The fragmentation of European power
José Ignacio TorreblancaIcaria / Política Exterior, 2011
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In a world where China and other emerging countries are on the rise, the power and presence of the European Union is becoming marginal and its voice weaker. However, it cannot be said that the EU is weak nor that it lacks power. Today it is still the world’s biggest economy, the second biggest commercial block, the biggest aid donor and the world’s second biggest military power. Europe is powerful but introverted and therefore it exerts its power in a fragmented manner. Although the European project is in crisis, its decline is not inevitable.
¨This book analyzes the difficulties for Europe in acting united and being a relevant power in the world, but it does so from a conviction that the values Europe represents are not only the best ones but also the only ones that can guarantee peace and prosperity for the Europeans.¨ Javier Solana
¨This book offers an excellent exercise in summarizing and a reflection on the last decade in Europe, which involves one of the greatest displacements of world power that has ever been seen by current generations. The idea of Europe as a fragmented power perfectly captures the nature of its problems and limitations and is very useful for devising the possible paths that could be taken for the recovery of the European idea.¨ Lluís Bassets
¨José Ignacio Torreblanca, through his weekly articles in El País, has taught us how often, in the construction of Europe, the king walks naked. In ´The Fragmentation of European power,´ these flashes of virtue form a pool, and lose the attractiveness of a prose, the unexpected from the images or the daily apparel, curdling from a splendid image which matures and which, without doubt, forms what nowadays constitutes the biggest challenge in which us Spanish must confront at the beginning of the 21st century. ¨ Ana Palacio
¨’European power,’¨ whose fragmentation José Ignacio Torreblanca studies, never existed in reality. However, the deconstruction of this ghost reveals some blueprints in how to build a ‘European habitat’ in the real world’s ecosystem.¨ Carlos Alonso Zaldívar
The fragmentation of European powerJosé Ignacio Torreblanca
Icaria / Política Exterior, 2011(232 pages 18 €)
Content
Where the idea to write this book occurred: two narratives of power
Hard and soft power. Are Europeans really from Venus and Americans from Mars? Is Europe a ‘normative’ or ‘civil’ power? It´s time to overcome this discussion; Europe’s power is neither hard nor soft, it is fragmented.
In the meantime, Spain and the rest of the Europeans were settling in precious mansions. Soft power: “Sense and sensibility”. Link
Typical topics. Hard power: Skopje (Macedonia), February 2008 : The United States builds a large and ugly embassy. Link
The Asian century
Chapter 1: The end of the European dream
Source: Worldmapper
Worldmapper helps us to reconstruct the world according to different categories and magnitudes. If population size is taken into account, the world would appear as on the image above. China and India alone have 40% of the world’s population. Asia has 60%.
A declining Europe
Source: Eurostat 2010
In 1960, one out of every five habitants in the world was a European. However in 2005, Europe had already lost half of its population (in relative terms), leading to a situation where only one in every ten habitants in the world was European..
In 1960, one out of every 5 people was European, in 2050, only one in every 20 will be so
Source: Eurostat 2008
According to current demographic projections, there will be less Europeans who will also be older. If one looks at Russia, it will age even faster. Due to its demographic problems it appears as a European power. On the other hand, the United States, which is capable of attracting and integrating immigrants, has the opposite demographic perdictions than Europe.
Europe without Europeans
Source: Eurostat 2010
In 2005 Europe had 11.2% of the world’s population, China 20.02%, India 17.4% and the United States 4.6%. The projections state that in 2050 Europe will have around 7.5% of the world’s population, China 15% and India 17.6%. These statistics should force us to face up to the challenge of how to ¨create a Europe without Europeans.¨ Europeans are old, expensive and declining in number while at the same time they do not indentify themselves with the European project sufficiently.
Source: Bertlesmann Stiftung
From the following list of countries, which countries do you think are world powers?
In 2005, the Bertelsmann Foundation asked citizens of different countries around the world which countries they considered world powers. In the fifth column one can see that only the Europeans considered themselves as a world power. Only 15% of Brazilians, 17% of Chinese and 7% of Indians saw Europe as such. Approximately 1 out of every 4 Americans and Russians saw it as a world power. The Germans, French and English did not have a corresponding perception.
