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What is Germany’s self-interest?
The imminent Brexit negotiations have the potential to give rise to toxic disputes within the EU27. This would be the case if individual countries seek to gain market shares in special sectors, or to pursue short-term political victories at the expense of others. Germany’s enlightened self-interest cannot be confined to short-term cost-benefit calculus for specific goods or sectoral relative advantages. In the long run, Germany’s prosperity is inseparable from the success of Europe and the Eurozone. As the bloc’s largest economy, it has great impact but is also highly exposed to Europe. Thus its priority has to be to preserve the EU and the Eurozone, and to avoid corrosive, possibly divisive or even destructive compromises with a country that wants to leave.
Editor's note: This column first appeared as a chapter in the VoxEU eBook What To Do With the UK? EU perspectives on Brexit, available to download here.
References
Canetta, E., E. Fries-Tersch and V. Mabilia (2014), Annual Report on Labor Mobility, European Commission.
Der Spiegel (2016), “Don’t go, Please Stay”, 11 June.
Financial Times (2016), “‘Please Don’t Go!’ — Germans beg ‘cool’ Brits to stay in EU”, 10 June.
Jauer, J., T. Liebig, J. P. Martin and P. Puhani (2014), “Migration as an adjustment mechanism in the crisis? A comparison of Europe and the United States”, OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Paper No. 155.
Pisani-Ferry, J., N. Röttgen, A. Sapir, P. Tucker and G. B. Wolff (2016), “Europe after Brexit: A proposal for a Continental Partnership”, Breugel External Publication, Brussels.
Endnotes
[1] They propose a Continental Partnership (CP), starting between the UK and the EU7 and involving “participation in selected common policies consistent with access to the Single Market; participation in a new CP system of inter-governmental decision making and enforcement; contribution to the EU budget; close cooperation on foreign policy, security and, possibly, defence matters”.
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