Can the European Union Survive in a Deglobalized World? – Foreign Policy
In September 2019, two months before officially taking office, the new European Commission president was already insisting that the European Union needed to change. On the one hand, Ursula von der Leyen promised a new geopolitical Commission, but on the other, she wanted the EU to be the guardian of multilateralism. The difficult question was left unstated: How exactly is the EU supposed to reconcile the great-power maneuvering of geopolitics with the more level playing field of multilateralism?
Geopolitics is the ruthless pursuit of self-interest by powerful states, no matter the cost to others. Multilateralism involves mutual agreements among states pursuing their collective welfare. At a minimum, the two sit awkwardly with each other; at the worst, they are radically incompatible. The latter is true of the current system of globalization, which has been supported by a complex system of multilateral rules and agreements among states.
Von der Leyenand the EUfaces a fundamental strategic dilemma. More than any ordinary nation-state, the EU is as pure a creature of multilateral globalization as exists in the world. It is most comfortable when the outside world mirrors its traditional internal principles of organization: free economic exchange and mutually beneficial cooperation.
Deglobalization has cut the EU adrift. In the new world order, geopoliticsin the form of newly assertive great powers like the United States and Chinais coming to trump old trade commitments and international cooperation. Europe, for its part, has been vacillating between defending the remnants of multilateralism and building up geopolitical muscle so it can pursue its own strategic self-interest.
The coronavirus crisisin which other member states have been willing to leave Italy high and dryshows how the EU may suffer if it does not figure out how to reconcile these clashing imperatives. Geopolitics abroad may come to roost at home, undermining the solidarity that the EU needs to exist.
Globalization remade Europe before it remade the world. The historian Quinn Slobodian has shown how the driving ideas of globalizationstrengthening cross-border exchange and restraining the nation-statewere the motivating force behind European integration.
The EU (then called the European Economic Community) was founded in a 1957 treaty that set out the new groups aims: eliminating restrictions on the import and export of goods between its member states and abolishing obstacles to freedom of movement for persons, services and capital. These four freedomsfor things, people, services, and moneyare still the cornerstone of the EU.
The four freedoms were supposed to not only power an economic dynamo but also build the foundations of a lasting peace. For most of modern history, Europe had been torn apart by wars between great powers such as Germany and France. The founders of the EU wanted to transform the politics of Europe, replacing geopolitical conflict with shared institutions and cooperation. Power had to be recognized: The size of the bigger member states meant that they got more votes on crucial EU decisions. However, their clout was balanced by institutions such as the European Commission and European Court of Justice (ECJ), which were supposed to deal evenhandedly with all members and protect the interests of the smaller states.
The result was a unique set of political arrangements. The EU has never looked much like a national state. It employs fewer people than a regional government, has no army, and has very limited spending power. Even today, its national security powers are negligible: The key decisions are taken by its member states.
What it has is the power of rules. The commissionproposes laws, drafts regulations, and makes antitrust decisions. The ECJ interprets EU law, as well as the basic treaty texts that the EU is founded on, when national courts ask it to.
Together, the court and commission drew on the four freedoms to build a European free market, enhancing their own authority in the process. ECJ decisions struck down national standards and rules that restricted imports from other member states. The commission issued common regulations to support a truly European marketplace. Its Directorate-General for Competition acted as an antitrust enforcer against potential monopolists. In the 1980s and early 1990s, the commission implemented a highly ambitious single market program aimed at eliminating existing barriers to trade and exchange. Even before the current wave of globalization began, the EU was building a globalization in miniature. Within EU borders, markets and free movement dominated while free trade rules constrained national governments from building favored firms into national champions.
When globalization really began to take off in the 1990s, the EU was thus ready to help shape it. It understood how to knock down barriers to market competition. The founding director-general of the World Trade Organization (WTO), Peter Sutherland, had been Europes competition commissioner at the height of the single market program. In some ways, the EU was more comfortable with globalization than the United States was. After all, it had been founded on the belief that open commerce and shared institutions were a better guarantee of peace than great-power maneuverings.
Like the United States, the EU resisted multilateralism in areas of trade that might undermine internal political bargains or sensitive external relationships. Europe was slow to abandon restrictions on textile imports. It was notoriously opposed to free trade in bananas, which might damage its ties to former European colonies. Nonetheless, it grudgingly opened up.
