem

Today’s Main Message

“History affects current spending priorities and affects the path of economic integration”

Lisbon

What is Lisbon?

What does it do?

What does it mean?

Why did it fail?

What is Lisbon?

Amends Previous Treaties

Why?

Lots of Reasons.

Streamline Bureaucracy

Introduce Qualified Majority Voting

What does this mean?

No. Veto.

No. Veto.

Presidency

EC Council

Foreign Affairs High Rep

EU Parliament:More PowersFewer MEPS

Defense Policy:Mutual Assistance

Climate ChangeHuman RightsCompetencies

Competencies

CompetenciesExclusive

JointNational

OK.

That was Lisbon.

What did it mean?

“StreamliningExpandingEnhancing”

Common ValuesCommon Justice

Common Foreign AffairsCommon Defense

Common Climate ChangeCommon Voting Rules

Why did it fail?

O’Rourke: ClassECB: Economy

FF: Lack of Preparation

Think there will be another referendum?

Moving on.

30

1. Formation of the Customs Union, 1958- 1986

2. Single Market program, 1986-1992

3. European Economic and Monetary Union, 1992-present

3 big increases in EU economic integration

Stage of Integratio

n

No Internal Barriers

Common External

Tarrif

Factor+Asset Mobility

Common Currency

Common Ec. Policy

FTA X

CU X X

Single Mkt X X X

Monetary Union

X X X X

Economic Union

X X X X X

Budget

Budget Priorities

Research AdminOther AidRegional CAP

1.27% of

GDP

Transaction Cost Ecs

For the Firm

Costs of compliance with contracts, social conventions, supply-chain problems.

Phases of Ec. Integration

EMU

Common Mkt

Economic Union

Customs Union

Free Trade Area

Integration

Costs from

Fragmented

Markets

Legal,

Regulatory

Costs Macro Costs

Source: McDonald & Dearden, pg. 44

Why is Trade good?

What is FreeTrade?Absence of tariffs, quotas, or other governmental impediments to international trade allows each country to

specialize in the goods that it can produce cheaply and efficiently relative to other countries.

SO?

Trade Creation

But first...

Price, €

Quantity, (Items)

Supply Schedule

Demand Schedule

Eq. Price, P*

Eq. Quantity, Q*

CS

Trade Creation is

“The increase in trade volume caused by union with a lower cost (more efficient) supplier within the trade bloc”

––Viner, 1950

Punion post tax

Pworld post tax

Pworld pre tax

Punion pre tax

Supply Home

Demand Home

P*

C*

P

QB D

E F G

Trade Creation (High Cost to Low Cost)

Punion post tax

Pworld post tax

Pworld pre tax

Punion pre tax

Supply Home

Demand Home

P*

C*

P

QB D

Trade Diversion (Low Cost to High Cost)

CU Good iff

• TC > TD

€ (bn) % GDP

(a) (b) (a) (b)

Barriers to trade 8 9 0.2 0.3

Technical Regs 57 71 2.0 2.4

Ecs. of Scale 60 61 2.0 2.4

X-inefficiency 46 46 1.6 1.6

Total 171 187 5.8 6.4

At 1985 Prices Source: Cecchini Report, Emerson et al, 1988.

Movement of Labour

w2

w3

w4

w1

Wage, wSg

S(i-m)

Si

FEDB CA

1 2

3 4 5

DiDg

Quantity

of labour

Quantity

of

labour

Germany, g Ireland, i

Effects of Economic Union

1. Location Effects

2. Accumulation Effects

3. Allocation Effects

Price Dispersion(coefficient of variation)

1985 1993 1996% % %

Private Final Consumption 21.9 15.9 15.9Government final cons. 25.4 25.9 27.2

Gross fixed capital formation 12.8 14.5 13.5Construction 19.2 23.6 22.0

Machinery 9.1 6.7 7.7GDP 20.1 16.2 16.3

El-Agraa, A.M., (2002), The European Union: Economics

and Policies, 6th ed., pgs. 149–164,

337.142 AGR.

Vox EU Columns Linked at the Site

EC433 Lecture 2Dr Stephen Kinsella

LisbonBudget

CU Theory