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Enlargement of the European Union

The European Union originally consisted of 6 member states. It has since grown to 15 member states, and several more states plan to join: 10 new members in 2004, 2 new members in 2007, and possibly more after that.

Table of contents
1 Summary of past enlargements
2 The 2004 enlargement
3 The 2007 enlargement
4 Further enlargement
5 External links

Summary of past enlargements

For details see History of the European Union.

The 2004 enlargement

The European Commission's Strategic Report of October 9, 2002 recommended 10 candidate members for inclusion in the EU in 2004: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, Malta and Cyprus. Their combined population is roughly 75 million, their combined Gross Domestic Product is about 840 billion US dollars (purchasing power parity; CIA World Factbook 2003), similar in size to that of Spain.

After negotiations between the candidates and the member states, the final decision to invite these nations to join was announced on December 13, 2002 in Copenhagen, with the European Parliament voting in favour of this on April 9, 2003.

On April 16, 2003 the treaty of Accession was signed by the 10 new members and the 15 old ones in Athens. The final remaining step is the ratification of the treaty by the current member states and by each of the candidate nations. Ratification in the former is to be done by the parliaments of the member states alone, whereas in the latter the ratification is first subject to a referendum, except for Cyprus where the parliament will be solely responsible. The 2003 referenda dates (in many countries a two-day ballot is held) and the outcome in each of the candidate countries are as follows:

In the event that one of the referenda did not return an affirmative result, provision had been made for the enlargement to carry on without that country. Now the referenda have turned out in favour of joining, ratification is expected to proceed without further problems and the candidate countries will become full members of the EU on May 1, 2004.

2004 enlargement
country Pop Area GDP GDP per cap

Estonia
 
1.4 45226 15.2 10900
Latvia
 
2.3 64589 20.0 8300
Lithuania
 
3.6 65200 29.2 8400
Poland
 
38.6 312685 368.1 9500
Czechia
 
10.3 78866 155.9 15300

Hungary
 
10.1 93030 134.7 13300
Slovakia
 
5.4 48845 66.0 12200
Slovenia
 
1.9 20253 36 18000
Malta
 
0.4 316 7.0 17000
Cyprus
 
0.8 9250 9.415000
Subtotal
 
74.8 738260 841.5 11250

Notes (for this and later tables):

  • Pop is population in millions
  • Area is in km²
  • GDP in billions of USD, at purchasing power parity, 2001 figures
  • GDP per cap is per capita GDP in USD, year as in previous column

The 2007 enlargement

Bulgaria and Romania have been recommended to join the EU in 2007, and these dates have been firmly set at the Thessaloniki Summit in 2003.

2007 enlargement
country Pop Area GDP GDP per cap

Bulgaria
 
7.5 110910 50.6 6600
Romania
 
22.3 238391 166 7400
Subtotal
 
29.8 349301 216.6 7268
Incl.2004
 
104.6 1087561 1058.1 10115

Further enlargement

Croatia applied for EU membership in 2003 and is in the process of becoming an official candidate.

Turkey has officially been recognised as a candidate for enlargement after having been an Associate Member since 1963, but it has not yet been permitted to start negotiations due to concerns about its human rights record and about the involvement of the military in Turkish politics. It is however encouraged to continue its reform process. Some people in the EU are reluctant to accept a Muslim State, albeit a strongly secular one, into what is seen by some as a Christian club. It is also pointed out by these people that much of Turkey's territory is not European, but Asian.

possible enlargement past 2007
country Pop Area GDP GDP per cap

Turkey
 
68.1 780580 468.0 7000
Croatia
 
4.4 56542 38.9 8800
Subtotal
 
72.5 837122 506.9 7109
TOTAL
 
177.1 1924683 1565.0 8837

Source: http://www.undp.org/hdr2003/indicator/indic_110_1_1.html

External links





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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Enlargement of the European Union".