Don’t create eastern eurosceptics

DISCLAIMER: All opinions in this column reflect the views of the author(s), not of Euractiv Media network.

Don’t create eastern eurosceptics

The EU is in danger of turning the east
Europeans into eurosceptics, even before they join the Union. For
the past decade, they have seen EU membership as about gaining a
nice starry flag and a better way of life. But in 2002, east
Europeans have learnt much more about what EU membership entails,
and it makes them uneasy. The main feature of membership – it would
seem from alarmist television and press reports – is an
agricultural policy which will initially provide their farmers with
only a quarter of the subsidies given to their much richer west
European neighbours. In Slovenia, Poland, Hungary and the Czech
Republic, people are worried – probably unduly – that they might
have to make net payments into the EU’s budget in the first
year.

The EU’s budget accounts for just over a
hundredth of its GDP. But squabbles over sharing the spoils receive
a disproportionate amount of political attention in the Union.
Acrimonious negotiations in the next few months could cause the
goodwill towards the EU in the candidate countries to
evaporate.

The EU’s 15 members will decide this autumn what
to offer the candidate countries. Today’s avarice could turn out
very costly over the longer term. If the negotiations result in a
deal that is patently unfair, the top priority of east European
leaders after joining will be to “get our money back”. This could
delay fundamental reform of the EU’s finances, and possibly
increase the size of the budget after 2006, when the next budget
period begins.

The Commission’s proposals for the EU
negotiating position would create perverse incentives for the
candidate countries. The Commission has suggested that in the first
year of membership, the candidates’ farmers should get 25 per cent
of the direct payments to which they would be entitled under the
current rules. They would then get 30 per cent in the second year,
with the sum increasing gradually to 100 per cent by 2013. This
proposal gives Poland – which has by far the largest agricultural
sector among the applicant states – every incentive to argue for a
higher percentage and a shorter transitional period, rather than to
demand a phasing-out of direct payments for everybody. Any
accession deal that gave the new member-states just a fraction of
what the old ones get would encourage them to demand the full
amount, rather than to seek fundamental reform of the budget.

The proposal could also tip the balance in the
debate over the future of the EU’s budget away from the reformers –
who are currently in the majority – towards the countries that want
a larger budget overall. After accession, Poland could become
Spain’s best friend, teaming up to demand a budget that exceeds the
current ceiling of 1.27 per cent of EU GDP.

Like Britain, Portugal and Spain – which spent
their first years of membership trying to re-negotiate what they
saw as unfair accession terms – the new member-states could be
driven by domestic politics to take an obstructive stance in the
budget negotiations for the period starting 2007. If the perception
grows in eastern Europe that the EU has used its greater muscle in
negotiations to force an unfair deal, it will have a profound
impact on the future behaviour of the new member-states. The
nightmare scenario is ten new member-states which behave like Spain
on the budget, but like Britain and Denmark in their
euroscepticism. The Polish farmers have already learned from their
French counterparts how to gain publicity for their cause: Andrzej
Lepper, the populist leader of the ‘Self-Defence’ party, has
blocked roads and attacked trains carrying imported grain.

In framing their common negotiating position
this autumn, the EU-15 leaders should limit the accession deal just
to 2004-06, and not offer direct payments to the candidates at all.
Why start their farmers on that drip-feed addiction, which doesn’t
suit t heir needs anyway? Instead, the EU should use that money to
ease the pain of the candidates’ contributions to the EU budget.
The EU should also spend more on rural development, including
infrastructure and education.

The EU should not link the enlargement talks to
the parallel debate on the ‘mid-term review’ of the EU’s farm
policy, for it will be hard enough to reach an agreement on either.
The Commission’s July proposals to phase out farm subsidies slowly
may have greatly annoyed France, but they should have been more
radical. However, the EU’s top priority must be to conclude the
enlargement talks in December, so long as the deal is seen as fair
by the candidates. It can return to farm policy reform when the
candidates are in. Neither EU nor candidate country governments
have presented the budget negotiations effectively to their
populations. Most people in eastern Europe have only heard about
the farm-sector wrangles and not about the much bigger sums they
will eventually get from the structural funds. Meanwhile, there is
a widespread perception in the EU that enlargement is going to be
very expensive, when in fact the sums allocated to the new members
represent less than 10 per cent of the whole budget.

Eurosceptics are largely made, not born.
Countries can become awkward partners because their populations
believe the EU is not acting in their interest – that is one of the
lessons of Ireland’s ‘No’ to the Nice treaty last year. Public
support is already dropping in most of the candidate countries. If
people hear constantly that the EU has done the dirty on them, they
will be more prone to vote for populist eurosceptics. The French
and Germans have long bemoaned a lack of ‘esprit communautaire’
among the British and Danes. If the Union doesn’t want to create
further Britains and Denmarks, it had better show a little more
generosity towards its members-to-be.

Heather Grabbe is CER research director

For more CER analyses go to the

CER website.  

Subscribe to our newsletters

Subscribe