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 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.
- Crisis countries need to be relieved from excessive interest rate burdens that prohibit growth, for instance through moving towards Eurobonds or introducing a European debt redemption fund. (For other concrete measures see this recent ECFR paper.)
- The gulf in competitiveness that lies at the heart of the euro crisis needs to be tackled with rewards for reform, rather than a punitive regime obsessed with rules and outcomes. Efforts need to be made to expand the single market in services, energy and the digital economy, and reinvigorate the vision of a Europe that brings prosperity.
- Europe needs to empower and involve its citizens rather than alienate them. For instance a weekly council of national deputy prime ministers could make Brussels more accountable and democratic, and a second European Parliament chamber could be created from national MPs to help sign off national budgets.
For more: ECFR58_EUROPE_INCENTIVES_REPORT_AW.pdf (application/pdf Object)
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