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OP:11 The
Association Process: Making it Work, Central Europe and the European
Community
Author(s):
Publication Date: November 1992
Abstract: Following
the political upheaval in Eastern and Central Europe in the late 1980's
and the collapse of Russian demand, and with it of Eastern Europe bloc
trade, the countries of Central and Eastern (CEECs) looked towards the
European Community for support. In particular, they sought support for
their programmes of economic transformation through the development of
trade links. It was also hoped that the \Community would be able to
provide technical and financial assistance, as well as an economic and
political model towards which they might progress. in the longer term,
the goal was the security of an integrated Europe via full membership of
the Community for CEECs.
In 1990, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and
Poland signed treaties with the Community on trade and commercial and
economic cooperation. These treaties were the forerunner to a set of
Association Agreements between these countries and the EC, negotiated
during 1991 and signed in December of that year. the trade part of the
Agreements was to come into force on 1 march 1992, with the full
agreements coming into force upon ratification by the 15 national
parliaments.
The Agreements (also called Europe
Agreements') aimed to create a new climate for economic relations
between the EC and the CEECs, and as the preamble to the Agreements
said, 'in particular for the development of trade and investment,
instruments which are indispensable for economic restructuring and
technological modernization'. It was immediately apparent, however, that
there would be problems and conflicts in implementing the agreements. As
L Alan Winters says in his contribution to this report: 'The agreements
are disappointing in the degree of support and encouragement they
guarantee to CHP ... Indeed, they sometimes appear to be designed as
much to minimize the adjustment that the revolutions of 1989 cause in
the EC than to maximize the benefits that accrue to CHP'. Furthermore,
after the signing of the Agreements, it was necessary to continue and
extend contracts so that the Association process could not begin to
compensate for inadequacies in the Agreements, leading to a consensus
for their ratification in the national parliaments of the contracting
parties.
In order to promote such dialogue, CEPR,
jointly with SCH Consultants and the Solvay Business School, organized a
seminar on the Agreements in Brussels on 27 February 1992. the seminar
was intended to provide the first in-depth outside discussion of the
Agreement and to raise their profile by attracting media coverage, since
they had previously drawn little attention from this direction.
financial support for the meeting was provided by the German Marshall
fund of the United States and Lyonnaise des Eaux-Dumez.
The meeting succeeded in bringing
together many of the key negotiators in the process, including Pablo
Benavides, principal negotiator for the EC, and dealing with the
Association process within the European Commission. In addition to
presentations by Commission officials and representatives of the CEECs,
short papers were presented by a number of academic experts in the
field. The private sector was also represented and provided valuable
input into the discussions. The key objective of raising attention in
the media was certainly achieved. A number of journalists from major
European and American newspapers were in attendance, and both the Wall
Street Journal and the Financial Times provided substantial
coverage immediately after the seminar.
The individual presentations and papers
are summarized in this publication, and the full text of Alan Winters's
briefing note is also included. It is our hope that, by making the
discussions from the Brussels meeting available to an even wider
audience, further dialogue will be stimulated on the Association process
and attention drawn to the opportunities and problems that it offers.
Professor Winters's paper, the first 'public' assessment of the
Agreements (now revised for this publication), starkly lays out the
dangers inherent in not honouring the spirit of the process: '1991
offered the EC the chance to make a major and imaginative contribution
to the emergence of the transitional economies from their years of
economic twilight ... [the EC had, perhaps, the greatest
responsibilities for ensuring a successful transition] ... these have
been recognized in the details and formality of the Europe Agreements ,
but not, unfortunately, in their content.' Yet much will depend on how
they are implemented and on whether the Community can go beyond them to
take a wider, deeper perspective on the integration of the CEECs into
the economy and polity of the EC. We must hope for rapid progress in
this direction, to which we believe this seminar has already
contributed.
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