
The EU is going places--or at least that's what the EU would like its citizens to think. That is, judging by an opinion piece by a lawyer who now works in the financial services.
She (I presume) writes an interesting piece about the EU, and looks at the following issues:
Withdrawing from the EU will put businesses in disadvantageous positions in EuropeInconvenience caused to tourists and migrantsWithdrawal will distort the marketMember states should not enjoy benefits of the EU without facing drawbacksWe know the writer is a free-trader--and there's nothing wrong with that if that's what gets your kicks--because of the manner in which she castigates the attempt by the EU to assume an "egalitarian" EU predicated on a single market. She writes:
With the egalitarian ideology at its core, the EU is heading in a direction that is opposite its original destination. The aim of the EU officials is to create a collective block and to build a high fortress around it. That block will hamper the growth of Europe. Instead of truly fostering free trade, EU regulations and directives hold back those who endeavor to progress; indeed such efforts are frowned upon.
This is so ironic it's not funny. If you look at the steely attempts by the European Union and its arm-twisting of countries of the
Africa, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States to comply with its version of regional integration
à l'Africaine, you could arrive at the conclusion that the EU is ferociously free-trade.
If you look at attempts by civil society organisations setting up websites, such as
EPA Watch; specifically to monitor the obfuscatory tactics deployed by the EU in its relations with African countries, you begin to wonder whether a little hypocrisy is in the offing.
So when the writer finally writes:
It is one thing to devise policies founded on egalitarianism but quite another to implement them as if they are based on the ideas of free exchange.
from:http://www.mises.org/story/2536
I begin to ask myself is it not time to question what the EU does and says in theory, and practice?
Or is the EU pulling a very fast one on some of us?