Which countries do you think will be world powers in 2010?
Source: Bertlesmann Stiftung
Future perspectives do not appear promising either. The correspondents do not think that Europe will rise, but rather that it will stay in its actual zone, in other words, one of ‘irrelevance.’
¿How do outsiders see our influence?
2010
Source: BBC World Service Poll 2010
A BBC survey demonstrates that foreigners see Europe’s influence, in general, as positive. In the United States, Brazil, China and Russia it is not seen as negative. Interestingly however, Turkey is one of the few countries where the EU’s influence is seen as negative.
Chapter 2: A small Asian peninsula
The BRICs are already here….
Source: Goldman Sachs 2003
According to Goldman Sachs predictions (2003), emerging economies will slowly overtake the G-6 (this excludes Canada). This ‘overtake’ will be completed around 2040, when the BRICs’ economies (Brazil, Russia, India and China) will be larger than the G-6s’ (United States, Germany, United Kingdom, France and Italy).
Projections for the BRICs and the West (2003 and 2008)
Source: Goldman Sachs 2009
The most interesting fact about Goldman Sach’s predictions on China is that they have always been wrong and against China. Every prediction has been disapproved by reality, in other words, China has always grown more than had been expected. If in 2003 it was though that China would overtake the United States in 2041, this changed in 2008 when the predictions were lowered to 2027 and they continue to be lowered today.
Underestimating the BRICsThe world in 2050: 2003 perspective (the graph on the left) and 2008 perspective (the graph on the right)
Source: Goldman Sachs 2009
The graph on the left shows the predictions made in 2003 on how large the world’s economies would be in 2005. The size of China’s economy was estimated (in 2003) that it would be $ 45,000 billion (in 2050). However in 2008 the estimates were changed to $70,000 billion (in 2050).
The struggle for energy resources in a multipolar world: the Chinese giant needs more energy
Fuente: Financial Times, 20/01/2011
Are there enough energy resources in the world to satisfy China? China is on the verge of overtaking the United States as the world’s biggest consumer of energy (graph on the left) and it is currently already the second biggest importer of oil in the world (graph on the right). From these facts rises its ‘African’ policies and the necessity to assure supply.
The 21st century will be a G-2 world
Source: The Guardian, 20/04/2011
The United States is living in a ¨Sputnik¨ moment: comparisons between the United States and China do not show a clear lead for the US while Obama is currently preparing the US for a post-American century. The European Union should also think about what its role in such a world.
Chapter 3: Power fragments
• EEurope continues to be an economic superpower…
Source: IMF World Economic Database
Even during the economic crisis, the EU-27 economies are larger than the American economy. And three times bigger than China’s. The rest of the BRICs trial far behind the EU. Economically, there is much more to Europe than it appears (data in billions of Euros).
EU-27
United St
ates
ChinaJap
anBraz
il
Canad
aRussi
aIndia
Mexic
o
South
Korea0
2000400060008000
1000012000140001600018000
20052010
…and also a trade superpower
Source: Eurostat 2010
As a trade partner, the Europeans lack rivals. Its market continues to be the most attractive in the world.
The United States' hypertrophy:
One area where Europe cannot compete with the United States is defense spending. The US represents almost half of the world’s spending on defense and the consequences of this might are enormous. Psychologically, it is said, ¨when one has a hammer, everything appears to you as a nail.¨ One can say something similar for the US. The US Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, said that he would prefer more diplomats rather than soldiers (and allies more willing to cooperate).
Europe and the United States are more and more incompatible
Europe United States
Total defence expenditure
€ 194 billion € 498 billion
Defence expenditure as
% of GDP1,67% 4,9%
Defence expenditure per capita
€ 392 € 1.622
Define spending in the US and Europe in 2009
Source: European Defence Agency 2009 y Financial Times, 16/11/2010
Is Robert Gates correct when he speaks of the ¨demilitarization of Europe¨? Are we really from Venus and the Americans from Mars? The war in Libya shows that the US was right to be frustrated with Europe. NATO is in an intensive care unit, but nobody dares to say it publicly.