The EU gradually discovered that it could turn its embrace of globalization into a strategy of influence. It could use the internal markets rules and standards to shape the rules and standards of a globalized world. The EUs combination of a large market and a common standard setting system gave it unique leverage in many sectors. While the United States had a big market too, its internal regulations and standards were often weak or created by squabbling private organizations. The commission was a sophisticated and internationally oriented regulator, with decades of experience in making its regulations work across different countries. Often, it was able not only to impose its rules and standards on multinational firms that wanted to sell to Europe but to get them to apply these rules and standards outside Europe too. This subtle form of influence, which Columbia Universitys Anu Bradford has dubbed the Brussels effect, reshaped global markets.
In short, the EU seemed well adapted to a globalized world. The stronger the EU became, the easier it was to influence world markets in Europes direction. The relationship worked the other way too: The ideas of globalization helped EU officials push for further internal reforms. It was easier to push member states to accept more European integration in a world where everyone believed in open trade and free movement. Together, these created a feedback loop between European integration and global markets.
Now that feedback loop is breaking down. Just as the EU began to globalize before most other countries, it started encountering problems earlier too. International market integration necessarily limited national democracyand voters didnt always like it. When EU leaders tried to introduce a new constitution in 2005, French and Dutch voters rejected it. A somewhat less ambitious follow-up document, the Treaty of Lisbon, was rejected by Irish voters in 2008 (though it passed when they were asked to vote again in 2009). The 2008 global financial crisis demonstrated the problems of easy financial flows across borders. The EU was especially weak in financial regulation, meaning banks could relocate their most risky and speculative lending to lax jurisdictions such as the United Kingdom and Ireland without difficulty. And as the Greek debt crisis mounted, power politicsand the self-interest of Germanyreemerged within Europe. German taxpayers were unwilling to support further integration if it meant they had to pay the bill.
The Brussels effect turned out to have limitations as well. The EU was able to spread its privacy rules worldwide, but it was too late to help European firms. Europes information economy had already been eaten up by Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other big technology firms. These are not just companies that can be tamed through ordinary antitrust regulation: They aspire to become economies in their own right. Amazon, for example, is already both a marketplace and a formidable market regulator, setting rules for the businesses that use its many different backend services. Even before 2016, it was clear that the EUs approach to globalization needed to be updated to deal with market actors that were themselves effectively evolving into markets.
Now Europe is facing the new challenges of a deglobalizing world. The Trump administration wants to tear apart the existing globalized economy and replace it with an America First approach to trade. It scorns multilateralism in favor of threats and one-sided bargains. It fears China as an adversary and is trying to cut it out of global technology supply chains. When the Trump administration decided to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal, it threatened to punish allies that were impertinent enough to uphold a treaty that the United States itself negotiated. As the political scientist Abraham Newman and I have argued, the United States is weaponizing the trade and financial networks that wove globalization together and turning them into tools of coercion.
Unfortunately for Europe, the United States isnt the only problem. China is not as powerful as the United States but is just as ruthless in exploiting what economic leverage it has. For example, it has threatened to retaliate against German car manufacturers if Germany gives in to U.S. pressure to block the Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei. When a Swedish writers organization gave a prize to a dissident Chinese publisher late last year, Chinas ambassador to Sweden said on Swedish public radio: We treat our friends with fine wine, but for our enemies we got shotguns, warning of trade restrictions.
Globalization is unraveling as the United States and China face off against each other. It will not unravel completely: The worlds economies are too entangled to be easily separated from each other. But the way that the global economy works is now at odds with the way that Europe itself does business. Deglobalization has especially imperiled the multilateral institutions governing trade. The WTO Appellate Body, which serves as a final court of appeal for trade decisions, cannot do its work because the United States is vetoing new appointments to it. The EU is trying to keep the appellate system on life support through independent arbitration.
The Trump administrations invocation of a national security exception to justify its tariffs on steel and aluminum may be an even greater threat to the multilateral trade regime that Europe favors. Global free trade will not survive if states can invoke national security more or less on a whim, but the current U.S. administration may provoke an even bigger crisis if the WTO rules against it.
Europe now finds itself caught between two unattractive alternatives. It can accept deglobalization and embrace geopolitics, pushing to protect its own businesses as the United States and China protects theirs. Already, there are moves within Europe in this direction: Politicians are talking about watering down antitrust regulations and building and promoting European businesses. However, this would mean giving up on the multilateral institutions that Europe has relied on and hoping that soft power can be transformed into hard bargaining strength. That may be possible, but it will require luck, time, and profound internal transformation.
For example, the EU is unhappy with how the United States has used the dominance of the dollar to bully European officials and firms. If it wants to build the euro as a credible alternative, it will have to create a real system of common banking regulation and shared fiscal capacities, as well as offer stability to non-European currencies in times of economic crisis, just as the United States has. Even this might be insufficient. Europe has just lost its greatest geopolitical asset: the city of London, which is one of the core nodes in the global financial network. Building up clout would require the EU to figure out practical ways to bring London back into its orbit.
