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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT1067>
<title>
Mar. 01, 1993: No One Ever Said It Would Be Easy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EUROPEAN COMMUNITY, Page 32
No One Ever Said It Would Be Easy
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Goods, people, capital and services are moving more freely,
but so are jobs as Europe's attempt to form a more perfect union
runs into trouble
</p>
<p>By MARGOT HORNBLOWER/PARIS--With reporting by Helen Gibson/Calais, Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn
and Jane Walker/Madrid
</p>
<p> In the town of Irun, on the Spanish-French frontier, Jan. 1
marked the end of Juan Manuel Retegui's career. Until then,
1,500 trucks a day would pass through the border's vast customs
complex, with its long rows of loading bays and warehouses.
Retegui and his 1,275 fellow agents, inspectors and clerks thrived
on the red tape generated by $1 billion worth of trade a year.
"Lines of trucks would stretch up the road," said Retegui. "Shops
and bars were packed with people."
</p>
<p> But on New Year's Day--poof! The European Community's single
market took effect, freeing the movement of goods among all
12 countries. Across Western Europe, an estimated 63,000 customs
workers found themselves looking for new jobs. As Retegui walked
glumly through Irun's deserted halls, only a single clerk was
at work, clearing a salmon shipment from Sweden, a non-E.C.
country. In the distance, tractor trailers thundered down the
highway, barely slowing as they approached the crossing. "Who
could believe we would be working flat out through December,"
said union official Ricardo Urtizberea, "and then suddenly find
ourselves without a job?"
</p>
<p> Since the 12 Community nations agreed in 1986 to form a more
perfect union, governments have swept away thousands of protectionist
laws and regulations. Anticipating cross-border competition,
industries initiated a frenzy of mergers and reorganizations,
investing billions of dollars and creating an estimated 1.5
million new jobs. Fearful of being left out, U.S. and Japanese
companies scrambled to set up European subsidiaries before the
deadline. The prize: an integrated market of 360 million consumers
in an area with a combined gross national product of $6.5 trillion--the world's largest single trading bloc.
</p>
<p> If an integrated Community, unfettered by internal barriers,
will be able to compete better against overseas rivals, that
is far from its only purpose. After the wreckage of two world
wars, European statesmen reasoned that only by interlocking
their economies could they make war among themselves unthinkable.
</p>
<p> So why, now that the day has finally arrived, is the mood so
morose? Europe's failure to deal with the Yugoslav crisis has
exposed its impotence in foreign policy. Its prosperity is undermined
by global recession. Turmoil in the money markets has reinforced
doubts about the E.C.'s ability to achieve a single currency
and greater political union. In a climate of growing unemployment,
a spate of factory closings is leading to bitter rivalry: France
is seeking to stop Hoover Europe from moving 600 manufacturing
jobs from Dijon to Glasgow. Glasgow is protesting Nestle's subsidiary
Rowntree's plans to shut a chocolate factory, transferring operations
outside Scotland. "European unity might be good for business,"
says customs clerk Retegui, reflecting widespread popular unease.
"But what does it do for the man in the street?"
</p>
<p> The answer: Plenty. Although many are only vaguely aware of
the extent of the revolution, the single market has already
touched the lives of Eurocitizens in ways great and small. The
free movement of goods, people, capital and services required
a standardization of financial, technical, health, labor and
environmental rules. The job was undertaken by a multinational
force of 13,400 bureaucrats in Brussels--the embryo of an
emerging federal government. Farmers were brought under a common
agricultural policy that slashes subsidies and translates into
lower food prices. New cars feature catalytic converters so
that Italian manufacturers cannot undercut German companies
by saving on pollution equipment. Toys from Portugal must meet
the same safety guidelines as those made in Denmark.
</p>
<p> If some are losing jobs, others are profiting from the new market.
