Brief
Single market: industrial and political challenges
Single market today is praised as one of the ways that could help overcome the economic crisis and ensure growth. The Tribune overviews the progress achieved and outlines the main current industrial challenges.
Single market today is on the top of the European political agenda, praised
as the strategy that could help overcome current economic crisis and ensure
growth in the long term. Mario Monti’s report of 2010, Commission’s two Single
Market Acts and the conclusions of the latest European Council meetings
emphasizing the importance of the single market – these are just a few examples
of the rebirth of the project, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year.
Two decades on, the European single market is still incomplete and significant
reforms are needed more than ever for the achievement of its full potential.
This tribune gives an opportunity to step back and review the progress that
has been made since 1992, the initial symbolic deadline for the completion of
the single market. Significant achievements have been made and they should not
be underplayed. Yet, with the benefit of hindsight, the lessons on the
obstacles of further integration should be drawn too.
The tribune consists of three parts. Firstly, the historical overview
of the single market is provided emphasizing both the strengths and the
weaknesses of the project. Secondly, the developments and the relevance of the
single market today are analysed in the context of the economic crisis. Lastly,
European industrial policy is given a special focus as the current economic
mayhem may lead to the resurgence of protectionism in many forms and to the
collapse of the single market as a whole.
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
Annual Conference of the Jacques Delors Institute

The Unexpected Impact of Prosperity: How the Manipulation of the Consequences of Globalization by the Far-Right Movements Endanger the International Order?

Together we trade, divided we aid

Make the European Single Market fit for the age of geopolitical competition

After the elections in the United States, will Europe wake up?

For a competitive European industrial policy

Opening Financial Data: A Threat to Solidarity and Consumer Protection in Europe

Commonalities and fault lines in EU economic policy visions

Much more than a Market

Les projets importants d’intérêt européen commun (PIIEC)

Strategic Autonomy
in Post-Covid Trade Policy

External Differentiation in Access to the Single Market: Effectiveness, Accountability and Political Unity

Is Brexit a game changer for EU external differentiated integration?

Brexit and External Differentiation in Single Market Access

European Taxes: Do We Need Them?

The four freedoms in the EU: Are they inseparable?

How To Scale-up in the EU? Creating a Better Integrated Single Market for Start-ups

Venture Capital: How to harmonize national and EU measures?

Balancing Ambition and Pragmatism for the Digital Single Market

Digital Development: a Matter of Speed

Free movement of Europeans – Taking stock of a misunderstood right

A deepened Single market for labour and digital innovation

De jure freedom of movement and de facto mobility in the EU internal market

Growth and euro area stability: for a deepened single market for services

The single market and cohesion policy dyad: battered by the crisis and globalisation

The single market 20 years later: challenges and opportunities

European elections: full steam ahead!

Enjoying a Single Market for Network Industries?

Public Services and European Competition: Contradiction or Conciliation?

Single market: new rules urgently needed

The Single Market: cornerstone of the EU

Competition, Cooperation, Solidarity: new challenges

Jacques Delors’ “Triptych”: current situation and prospects

For a new relaunch of the single market

15 countries in a boat: economic and social cohesion – the cornerstone of european integration

MÉDIAS
MEDIAS
Les 7 tendances à suivre en 2025, selon Enrico Letta

Enrico Letta: «L’épargne des Européens finance des sociétés américaines qui rachètent nos entreprises»
