IS THE FINANCIAL TIMES RECYCLING

IS THE FINANCIAL TIMES RECYCLING ITS STORIES?: According to the FT, the liberalization of European Union economies is failing: “European diplomats are warning that the European Union’s liberalisation programme, intended to make Europe the world’s most competitive economy by 2010, has run out of steam. An EU summit this month, scheduled to review and inject ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

IS THE FINANCIAL TIMES RECYCLING ITS STORIES?: According to the FT, the liberalization of European Union economies is failing: "European diplomats are warning that the European Union's liberalisation programme, intended to make Europe the world's most competitive economy by 2010, has run out of steam. An EU summit this month, scheduled to review and inject new impetus into the liberalisation process, is instead set to be dominated by the crisis over Iraq and the problems of the EU's stability and growth pact.... But diplomats from other countries caution that progress at the summit is likely to be merely symbolic. 'The problem is Germany and France and it is clear that Schröder and Chirac are not willing to take the necessary measures,' said one EU diplomat. 'There are also worries about the watering down of the stability pact.'" I fear this story will be recycled endlessly as long as Schröder and Chirac remain in power -- although, given the way the EU operates, it might just be endemic to the institution.

IS THE FINANCIAL TIMES RECYCLING ITS STORIES?: According to the FT, the liberalization of European Union economies is failing: “European diplomats are warning that the European Union’s liberalisation programme, intended to make Europe the world’s most competitive economy by 2010, has run out of steam. An EU summit this month, scheduled to review and inject new impetus into the liberalisation process, is instead set to be dominated by the crisis over Iraq and the problems of the EU’s stability and growth pact…. But diplomats from other countries caution that progress at the summit is likely to be merely symbolic. ‘The problem is Germany and France and it is clear that Schröder and Chirac are not willing to take the necessary measures,’ said one EU diplomat. ‘There are also worries about the watering down of the stability pact.'” I fear this story will be recycled endlessly as long as Schröder and Chirac remain in power — although, given the way the EU operates, it might just be endemic to the institution.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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