Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Slovakia Stands Up, Caves to the E.U.

On October 11, 2011, Slovakia’s Parliament failed to approve the expansion of the euro rescue fund, a development, The New York Times reports, that “brought down the government.”[1] Although the vote makes good copy, it was not at all as dire as the headline suggests. The state’s “leading opposition party said after the government fell that it would be willing to discuss support for the fund, pointing to the eventual approval of the deal. European officials in Brussels were counting on a political solution, but also weighing the possibility of some kind of messy workaround if Slovakia failed to pass the measure.”[2] In other words, the vote had to do with state politics as well as resistance to bailing out a richer state. Once the state government fell, pressure from the E.U. and the new politics in the state government quickly coalesced by the next day to produce a deal in support of expanding the bailout fund. According to The Washington Post, "opposition leader Robert Fico, head of the Smer-Social Democracy party, announced he had struck a deal with the remnants of Radicova’s coalition, promising to back the fund in exchange for early elections that analysts say Fico’s party is well positioned to win."[3] Doubtless that pressure from the E.U. was also in the mix, as E.U. officials were already hinting that the bailout fund could be expanded over the tiny state's objection. “We call upon all parties in the Slovak parliament to rise above the positioning of short-term politics and seize the next occasion to ensure a swift adoption of the new agreement,” European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said in a joint statement.[4] In other words, hey guys, get your act together over there in Slovakia or else.


The full essay is at "Essays on the E.U. Political Economy," available at Amazon.


1. Nicholas Kulish and Stephen Castle, “Slovakia Rejects Euro Bailout,” The New York Times, October 11, 2011.
2. Ibid.
3. Anthony Fiana, "Slovakia Reaches Agreementon European Bailout Fund," The Washington Post, October 12, 2011.
4. Ibid.