Alternatively, Europe can double down on protecting the existing multilateral system, working with other states such as Japan and Canada to build an alliance for multilateralism. The problem is that the two other great economic powers are taking just the opposite course. Even if the Trump administration is replaced by a Democratic leadership, the days of easy multilateralism will never return. Democrats, too, are hawkish about China, and presidential candidates like Bernie Sanders are skeptical about the old free trade nostrums.
Europe needs more than knee-jerk multilateralism or geopolitical cunning if it is to prosper. Naive multilateralism would lead to the EU getting squashed. Geopolitical cunning on its own would suggest that the EU should adopt Trumpism (or Xi Jinping-ism) with European characteristics, championing national firms at home while aggressively pressing its interests abroad. This is a recipe for failure. Europes external influence is based on patience and persuasion rather than brute force; it would wither if it became a crude proxy for self-interest. Without a shared commitment to problem-solving, Europes internal market would degenerate into a sordid squabble among member states, each favoring its own politically connected firms. Even worse, the political union might disintegrate, as member states absorbed the lesson that national interest trumps all. The EU can manage some temporary national ruthlessness, of the kind exhibited in the Greek debt crisis, or the decision of some member states to close their borders to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. But even this is damaging, and it would undermine the EU if it continued indefinitely.
What Europe needs is a new understanding of its place in the world to connect its internal and external environments. EU experts used to describe the bicycle theory of European integration, claiming that, like a bicycle, European integration must keep on moving or it will fall over. In its golden age, globalization acted as Europes bicycle chain connecting the gear of its inner order and the gear of its outside environment, propelling the whole system forward. Now it needs a new strategy and a new bike chain.
It is a mistake to think of deglobalization as a universal withdrawal of nation-states from the world economy. It is altogether more complex. The push toward economic decoupling goes together with new needs for global engagement. The challenge of climate change will require extensive global cooperation. Under the digital platform economy, algorithms designed by market actors inevitably allow global information flows to impinge on national-level democracy. (New forms of machine learning, for example, can lump users of digital services into self-perpetuating disadvantaged categories such that a persons online habits might make it nearly impossible for them to find a job or to get a loan on reasonable terms.)
Both of these challenges provide new ways to connect Europes inside and outside. If Europe is to tackle them, it will need to move to an unparalleled level of internal integration, where it thinks about internal market rulesright from the beginningas external means of projecting European interests and values. Responding to climate change will require large-scale regulation and coordinated investment. Properly regulating information platforms will mean a fundamental shift in how the EU thinks about market power so that it incorporates an understanding of how the accumulation of data creates its own forms of influence.
Yet integration on its own will be insufficient: Both are global problems. Europes challenge, then, is to figure out how climate globalization and information globalization can become a new bicycle chain, using the smaller gear of European integration to propel change in the globaleconomy and the larger gear of the global economy to power change within Europe.
Europe is taking initial steps in this direction. The new proposals to price carbon emissions into border taxes provide one example of how this can be done, creating a virtuous cycle between Europes own efforts to reduce carbon emissions and those of other world producers, which will either have to match these efforts or pay a surtax when selling to the European market. In contrast to traditional tariffs, the ideal outcome of this border tax is that no one will have to pay it because the hope is that everyone will move to more carbon-efficient forms of production. Even better would be if Europes competitors introduced carbon taxes and carbon regulation too, making it easier to eventually build a global institutional infrastructure.
Antitrust regulation, too, is changing. Sutherlands distant successor as EU competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, is pioneering a new approach to global enforcement. Privacy regulation, citizen protection, and traditional antitrust regulation are no longer seen as separate priorities but as different aspects of a single problem: reducing inequities of power within the market to prevent abuses. Again, this promises to help create a mutually reinforcing relationship between European and global rulesalthough here the challenge is far greater, since what European and other democracies value may be seen by countries such as China as undermining their domestic system of rule. The EU will have a hard time figuring out creative rules to tame big tech companies, but if it succeeds, it can use the Brussels effect to spread these values to other jurisdictions.
None of this will be easy in a world where the United States and China weaponize their economic clout. Yet it is necessary. Europes apparent dilemma between geopolitics and multilateralism reflects a much deeper problem. Deglobalization has broken the relationship between Europes way of organizing itself and Europes way of acting in the world. Rebuilding that relationship will require Europe to discover new ways to couple the engine of integration to the engine of globalization so that strategy and multilateralism point again in the same direction.