Europe is reducing its defense expenditure while the BRICs are increasing it
Source: IISS, The Military Balance 2010
The BRIC’s defense expenditure is increasing while the European's is decreasing. The UK-France agreement to share aircraft carriers has been described as a substitution of the ¨entente cordial¨ to ¨entente frugal.¨
Europe does not spend little: its military expenditure is high but it spends it badly
United States49%
EU-27 22%
Rest 11%
China7%
Russia5%
Japan4%
India2%
US EU-27 Rest China Russia Japan India
World expendi
ture$950, in
billions
United States $466
EU-27 $207
The rest of the world $102
China $65
Russia $50
Japan $41,7
India $19
Europe’s problems is not that it spends little, it´s that it spends ‘badly.’ The defense expenditure of the EU-27 represents about one ¼ of the world’s defense expenditure. Their total defense expenditure of around $200 billion reflects different priorities from the Cold War, their political necessities and national prejudices. The Treaty of Lisbon includes the legal mechanism to overcome this problem, but the political will is non-existent.
Some Europeans spend a lot, others few: the defense of the 27 is a thing for 2
Source: ECFR, Re-energising Europe’s Security and Defence Policy
As important as quantity and quality is fairness. In the EU, two EU member states (France and the UK) spend almost 50% of defense spending in Europe. However, the politics of the common defense policy are governed by unanimity. It appears as though Europe is still not mature enough to change the rules of the game.
Many embassies, few results
Source: Lamo, Emilio (ed), “Europa después de Europa”, Academia Europea de Ciencias, 2010, p.377.
The EU’s foreign policy has three ‘Ds’ (defense, diplomacy and development). The diplomatic dimension consists of a large number of redundancies duplications. The European External Action Service (EEAS) created by the Lisbon Treaty, was meant to resolve these problems but reality has gone down a different path; we have now moved from the ¨troika¨ to ¨trio.¨
A sufficient number of diplomats but very dispersed
Resultados de las votaciones en materia de derechos humanos en ONU. Source: ECFR, The EU and human rights at the UN, 2009 review
The power of the EU at the United Nations has been decreasing. More then 1,000 annual meetings between the Europeans to coordinate policies at the UN has lead to the EU voting almost always together. However, the success of this has been low due to the fact that the ¨eurosphere¨ is becoming weaker in the area of human rights. China, Russia and other emerging economies have become more successful in attracting African, Asian and Latin countries to adopt their positions.
World superpower in development assistance…
ODA (millions of $)
UE-27 59,909United States 25,173Japan 6,166Other CAD 5,443Other non-CAD 5,580
Source: OECD 2009
Europe continues to the world’s biggest aid donor. However, due to its network of dispersed relations and delegations around the world, especially in the ACP countries, the EU does not achieve its desired goal of getting these countries to vote with it in the UN. China has converted itself into Europe’s primary rival in the African sphere.
UE-27
United St
ates
Japan
Other C
AD
Other n
on-CAD 0
10203040506070
ODA (millions of $)
…but with many “free-riders”
Source: Eurostat 2010
AOD como % de Producto Bruto Interno Once again, the total spending in Europe on aid hides the realities of donor asymmetries. Official development assistance spending is above the UN target in few EU countries, while others look the other way (such as Italy, in particular).
Bosnia’s aid map reveals some secrets
A typical example of the fragmentation of European power is Bosnia. Bosnia’s donor map clearly shows the dispersion of aid. Bosnia is under ‘de facto’ European administration and it has received hundreds of millions of Euros in European aid. However, the image of the EU in Bosnia is neither good nor does the EU manage to persuade the officials in the country to adopt the reforms necessary to place Bosnia on a path towards EU integration.
Chapter 4: A lost decade
Source: Parlamento Europeo
The decade in which European ‘politics’ was meant to become reality has been the decade that the Europeans have begun to distance themselves from Europe. Attendance in the European Parliament’s elections have been particularly low, especially in Central and Eastern Europe, which has surprised a large part of the world.
The rise of xenophobia
Source: Financial Times, 15/11/2010
The rise of xenophobia in Europe questions its true values, both those projected inside the EU as well as those projected in its foreign policy.
Fear of immigrants
Source: Financial Times
There appears to be no relation between the number of immigrants and (the rise of) xenophobic parties. In Holland and France, where the percentage of immigrants is low, xenophobic parties have been on the rise.
