Some interesting facts about the EU

Recent surveys by Eurostat show these results (slovak results were among the EU consensus)






  • Multinationals benefit most from globalisation according to 87% of EU citizens
    Multinationals, financial markets, the European Union, the United States, Japan, China,
    developing countries, consumers all benefit from globalisation according to a majority of
    EU citizens. However, farmers and small and medium sized companies seem to lose out.

  • Over three in four citizens in the European Union have heard of globalisation
    Awareness of the concept of globalisation seems to be high in most Member States.
    However, in Luxembourg and the United Kingdom, close to two in five respondents
    have not heard of it.

  • 63% of citizens are in favour of the development of globalisation
    Citizens support globalisation in each Member State with the exception of Greece where
    a majority are opposed.

  • Over two in five respondents believe that the Single Market and their domestic
    economy is sufficiently open to the needs of international trade

  • 43% of respondents believing that their country’s economy is too open also believe that
    the European Union is too liberal. However, respondents are more critical of their
    country’s level of protectionism as 43% of those who believe that their country’s economy
    is too closed believe on the other hand that the European Union is neither too
    protectionist nor too liberal.

  • Over one in two citizens are optimistic about their personal future and that of home
    economy should globalisation intensify

  • France, Greece and Belgium are the only Member States where a majority are
    pessimistic about their personal future and the economic impact on their country should
    globalisation intensify. In France and Belgium, respondents are in favour of the concept
    of globalisation in general but when asked for their views on the consequences at a level
    that is closer to themselves, they are more critical. Positive perceptions on a personal and
    economic level go hand-in-hand. 75% of respondents believing that they would gain on a
    personal level should globalisation intensify are also optimistic about the economic
    impact.

  • 62% of citizens believe in the effectiveness of controlling globalisation and 56% are
    calling for regulation to be stepped-up

  • In most Member States a majority of citizens believe in the regulation of globalisation.
    Respondents in Denmark and Luxembourg are least convinced of the effectiveness of
    regulation with respectively 59% and 52% indicating that they believe that globalisation
    cannot be effectively controlled.

  • Three in four European Union citizens believe that the United States exercises too
    much influence on globalisation

  • 37% of citizens believe that the European Union has a suitable level of influence on the
    process of globalisation. According to a majority of citizens the United States,
    multinationals and financial circles seem to exercise too much influence - a fact that is
    compounded by the low level of trust EU citizens place in these players. Consumer
    associations, however, are well placed to increase their level of influence on the process
    of globalisation.

  • 79% of citizens believe that anti or alter-globalist movements raise points that
    deserve to be debated

  • In each Member State a majority of respondents believe that anti or alter-globalist
    movements raise points that deserve to be debated. However, such movements are seen
    to be lacking in their ability to change its development.

  • 58% of citizens support the European Commission in its role as negotiator on
    international trade issues

  • Finland and the United Kingdom are the only two countries where a majority of
    respondents believe that the European Commission cannot sufficiently account for the
    interests of their country.

The Schengen feeling

This article says a lot about the mood at the moment in Bratislava


MANY Slovaks remember the times when one-day trips to Hungary’s border town of Salgótarján or Poland’s Nowi Targ were highlights of the year. Those who made brave plans to see travel destinations that were unusual for a good citizen of the communist Czechoslovakia had to start making arrangements early, and probably call many important people who knew other important people at important places. One single trip to the wrong destination might have cost them years of unwanted conversations with the secret police.

People who crossed the borders too frequently were suspicious, too. An obedient citizen was happy at home, the communists thought, and avoided the danger of getting infected by Hungary’s more liberal attitude towards private business or Poland’s Catholic traditions, which seemed to survive despite the best efforts of the only relevant political party.
Many can still recall the pre-1989 atmosphere on buses or trains. People nervously clutched their passports as they approached the Slovak-Hungarian or Slovak-Polish border crossings, ready to get a new stamp every time they visited a town on the other side of the border, even when they could see it from their gardens. Nervous mothers silenced their children, fearing that the border guards would search for the extra package of Hungarian or Polish candy that they hid under the seat because they exceeded the unofficial quota.