The duty on alcohol and tobacco, for example, was lifted for
individual travelers. "We enjoy drinking wine, but we cannot
afford it at British prices," said Barbara Green, the wife of
a taxi driver from the British port of Ramsgate whose family
went on a cross-Channel shopping spree. Charging down the aisles
of a Calais supermarket, the Greens scooped up five crates of
beer, five bottles of whiskey and 38 bottles of wine. "These
are for our wedding anniversary," she said. With Barbara's mother
stocking up on brandy and champagne, the family spent $434,
probably less than a third of what the goods cost in Britain.
</p>
<p> All the English families that are buying their liquor in French
stores will eventually see a drop in British prices as the single
market forces member countries to harmonize their tax rates.
France has already chopped its 33% value-added tax on automobiles,
which kept French drivers from speeding across the border to
buy lower-taxed German models. Lufthan sa, Iberia and Air
France have slashed airfares, signaling the opening of Europe's
first air price war. Consumers are benefiting. But Bernard Attali,
chairman of the board of Air France, warned that the "suicidal"
consequences of cut-throat competition will be massive layoffs
and fewer flights to small cities.
</p>
<p> Europeans are waking to the fact that hardly any aspect of daily
life is unaffected. The single market touches their wallets:
Britain's Barclays Bank charged into the Spanish market with
interest-bearing accounts, forcing local banks to follow suit.
The single market influences food prices (bananas in Germany
will be one-third more expensive thanks to new E.C.-imposed
tariffs on South American imports), health (no cigarettes with
more than 15 mg of tar can be sold in the Community, forcing
France to lighten up its legendary Gauloises), and even noise
(all lawn mowers must adhere to the same decibel regulations).
</p>
<p> But Brussels' bureaucrats have not dared tell the British to
drive on the right. Nor have the Twelve been able to agree on
uniform electric plugs or phone jacks. In theory, professional
barriers have dropped, so a Greek dentist can practice in Aberdeen,
Scotland and an Italian lawyer can hang up his shingle in Hamburg,
Germany. In actuality, the rules governing professional practice
in each country remain decisive. On Jan. 1, internal passport
controls were to vanish, but Britain, Ireland and Denmark balked.
In the other nine countries, airport controls for internal E.C.
passengers will disappear next year, after arrival gates have
been reconfigured.
</p>
<p> Some businessmen have found the changes welcome. "Everything
is much speedier," said Mario Sivieri, who runs a horse-transport
business from Milan. Twelve hours has been shaved off the time
it takes to ship a breeding mare from Italy to Ireland and back,
saving $700 on the round trip. A dozen export-import forms were
eliminated, and veterinary checks now take place only at the
destination. As for Sivieri trucker Carlo Boldrini, who used
to spend nights in the horse trailer when frontier posts closed
for the day, "stress is reduced 90%."
</p>
<p> For others, the single market seems a sham. "German veterinary
rules say poultry cannot be imported with heads, feet, hair
or innards," said George Kastner, the country's leading food
distributor. "But the French would not think of buying it any
other way." A unified market has not changed the German rules,
but now inspections take place on Kastner's premises. He had
to spend $62,000 for new software to calculate value-added tax,
which is now done in-house. "The single market has merely pushed
the border inland," he said. "Brussels bureaucrats want to know
how many kilos of this, how many crates of that. Before, I needed
half an hour to do paperwork for one truck picking up prod
uce in Paris. Today a specialist needs a full hour for each
truck."
</p>
<p> Many fear that the single market will prompt more short-term
unemployment, as companies shut down scattered operations and
consolidate. Unless rules are equally enforced by member countries,
industries could demand a return to protectionism. Protests
have erupted over the fear that lower wages and benefits in
some countries will draw industry away from such socially liberal
nations as France and Germany. Many also fear that broadening
the E.C. by admitting East European nations will weaken it economically.
But, says European Commission president Jacques Delors, "building
Europe has not been a long, calm process." Forced to cope with
the realities of a single market, the Reteguis, the Greens,
the Sivieris and the Kastners would not disagree with Delors's
sentiment.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>