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10 British J. Pol. & Int'l Rel. 1 (2008)

handle is hein.journals/bhjlplcs10 and id is 1 raw text is: 



doi: 10.1111/j.1467-856x.2007.00314.x


Economic Interests and the European

Union: A Catalyst for European

Integration or a Hindrance?

Tal  Sadeh   and  David   Howarth



Keywords:   economic  interests; European integration theory; European Union;
interest groups


This special issue of The British Journal of Politics & International Relations focuses on
the role of economic interests in European integration. Economic interest groups
are  defined as representative associations that pursue-as their overriding
objective-the material economic interests of their members. They include peak
and sectoral business associations, trade unions, professional associations, farmers'
unions  and associations representing small-scale businesses, shopkeepers and
tradespeople. Economic interests can also include individual companies that lobby
governments  directly. Groups that represent political actors which do not focus
explicitly on the material interests of their members and economic goals would be
excluded from  this definition: for example, women's groups as well as non-
governmental associations that focus on environmental or human rights issues.

Existing studies of the role of economic interests in European integration fall into
one or more of four camps, none of which has entered into a sustained analysis of
the role of all major economic interests and European integration. First, there are
studies where the role of economic interests is part of and is seen in terms of a
particular theory or analytical approach that makes broader claims about European
integration. Andrew Moravcsik (1998), notably, examines a limited range of eco-
nomic interests in the context of his liberal intergovernmentalist study and under-
stands national policy formation in terms of competing economic, and principally
business, interests. Neo-functionalists emphasise the role of interests that operate
supranationally and independently of the activities of national governments to
shape EU-level policy developments. For neo-functionalists, economic interests
proactively support the successive integration of various sectors of the economy in
order to diminish the transaction costs created from the cross-border movement of
goods, services, capital and people. Neo-Gramscians (van Apeldoorn 2002; Bieler
2001) focus upon the pro-integration role of transnational business and financial
interests and the complex positioning of trade unions.

In the second camp, there are studies of a broad range of interest groups operating
at the EU level but not economic interests per se. Justin Greenwood and Mark
Aspinwall's (1998) edited volume explores EU-level policy-making as a collective
action problem involving various interests. Greenwood (2007) has undertaken the


 l:. Political Studies  © 2008 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2008 Political Studies Association
'i .IE Association


BJPIR:   2008   VOL   10, 1-8

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