Europa: the land of asylum and refuge
Source: Financial Times, 14/06/2011
The traditions of asylum between EU member states. Many lack an asylum culture.
Chapter 5: Swimming with sharks
Source: ECFR, Towards a post-American Europe
American ‘fetishism’: Thirteen EU member states believe that they have a ‘special relationship’ with the United States. The expectations in Europe of Bush’s departure and Obama’s arrival in the White House were high, however they did not change the ‘icy’ relationship.
From 20.000 (2006) to 40.000 soldiers (2011). However, the increase in European troops has not convinced the US.
Source: ISAF, Junio 2011
In Afghanistan, European leaders irritate the United States because of their unavailability in combat and due to their reluctance to increase contingents. Furthermore, the Europeans appear to alienate their electorates, which appear to be more or less happy with the deployment in Afghanistan.
China divides us: four different positions on trade and human rights
Source: ECFR, A Power Audit
of EU-China relations
The relationship each EU member state has with China is very different although they can be divided into four groups depending on how soft or tough they are in their relationship with China on human rights and trade issues.
And Russia divides us even more…
Source: Popescu & Leonard, Eu-Russia Power Audit
Frosty pragmatists
The new Cold-Warriors
Chapter 6: Nobody loves meEuropean values are not majoritarian
Source: Freedom House
2010
European’s record on the promotion of democracy and human rights has been questionable. Democracies do not constitute the majority in the world nor do states have similar practices of promoting democracies. Brazil, India, South Africa, and Turkey, for example, do not always vote with Europe.
At the UN, the EU is becoming more isolated
Source: ECFR, The EU and human rights at the UN: 2010 review y A Global Force for Human Rights?
EU member states insist that the UN is fundamental in their vision of a international system and universal human rights, but the organization is becoming more dominated by China, Russia and their allies. The active diplomacy by Beijing and Moscow to find allies for their ‘axis of sovereignty’ demands a new approach by the Europeans to counter it.
Too many Europeans, too little EuropeMembers of the G-20
Argentina
Australia
Brasil
Canada
China
Frane
Germant
India
Indonesia
Italy
Japan
México
Rusisa
Saudi Arabia
South Africa
South Korea
Turkey
United Kongdom
United States
European Union (the Presidents of the Commission and Council)
Spain (permanent ‘invited’ member) Source: Solbes, Pedro in: Challenges for European Foreign policy in 2011, FRIDE
¨The EU must reflect on the complexity and messiness of its own internal economic governance that inter aliacomplicates effective external action. The Eurogroup-Ecofin duality or rivalry not only affects the internal system of decision-making, but also muddies the external representation of the EU and the euro-zone..¨ - Pedro Solbes
Chapter 7: The new kids on the block
Source: ECFR, New World Order: The balance fo soft power and the rise of Herbivorous Power
India, South Africa, Russia and Brazil are natural leaders in their regions.
India: is anybody there?
The Europeans and the Indians do not understand each other: in India there are more people who have an ‘unfavorable’ opinion about the EU than ‘favorable.’ A surprising fact, considering the fact that both are democracies that are market-orientated.
Source: Pew Research
Center 2010
BrazilThe percentage of people who have a favorable opinion about the EU opinion
Source: Pew Global Attitudes Project, Financial Times 15/03/2011
Brazil could be the new ‘energy giant’
Turkey is walking away…
Source: Transatlantic Trends 2010
The percentage of the Turkish population that wants their country to join the EU has been decreasing since the adhesion negotiations began. The EU’s attractiveness is weakening.
Chapter 8: The other’s weaknessesThe Europeans are still 30 times richer than the Indians, 10 times richer than the Chinese and 4 times richer than the Russians.
Source: World Bank 2010 (current
dollars)
According to the World Bank GDP per capita in 2009 for India was: $1,192, China: $3,744, Brazil: $8,230, Russia: $8,684, la EU: $32, 845 and the US: $45,989.
Be careful with ‘the bubbles’: The BRICs also have their imbalances. Inflation was quite high in Russia and India
in 2010 as well as in Brazil.
