Should Europe simply retire from global governance? Or are there assets on which it can draw in order to play an influential role as a new world order emerges?
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After months of failed short-term fixes and mounting panic, European leaders from Merkel to Cameron are now agreed that the only sustainable solution to the euro crisis is political integration.
A new ECFR policy brief – ‘A Europe of incentives: regaining the trust of citizens and markets’ by Mark Leonard and Jan Zielonka – lays out how a more inclusive Europe could be achieved.
The paper also suggests ways to avoid a Two-Class Europe where decision making is dominated by powerful countries, the technocracy-populism trap and continued crushing austerity.
"Angela Merkel says that political union is the key to fiscal union, but Europe is becoming an "apolitical union" where elections allow citizens to change governments but not policies, and technocrats rule the roost. What is needed is a new reform agenda that is generous, flexible, empowering - a Europe of incentives." - Mark Leonard
“The current EU is not strong enough to get itself out of its present crisis or to prevent future ones. The choice that the eurozone’s leaders have been avoiding has become inescapable: economic and political integration or dissolution” - Jan Zielonka
Click here for a PDF of ‘A Europe of incentives: how to regain the trust of citizens and markets’
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Thomas Klau discusses Germany's hegemony in Europe.
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ECFR's China-Germany brief is quoted