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Dynamic
progress
At the time of its creation in the 1950s, the ambition
of the EU was to bring together the nations and peoples of Europe as they
emerged from the aftermath of World War II.
The need to develop its external relations sprang
essentially from two sources. As the original six EU countries removed
internal trade barriers between them, they had to handle their trade
relations with outside countries as a shared responsibility. This gave
rise to the common commercial policy, the first area where EU countries
pooled their sovereignty in their joint interest. At the same time, the
Member States agreed to share part of the financial cost of assisting
their former colonies, especially in Africa, as these secured their
independence.
New members have joined the EU and the Union has taken
on more responsibilities. Therefore the EU has had to define further its
relationships with the rest of the world and with international
organisations.
The common external trade policy is a key component of
the European Union's relations with the rest of the world. It operates at
two complementary levels. Firstly, within the World Trade Organisation
(WTO), it is actively involved in setting the rules for the multilateral
system of international trade along with its partners across the globe.
Secondly, the Union negotiates its own bilateral trade agreements with
countries and regions. It makes a special effort to give products from
developing countries easy access to its market and to promote development
through its trade relations.
Financial and technical assistance, which initially
concentrated on Africa, was extended to Asia, Latin America and the
southern and eastern Mediterranean countries in the 1970s. At this time,
the Union also began providing humanitarian aid to victims of natural and
man-made disasters around the world.
More than trade
and aid
The EU’s agreements with its partners around the globe
go beyond trade and traditional development assistance. They cover support
for economic reforms, health and education, infrastructure programmes and
in some cases cooperation in areas like research and development and
environmental policy. They also provide a framework for discussing
political issues like democracy and human rights. Recent agreements also
require partners to commit themselves to the non-proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction.
A long-standing relationship
As one of the world’s least developed countries,
Tanzania benefits from duty-free access for all its exports to the
European Union except arms and munitions. Tanzania is also one of the
EU’s 79 partners in the African-Caribbean-Pacific (ACP) group which
benefit from the Cotonou trade and aid Agreement. The EU is Tanzania’s
biggest external market, taking more than 50 % of its exports, while the
Union provides just over 20 % of Tanzania’s imports, mainly of capital
goods and equipment. EU aid to Tanzania is worth more than €100 million
a year. EU-funded projects focus on the transport infrastructure,
education, water supply, the environment, AIDS prevention and support
for good governance.
Adding a new
dimension
Under the 1992 Maastricht Treaty, the EU has been
developing a common foreign and security policy (CFSP) so that it can take
joint action when the interests of the Union as a whole are at stake.
Defence is becoming an important aspect of the CFSP as the EU works to
promote and maintain stability around the world. As it deals with
terrorism, international crime, drug trafficking, illegal immigration and
global issues like the environment, the Union works closely with other
countries and international bodies.
Managing the Union’s external relations is a dynamic
process: as the EU crafts its own foreign policy, it must also respond to
external forces. These include growing economic interdependence brought on
by the combined effect of a wave of market liberalisation around the
world, the global communications revolution and accelerating technological
progress. The EU has had to update its priorities in a context of more
international competition, greater cross-border investment flows and
rising global demand for raw materials, especially oil and gas.
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