Many Slovaks have a piece of barbed wire that they managed to get from the fence that separated Slovakia and Austria. Shortly after the Velvet Revolution in 1989, Slovaks and Austrians cut it to pieces, driven by the euphoria of change. Many of them stood there burning candles, and at a loss for words, gazed at the place that still bled from the wounds the barbed wire fence opened. They were remembering people who died for crossing the borders and wanting to freely move.

Eighteen years later, workers are dismantling the Berg border crossing between Austria and Slovakia, a spot that two decades ago represented for many a gate to a better and more dignified life.

There will be no need for Berg anymore. The Council of Ministers of the European Union for Interior and Justice unanimously approved Slovakia’s entry to the Schengen area at its December 6 session. Slovakia – along with the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania and Malta – is set to enter the Schengen zone one minute after midnight on December 21.

Slovak officials have described the entry as the act of removing the last remnants of the Iron Curtain.

Interior Minister Robert Kaliňák said that Slovaks will finally have their 50-year-old dream of European freedom fulfilled, while Prime Minister Robert Fico compared the entry to the Schengen zone to the Velvet Revolution back in November 1989.
Though many walls and curtains have been torn down, some psychological barriers will remain, even after the metal ramps of the border crossings are taken to the scrap yard and border officers are relocated to Slovakia’s border with Ukraine, which becomes the eastern border of the European Union.

Whenever borders get erased and the freedom to move freely is given, people have hopes and concerns. These concerns appear rather petty compared to the historical importance of the moment, but they are still legitimate.

Some Slovak towns hope that Schengen will pour more tourists to the region and they will see their businesses swell. Others fear losing tourists from Russia due to the changes to the procedure they must go through to get a visa in the Schengen zone.

After all, Schengen opens up a significant symbolic gate, even for countries that might be led by people representing a strange transition between post-communism and democracy, some of them stuck halfway in between. No matter what anomalies these leaders bring to the political spectrum, the country becomes part of Europe, with all of its attributes.

However, there is some bitter irony in Slovakia entering the Schengen area at a time when the country’s prime minister manufactured a union with the man who pushed Slovakia to the edge of international isolation 10 years ago. Now when the entry to Schengen is actually happening, Vladimír Mečiar is again part of the government.

Regardless, Slovaks will soon have biometric passports and they will not need to use them when they travel to European Union countries. And if someone decides to travel from Prague to Budapest through Bratislava, they will not have to cross at least two state borders within seven hours or so and show their passport to Czech, Slovak and Hungarian officers.

There will not likely be massive street festivities to celebrate the country’s entry to the Schengen zone, but most of the population is aware of the immense importance of the moment. It’s just that most Slovaks no longer feel the euphoria of walking through different gates towards becoming full-value EU citizens. Now they hope to live the reality of it.


feudal USA vs. The civilised european union...

In the US, 1% of the population control almost 40% of the entire wealth of
the biggest economy in the world...

This is very similar to other 3rd world countries, pseudodemocracies &
other oligarchies.

Sins of NGOs in Slovakia and elsewhere

Robbo seems to want to make the life of NGO more difficult. It seems that although that he is broadly well within the political parameters of the EU political consensus, the current government is however rather suspicious of the propaganda spread by NGOs.

Lets clarify that when we talk about NGOs we do not focus on things like greenpeace or unicef. we are talking about strange outfits that seem to have limitless funding to affect the political climate

Now read on:


The following is an excerpted article from The Economist:
Sins of the secular missionaries

Aid and campaign groups, or NGOs, matter more and more in world affairs. But they are often far from being "non-governmental", as they claim. And they are not always a force for good
A YOUNG man thrusts his crudely printed calling card at the visitor. After his name are printed three letters: NGO. "What do you do?" the visitor asks."I have formed an NGO.""Yes, but what does it do?""Whatever they want. I am waiting for some funds and then I will make a project."
Once little more than ragged charities, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are now big business. Somalia, where that exchange took place, is heaven for them. In large parts of the country, western governments, the United Nations and foreign aid agencies cannot work directly; it is too dangerous. ...outsiders must work through local groups, which become a powerful source of patronage. "Anybody who's anybody is an NGO these days," sighs one UN official.

And not just in Somalia. NGOs now head for crisis zones as fast as journalists do: a war, a flood, refugees, a dodgy election, even a world trade conference, will draw them like a honey pot. Last spring, Tirana, the capital of Albania, was swamped by some 200 groups intending to help the refugees from Kosovo. In Kosovo..., the ground is now thick with foreign groups competing to foster democracy, build homes and proffer goods and services. Environmental activists in Norway board whaling ships; do-gooders gather for the Chiapas rebels in Mexico.

