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Can the model of a social market economy lead the EU out of the impasse? The view of a lawyer and an econonomist on the necessary changes at EU level

Publication at Faculty of Law |
2016

Abstract

From the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty, the EU has, among its constitutional objectives, the goal of achieving a highly competitive social market economy. At the same time, however, the EU has not been given any specific powers to actively develop its social policy, and having to cope in parallel with the economic and fiscal crisis, it has given preference rather to austerity than to social welfare.

After six years of legal force of the Lisbon Treaty there is still no clarity on how should the EU interpret the legacy of German post-war Sozialmarktwirtschaft; whether it should strive for its own economic and social "Constitution", or whether it can try to fulfil the objective of social market economy through the instruments of EU law and policy measures. The paper argues that some, rather partial, measures enacted by the EU would be desirable and feasible without creating a danger of over-regulation that would threaten the freedoms of the internal market or distort the existing division of powers between the EU and the Member States in the social field.

The social market economy concept, being itself a compromise between the free markets and social welfare requirements, can act there as a guarantee that neither unbounded market freedoms nor socializing policies would dominate the EU.