home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME - Man of the Year
/
CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
/
moy
/
122192
/
12219911.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-04-08
|
2KB
|
37 lines
THE WEEK, Page 20WORLDThe Euro-Train Is Late
E.C. leaders paper over differences with outdated Maastricht
timetables
Could it be that the epiphany of Maastricht was only a year
ago? As the heads of the European Community's 12 members convened
in Edinburgh's royal Palace of Holyroodhouse, the issue was no
longer whether the visionary 1991 draft treaty calling for
political and monetary union by 1999 was off course. That much
had been amply certified, first by Denmark's rejection, then by
severe strains in an interim currency mechanism, by a festering
budget crisis and finally, less than a week earlier, by a
referendum in nonmember Switzerland that came down against
experimenting even with a customs affiliation. The question
facing the Edinburgh summit, said host John Major, was whether
the Twelve could overcome "very real difficulties" to preserving
Maastricht at all.
Very real indeed, but solvable still, the participants
decided. Late Saturday, they cobbled together a deal allowing
Denmark to opt out of major unified policies if it ratifies the
treaty in a second vote. Negotiators also seemed headed toward
a compromise on seven-year spending projections aimed at closing
gaps in living standards among E.C. member countries. German
Chancellor Helmut Kohl insisted that "the train to Europe will
not be stopped." Perhaps not. But it is surely not running on
time.