In recent years, such groups have mushroomed. A 1995 UN report on global governance suggested...nearly 29,000 international NGOs existed. Domestic ones have grown even faster. By one estimate, there are now 2m in America alone, most formed in the past 30 years. In Russia, where almost none existed before the fall of communism, there are at least 65,000. Dozens are created daily; in Kenya alone, some 240 NGOs are now created every year.

Most of these are minnows; some are whales, with annual incomes of millions of dollars and a worldwide operation. Some are primarily helpers, distributing relief where it is needed; some are mainly campaigners, existing to promote issues deemed important by their members. The general public tends to see them as uniformly altruistic, idealistic and independent. ...the term "NGO", like the activities of the NGOs themselves, deserves much sharper scrutiny.
Governments' puppets?

The tag "Non-Governmental Organisation" was used first at the founding of the UN. It implies...NGOs keep their distance from officialdom; they do things...governments will not, or cannot, do. In fact, NGOs have a great deal to do with governments. Not all of it is healthy. Take the aid NGOs. A growing share of development spending, emergency relief and aid transfers passes through them. According to Carol Lancaster, a former deputy director of USAID, America's development body, NGOs have become "the most important constituency for the activities of development aid agencies". Much of the food delivered by the World Food Programme, a UN body, in Albania last year was actually handed out by NGOs working in the refugee camps. Between 1990 and 1994, the proportion of the EU's relief aid channelled through NGOs rose from 47% to 67%. The Red Cross reckons...NGOs now disburse more money than the World Bank.

And governments are happy to provide that money. Of Oxfam's #98m ($162m) income in 1998, a quarter, #24.1m, was given by the British government and the EU. World Vision US, which boasts of being the world's "largest privately funded Christian relief and development organisation", collected $55m-worth of goods that year from the American government. Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), the winner of last year's Nobel peace prize, gets 46% of its income from government sources. Of 120 NGOs which sprang up in Kenya between 1993 and the end of 1996, all but nine received all their income from foreign governments and international bodies. Such official contributions will go on, especially if the public gets more stingy. Today's young, educated and rich give a smaller share of their incomes away than did -- and do -- their parents.

In Africa, where international help has the greatest influence, western governments have long been shifting their aid towards NGOs. America's help, some $711m last year, increasingly goes to approved organisations, often via USAID. Europe's donors also say...bilateral aid should go to NGOs, which are generally more open and efficient than governments. For the UN, too, they are now seen as indispensable. The new head of the UN's Development Programme says the body "will put a lot more emphasis on relations with NGOs". Most such agencies now have hundreds of NGO partners.

So the principal reason for the recent boom in NGOs is ...western governments finance them. This is not a matter of charity, but of privatisation: many "non-governmental" groups are becoming contractors for governments. Governments prefer to pass aid through NGOs because it is cheaper, more efficient -- and more at arm's length -- than direct official aid.
Governments also find NGOs useful in ways that go beyond the distribution of food and blankets. Some bring back useful information, and make it part of their brief to do so. Outfits such as the International Crisis Group and Global Witness publish detailed and opinionated reports from places beset by war or other disasters. The work of Global Witness in Angola is actually paid for by the British Foreign Office.

Diplomats and governments, as well as other NGOs, journalists and the public, can make good use of these reports. As the staff of foreign embassies shrink, and the need to keep abreast of events abroad increases, governments inevitably turn to private sources of information. In some benighted parts of the world, sometimes only NGOs can nowadays reveal what is going on.
Take...human rights, the business of one of the biggest of the campaigning NGOs, Amnesty International. Amnesty has around 1m members in over 162 countries, and its campaigns against political repression, in particular against unfair imprisonment, are known around the world. The information it gathers is often unavailable from other sources.

Where western governments' interests match those of campaigning NGOs, they can form
effective alliances. In 1997, a coalition of over 350 NGOs pushed for, and obtained, a treaty against the use of landmines. The campaign was backed by the usual array of concerned governments (Canada, the Scandinavians) and won the Nobel peace prize.
NGOs are...interesting and useful to governments because they work in the midst of conflict. Many were created by wars: the Red Cross after the Battle of Solferino in 1859, the Save the Children Fund after the first world war, MSF after the Biafran war. By being "close to the action" some NGOs, perhaps unwittingly, provide good cover for spies -- a more traditional means by which governments gather information.

