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Post an EU jobFrance emerges as the most negative on EU membership in a survey conducted in five member states revealing a general feeling of dissatisfaction among EU citizens.
Failure to ratify the Constitution in France and the Netherlands, indecision over the budget and disagreement over Turkey has cast doubts over the effectiveness of the European Union. Many member states are questioning whether EU membership is as advantageous a proposition as originally thought. Citizens throughout Europe are growing increasingly sceptical about the ability of governments to reach successful compromises and are rapidly losing faith in the viability of the EU as a fully functioning and operative working entity.
According to a survey produced by the leading French market research company Sofres, citizens from five of the EU's six largest member states are predominantly negative about the effects of belonging to the EU. Results revealed that a large number of people remain unconvinced that the benefits of EU membership outweigh the disadvantages. Overall, the economic implications appeared to be the greatest cause for concern.
From the countries surveyed, Spain emerged as the most positive about its association with Europe - 57% of Spanish interviewees claimed that the standard of living in their country had improved as a result of EU membership. Spain was also the only nation whose respondents felt safer thanks to Europe. France proved to be the most eurosceptic nation with 43% of French interviewees answering that their country had become 'less prosperous' due to involvement with the EU. Conversely, only 29% believed that France had benefitted from its European ties.
Although more British participants claimed that the standard of living had improved since joining the EU (33% yes, 24% no), 48% said that their national identity and culture were under threat from closer European links. A majority of interviewees from all five member states agreed that prices had increased because of European integration. However, only respondents from Spain believed that EU involvement had made their nation more powerful on a global scale.
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