written by
Truchlewski, Zbigniew ; Schelkle, Waltraud
Beyond the North–South divide: transnational coalitions in EU reforms – New Political Economy
19/07/2024
scritto da
Truchlewski, Zbigniew ; Schelkle, Waltraud

Abstract:

The literature on fifteen years of European crises leaves the reader with a puzzle. Prominent accounts of the longest crisis – that of the euro area (EA) – assert that the EA is deeply divided between North and South, with Central Eastern European (CEE) member states being ignored. This makes it hard to explain how the union has managed to reform since 2008 and especially during the Covid-19 pandemic. Scholars have started to talk of transnational coalitions, but they equate coalition-formation with bringing together the like-minded, typically over solidarity versus sovereignty and more or less integration. However, coalitions of the like-minded are typically too small to sustain reforms and compromise has to be sought with others who have different preferences. To establish empirically how stable or fluid transnational coalitions are, we exploit the EMU|Choices database (Wasserfallen, Leuffen, Kudrna, and Degner 2019) [Analysing European Union decision-making during the Eurozone crisis with new data. European Union Politics, 20 (1), 3–23] on EA reforms and our own original data on Covid-19 reforms. Our findings show a stable pattern but no geopolitical divide – coalitions have varying CEE members. These findings can provide a basis for developing a more plausible conceptualisation of transnational coalitions.

To cite this article:

Truchlewski, Z., & Schelkle, W. (2024). Beyond the North–South divide: transnational coalitions in EU reforms. New Political Economy, 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1080/13563467.2024.2356552

 

#Covid-19 #euro area #solidarity #sovereignty #Transnational coalitions
from the same author:
A Very European Way Out: Polity Maintenance and the Design of Article 50 – Government and Opposition
Bounded solidarity? Experimental evidence on cross-national bonding in the EU during the COVID crisis – European Journal of Political Research
Buying time for democracies? European Union emergency politics in the time of COVID-19 – West European Politics
sullo stesso argomento
#Covid-19
Natili, Marcello ; Ronchi, Stefano
Widening double dualisation? Labour market inequalities and national social policy responses in Western Europe during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic – Social Policy & Administration
Miró, Joan
Debating fiscal solidarity in the EU: interests, values and identities in the legitimation of the Next Generation EU plan – Journal of European Integration
#euro area
Schelkle, Waltraud
Monetary solidarity in Europe: can divisive institutions become ‘moral opportunities’? – Review of Social Economy
Ferrara, Federico ; Kriesi, Hanspeter
Crisis pressures and European integration – Journal of European Public Policy
#solidarity
Kyriazi, Anna ; Pellegata, Alessandro ; Ronchi, Stefano
Closer in hard times? The drivers of European solidarity in ‘normal’ and ‘crisis’ times – Comparative European Politics
Kyriazi, Anna
A solidarity bias? Assessing the effects of individual transnationalism on redistributive solidarity in the EU – Journal of European Public Policy
#sovereignty
#Transnational coalitions
partners
This project is funded with a Synergy Grant by the European Research Council under Grant Agreement n. 810356. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.