Enunciados de questões e informações de concursos
A modest proposal
Source: www.economist.com 14 Dec 2005 (Adapted)
What on earth is the European Union budget for? It is too small
(taking up just over 1% of EU-wide GDP) to have any serious effect. To
judge by the wrangling before this week's EU summit in Brussels, it has
become mostly an opportunity for countries to air their pet grievances
and to demand their money back. If there is a deal on the budget this
week, it will be an agreement reached for its own sake, because EU
leaders cannot bear to be blamed for yet another summit failure. And if
there is no deal, it will similarly be a disagreement for its own sake -
because France rather likes the idea of putting Britain, which holds
the rotating EU presidency, in the dock for one more financial fiasco.
Yet if there was ever a good moment to think hard about how the
budget might be better designed to advance the Union's stated aims, it
ought to be now. The "financial perspective" is negotiated once every
six years. That ought to create enough time to step back a bit and
consider some first principles. The present negotiation is also the
first since French and Dutch voters rejected the EU constitution this
summer, creating another good opportunity to ask whether the club is
still spending its money on the right things. What would a budget look
like if it took the EU's goals at all seriously?