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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 22-page paper compares Britain and France, and government influence in industrial policies and markets. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
22 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AS43_MTeuronatl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
constitution and federal government, the EU is a conglomeration of different nation-states; each of which has their own government, their own sovereignty, their own capital markets and their own way
of doing things. Member states of the EU are typically in a complex scenario. On the one hand, they retain their independence when it comes to economics and markets. But
on the other hand, they are answerable to a so-called "central authority" on issues such as trade, markets and the movement of goods, labor and capital. Its proven to be
an interesting dichotomy, but not something that all states have necessarily embraced. Furthermore, in the wake of market reform throughout Europe, independent regulatory
agencies (IRAs) have sprung up, with independence from elected governments and power over competition (Thatcher, 2007; 1028). These have worked, to greater or lesser degrees, depending on how "statist" European
countries have been. There are some member states in the EU with frankly socialist leanings, governments that become involved in just about every sector of the marketplace. And then there
are those member states in which free market sources are more or less free to roam, with government involvement restricted to licensing, regulation or ensuring fair and equitable competition.
What would be helpful to fully understand this conflict is to examine two different countries and determine, through this examination, whether there is
space left for national industrial/market policies in among European nations because of EU liberalization and trading procedures. The two countries weve selected for
our particular examination are France and the United Kingdom (Britain). Separated by the English Channel, these two nations are different in many other ways, above and beyond language and culture.
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