blog business
The EU takes a protectionist knife to Turkey
Kevin Baldeosingh
The European Union’s objections to Volkswagen’s future factory in a nonEU state reveals that the Brussels bureaucracy doesn’t really want to help
poor nations.
EU politicians and technocrats like to present themselves as progressive
and enlightened policy-makers. But that virtuous mask slipped in October
after German auto giant Volkswagen announced that its new facility would
be located in Turkey instead of an EU member nation. A news report
carried in Zeit Online last Monday quoted German Green Party politician
Reinhard Bütikofer as saying that Volkswagen’s decisions has “caused
consternation” within the European Parliament. This, Bütikofer said, was
because of “the increasingly deteriorating situation of the rule of law,
media freedom and democracy under President Erdogan.” He also revealed
that Volkswagen may face legal action from the EU Commission due to a
breach of competition rules that bind member states.
If the Commission follows through on this threat, it will be bad for
Volkswagen, bad for automobile buyers and, especially, bad for Turkish
people. Volkswagen plans to invest 1 billion euros in the multi-brand plant,
which will employ around 4,000 workers. Bulgaria was reportedly the
second preferred choice but, as an EU member, was bound by funding
regulations which constrained both Volkswagen’s and the Bulgarian
government’s negotiation space.
Yet, while businesses are not charitable organizations, it is inarguable that
Turkey benefits more from this investment, in relative terms, than Bulgaria
would have (or Romania or Serbia, which were also considered by VW).
Turkey has an unemployment rate of 13% as compared to Bulgaria’s 5%.
More importantly, Turkey has more political tension than Bulgaria, so the
very fact that VW is willing to set up a factory there sends a strong signal
both internationally and internally about the need for political stability. Yet
journalist Ivan Dikov argues in European Views that “In Bulgaria or
Romania, the Volkswagen investment would have boosted tremendously
the middle class, and thus the pro-Western, pro-EU orientation of the
respective society (which have come under attack by foreign powers in
recent years), and thus the potential of the respective country to contribute
far more to the well-being, dynamics, and development of the entire
European Union.” Dikov is oblivious to the fact that he’s arguing for VW to
support a middle-class, which is by definition well off, over support of a
poor class, which is the cohort that stands to benefit most from VW’s
investment in Turkey.
It is therefore ironic that the issue of human rights is being raised by EU
spokespersons as an objection to VW’s decision. The argument seems to be
that a country should have its political house in order before any firm can
in good conscience invest there. Yet the history of most European nations
shows that economic development long preceded any expansion of political
freedoms. Most of the time, it is economic progress which creates liberal
democracy, which is not surprising given that business is most efficient
when free, whereas governments are always attempting to restrict citizens’
rights as much as possible.
Protectionism requires political connivance. And, although free trade was
one of the key arguments used to justify the creation of the European Union
nearly three decades ago, the EU’s true protectionist face is becoming more
and more bared. As economist Ryan Bourne of the Cato Institute has
argued, “The long and short of it is that the EU is internally trade liberating
but outwardly protectionist…This is particularly obvious when one sees
certain tariffs, like those on oranges, applied seasonally as protection
against the South African harvest.”
Whether by accident or design, this policy is an economic carving knife
aimed to separate poorer countries, like Turkey, from the benefits of free
trade with wealthier nations.