In some cases, NGOs are taking over directly from diplomats: not attempting to help the victims of war, but to end the wars themselves. Some try to restrict arms flows, such as Saferworld, which is against small arms. Others attempt to negotiate ceasefires. The Italian Catholic lay community of Sant' Egidio helped to end 13 years of civil war in Mozambique in 1992. International Alert, a London-based peace research group, tried the same for Sierra Leone in the mid-1990s. Last year, Unicef (a part of the UN) and the Carter Centre, founded by ex-President Jimmy Carter, brought about a peace deal of sorts between Uganda and Sudan. There are now roughly 500 groups registered by the European Platform for Conflict Prevention and Transformation. "Civil war demands civil action," say the organisers.

Larger NGOs have pledged not to act as "instruments of government foreign policy". ...at times they are seen as just that. Governments are more willing to pay groups to deliver humanitarian aid to a war zone than to deliver it themselves. Last autumn, America's Congress passed a resolution to deliver food aid to rebels in southern Sudan via USAID and sympathetic Christian groups (religious NGOs earn the label RINGOs, and are found everywhere).
Perhaps the most potent sign of the closeness between NGOs and governments, aside from their financial links, is the exchange of personnel. In developing countries, where the civil service is poor, some governments ask NGOs to help with the paperwork requested by the World Bank and other international institutions. Politicians, or their wives, often have their own local NGOs. In the developed world, meanwhile, increasing numbers of civil servants take time off to work for NGOs, and vice versa: Oxfam has former staff members not only in the British government, but also in the Finance Ministry of Uganda. This symbiotic relationship with government (earning some groups the tag GRINGO) may make the governments of developing countries work better. It may also help aid groups to do their job effectively. ...it hardly reflects their independence.