Source: WSJ, Feeling the
heat
China will be old before becoming rich
Source: Land of the rising son
China ‘single child’ policy is already having implications on its demographics
China has 110 proposed reactors in the works. Will they be reliable?
Source: Financial Times
Russia’s demographics
Source: Prospect Magazine y Foreign
Affairs, The Demographic Future
- In 1993, Russia’s population was 148.6 millions.- In 2010 it was 141.9 millions.- In 17 years Russia lost almost 7 millions people. - The World Health Organization stated in 2008 that life expectancy in Russia for children aged 15 was less than in Cambodia, Eritrea and Haiti. - Life expectancy in Spain is 14 years higher than in Russia.
More cell phones than toilets and a lot of corruption in India
Source: UN Report 2010 y Financial Times, 21/03/2011
The BRICs have high inequality rates and corruption is extended to large parts of the society. The number of Russia millionaires has multiplied by 21, and by 6 in India.
According to a UN study, only 366 million people had access to toilets and running water in India while 545 million have a cell phone.
Brazil; an economy with weaknesses
Brazil’s economic growth has been high, but its industry is weak in the face of Chinese imports of manufactured goods and electronics. The Brazilian state is also ineffective and has a large corruption problem. The Doing Business’ index places Brazil on the 172 position, under Russia (123 position) and China (79 position).
Chapter 9: An introverted DNAThe evolution of the foreign service in the European Commission between 1969-1998
Africa, Caribbean and Pacific countries (ACP) and non-ACP countries
Source: Bruter, Michael (1999) 'Diplomacy without a state: the
external delegations of the EuropeanCommission', Journal of European
Public Policy, 6: 2, 183 — 205
The EEC’s first foreign delegations responded to the necessity of managing aid flows and relations with ex-colonies, not to a calling to have a ‘foreign policy.’ EU member states retained their foreign policy (high politics) and delegated the European Commission trade and aid issues.
Trade between the European community and EFTA
Source: European Navigator
Enlargement has not been the product of deliberate design but rather of unexpected events. The economic success of the EEC attracted the United Kingdom and others. The democratic factor attracted southern Europe. But Europe has always carried out enlargements against its will. The European project has an ‘expansion logic,’ but not a ‘expansion will.’
Chapter 10: Dazzled but not blind
That China is growing is logical: the abnormality is that the largest country in the world is so poor. Its GDP per capita, even today, is the same as Honduras.
Source: Financial Times,
22/11/2010
The world’s biggest economiesThe world’s biggest economies in 2010
GDP in 2010 (trillion $)The biggest economies in 2050 accorrding to Goldman Sachs
1 United States 14,624China
2 China 5,745United States
3 Japan 5.390 India
4 Germany 3,305Brazil
5 France 2,555Russia
6 United Kingdom 2,258 Indonesia
7 Italy 2,036Mexico
8 Brazil 2,023United Kingdom
9 Canada 1,563Turkey
10 Russia 1,476Japan
11 India 1.430France
12 Spain 1,374Germany
Source: IMF World Economic Outlook 2010
Europe’s decline may mirror Japan’sLife expectancy in Japan is 82.2 years, four years higher than in the United States; unemployment is 5% and its levels of social protection and equality are one of the highest in the world.
Source: World Bank 2010
Europe was designed towards the ‘inside’: not ‘outside’. It is an introverted power.
Link
The keyboard QWERTY was designed to slow down writing so that the keys did not get jammed. That is why the most used buttons on a computer are concentrated around the weaker fingers in the left hand.
To get Europe to have a foreign policy would require a large amount of constitutional engineering… but the
ideal is the enemy of what is good.
For more information see the following article: Chubon
keyboard
If we re-designed our keyboards, we would place the keys used most often in the center where out strong fingers lie. However, the cost of changing to a better system is higher than continuing to work with a suboptimal system. One way or another, Europe’s Constitution tired to resolve the EU’s problems and to change the institutional design. However, the institutional engineering has demonstrated its limits.
The panda developed a sixth thumb and Europe should invent its foreign policy. The function
creates the organ.
For more information see
this articulo.
The panda developed a ‘false’ thumb so that it could glide bamboo sticks between its claws. Europe does not need a ‘typical’ foreign policy like the rest of the superpowers, just one that appears so and one that could be effective in completing its objectives.