NGOS can also stray too close to the corporate world. Some, known to critics as "business NGOs", deliberately model themselves on, or depend greatly on, particular corporations. Bigger ones have commercial arms, media departments, aggressive head-hunting methods and a wide array of private fund-raising and investment strategies. Smaller ones can be overwhelmed by philanthropic businesses or their owners: Bill Gates, the head of Microsoft, gave $25m last year to an NGO that is looking for a vaccine for AIDS, transforming it overnight from a small group with a good idea to a powerful one with a lot of money to spend.
The business of helping
In 1997, according to the OECD, NGOs raised $5.5 billion from private donors. The real figure may well be higher: as leisure, travel and other industries have grown, so too have charities. In 1995 non-profit groups (including, but not only, NGOs) provided over 12% of all jobs in the Netherlands, 8% in America and 6% in Britain.
Many groups have come to depend on their media presence to help with fund-raising. This is bringing NGOs their greatest problems. They are adapting from shoebox outfits, stuffing envelopes and sending off perhaps one container of medicines, to sophisticated multi-million-dollar operations. In the now-crowded relief market, campaigning groups must jostle for attention: increasingly, NGOs compete and spend a lot of time and money marketing themselves. Bigger ones typically spend 10% of their funds on marketing and fund-raising. The focus of such NGOs can easily shift from finding solutions and helping needy recipients to pleasing their donors and winning television coverage. Events at Goma, in Congo, in 1994 brought this problem home. Tens of thousands of refugees from Rwanda, who had flooded into Goma, depended on food and shelter from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and from NGOs. Their dramatic plight drew the television cameras and, with them, the chance for publicity and huge donations. A frantic scramble for funds led groups to lie about their projects. Fearful...the media and then the public might lose confidence in NGOs, the Red Cross drew up an approved list of NGOs and got them to put their names to a ten-point code of conduct, reproduced above.
Since then, NGOs have been working hard to improve. More than 70 groups and 142 governments backed the 1995 code of conduct, agreeing...aid should be delivered "only on a basis of need". "We hold ourselves accountable to both those we seek to assist and those from whom we accept resources," they pledged. Yet in Kosovo last year there was a similar scramble, with groups pushing to be seen by camera crews as they worked. Personnel and resources were even shifted there from worse wars and refugee crises in Africa.
As they get larger, NGOs are also looking more and more like businesses themselves. In the past, such groups sought no profits, paid low wages -- or none at all -- and employed idealists. Now a whole class of them, even if not directly backed by businesses, have taken on corporate trappings. Known collectively as BINGOs, these groups manage funds and employ staff which a medium-sized company would envy. Like corporations, they attend conferences endlessly. Fund-raisers and senior staff at such NGOs earn wages comparable to the private sector. Some bodies, once registered as charities, now choose to become non-profit companies or charitable trusts for tax reasons and so that they can control their spending and programmes more easily. Many big charities have trading arms, registered as companies. One manufacturing company, Tetra Pak, has even considered sponsoring emergency food delivery as a way to advertise itself. Any neat division between the corporate and the NGO worlds is long gone. Many NGOs operate as competitors seeking contracts in the aid market, raising funds with polished media campaigns and lobbying governments as hard as any other business. Governments and UN bodies could now, in theory, ask for tenders from businesses and NGOs to carry out their programmes. It seems only a matter of time before this happens. If NGOs are cheap and good at delivering food or health care in tough areas, they should win the contracts easily.
Good intentions not enough
It could be argued...it does not matter even if NGOs are losing their independence, becoming just another arm of government or another business. GRINGOs and BINGOs, after all, may be more efficient than the old sort of charity.
Many do achieve great things: they may represent the last hope for civilians caught in civil wars, for those imprisoned unfairly and for millions of desperate refugees. There are many examples of small, efficient and inspirational groups with great achievements: the best will employ local people, keep foreign expertise to a minimum, attempt precise goals (such as providing clean water) and think deeply about the long-term impact of their work. Some of these grow into large, well-run groups.
...there are also problems. NGOs may be assumed to be less bureaucratic, wasteful or corrupt than governments, but under-scrutinised groups can suffer from the same chief failing: they can get into bad ways because they are not accountable to anyone. Critics also suspect... some aid groups are used to propagate western values, as Christian missionaries did in the 19th century. Many NGOs, lacking any base in the local population and with their money coming from outside, simply try to impose their ideas without debate. For example, they often work to promote women's or children's interests as defined by western societies, winning funds easily but causing social disruption on the ground.
Groups that carry out population or birth-control projects are particularly controversial; some are paid to carry out sterilisation programmes in the poor parts of the world, because donors in the rich world consider there are too many people there. Anti-"slavery" campaigns in Africa, in which western NGOs buy children's freedom for a few hundred dollars each, are notorious. Unicef has condemned such groups, but American NGOs continue to buy slaves -- or people they consider slaves -- in southern Sudan. Clearly, buying slaves, if that is what they are, will do little to discourage the practice of trading them.
NGOs...get involved in situations where their presence may prolong or complicate wars, where they end up feeding armies, sheltering hostages or serving as cover for warring parties. These may be the unintended consequences of aid delivery, but they also complicate foreign policy.
Even under calmer conditions, in non-emergency development work, not all single-interest groups may be the best guarantors of long-term success. They are rarely obliged to think about trade-offs in policy or to consider broad, cross-sector approaches to development. NGOs are "often organised to promote particular goals...rather than the broader goal of development," argues Ms Lancaster. In Kosovo last spring, "many governments made bilateral funding agreements with NGOs, greatly undermining UNHCR's ability to prioritise programmes or monitor efficiency," says Peter Morris of MSF. This spring in Kosovo, "there were instances of several NGOs competing to work in the same camps, duplication of essential services," complains an Oxfam worker. And whatever big international NGOs do in the developing world, they bring in western living standards, personnel and purchasing power which can transform local markets and generate great local resentment. In troubled zones where foreign NGOs flourish, weekends bring a line of smart four-by-fours parked at the best beaches, restaurants or nightclubs. The local beggars do well, but discrepancies between expatriate staff and, say, impoverished local officials trying to do the same work can cause deep antipathy. Not only have NGOs diverted funds away from local governments, but they are often seen as directly challenging their sovereignty.
NGOs can also become self-perpetuating. When the problem for which they were founded is solved, they seek new campaigns and new funds. The old anti-apartheid movement, its job completed, did not disband, but instead became another lobby group for southern Africa. As NGOs become steadily more powerful on the world scene, the best antidote to hubris, and to institutionalisation, would be this: disband when the job is done. The chief aim of NGOs should be their own abolition.