This article appears in the Spring 2020 print issue.
Excerpt from:
Can the European Union Survive in a Deglobalized World? - Foreign Policy
- The Exotic Pet Trade Harms Animals and Humans. The European Union Is Studying a Potential Solution - The Revelator - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- In July, price for wood pellets imported to European Union contracts 8% - lesprom.com - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- Discover Ukraines path to the European Union in the new Euroquiz! - EU NEIGHBOURS east - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Microsoft resolves European Union probe into Teams - The Killeen Daily Herald - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- How are microplastics regulated in the UK and European Union? - Fieldfisher - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- European Union and its member States should take measures to respond to Georgias crackdown on civil society and human rights organisations - fidh.org - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- What Is In The State Of The European Union 2025 For The Tech Sector? - Access Partnership - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- The Sound of Economics Live: The State of the European Union 2025 - Bruegel - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Webull Launches in the European Union, Debuting Retail Investment Platform in the Netherlands - PR Newswire - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- How Do Citizens See the Future of the European Union? - Hungarian Conservative - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Global Gateway: The European Union to invest close to 300 million in the Pacific - EU Reporter - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Russia jeopardizes nuclear safety and IAEA monitoring work European Union - Ukrinform - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Treasury secretary says U.S. and European Union must partner to 'collapse' Russian economy - - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- European Union's preserved sardines market to grow at a steady 0.7% CAGR through 2035, driven by sustained demand, reaching 157K tons. - IndexBox - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Palestine recognition: the principle the EU has been stuck on for decades | European Union - The Guardian - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - AP News - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with massive fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - France 24 - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - ABC News - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Ukraine opens its first railway line with European track width standard, boosting the countrys integration with the European Union - Enlargement and... - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- China to impose temporary duties on European Union pork imports - Le Monde.fr - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - The Independent - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - El Paso Inc. - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- European Union's flat hot-rolled steel in coils market, forecast to grow at a 3.0% CAGR through 2035, is driven by sustained demand to reach $32.3B. -... - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- European Union's hot-rolled steel bar and rod market to grow at a CAGR of +1.7%, driven by rising demand, reaching 34M tons by 2035. - IndexBox - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - Bakersfield.com - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - Caledonian Record - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Google hit with $3.5 billion fine from European Union in ad-tech antitrust case - Castanet - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- European Union's Ready-Mixed Concrete and Factory Made Mortars Market to Expand at a CAGR of +1.1% through 2035 - IndexBox - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- European Union's Base Metal Padlocks Market to Grow at a CAGR of +1.1% from 2024 to 2035, Reaching $364M by End of Forecast Period - IndexBox - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- European Union's cored arc-welding wire market projected to experience slight growth, with CAGR of +1.4% from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Drought and doubts: can the European Union help Greece and other thirsty Member States? - Yahoo News UK - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Eurobarometer: Czechs Have Least Positive View of European Union of All Member States - Brno Daily - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- European Union's Refined Palm Oil Market to Expand at +2.0% CAGR through 2035 - IndexBox - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- European Union's Hormones, Prostaglandins, Thromboxanes, and Leukotrienes Market to Grow at 1.9% CAGR from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Eurobarometer: 56 percent of Europeans support the expansion of the European Union - European Newsroom - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Did The European Union Impose A Limit On The Size Of Georgias Army? - - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- European Union's Iron or Steel Self-Tapping Screws Market to Reach 322K Tons by 2035 with a Value of $1.7B - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- European Union's Vegetable Oils Market to Experience Slight Growth with Anticipated CAGR of +1.4% by 2035 - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- European Union's Fish Fats and Oils Market to Grow at 1.0% CAGR, Reaching 609K Tons by 2035 - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- The European Union is considering using frozen Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine after the war - tesaaworld.com - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- European Union's Frozen Crustaceans Market to Witness +0.9% CAGR Growth by 2035 - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- European Union's Frozen Whole Fish Market: Anticipated +1.8% CAGR Growth Expected to Reach 2.1M Tons by 2035 - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- European Union's Printing and Writing Paper Market to see Slow but Steady Growth with +1.3% CAGR from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- The European Union Election Observation Mission deploys 20 short-term observers to all regions of Guyana - EEAS - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- European Commission summons Russia's top diplomat in Brussels over attack that damaged European Union building in Kyiv - ABC News - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Google may face only a "minor penalty" in the latest antitrust case in the European Union, significantly lower than in previous years. - - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- European Union's Newsprint Market to Experience Slight Growth with Expected CAGR of +1.7% from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Poland is second after the leader in European Union maize exports - Trade.gov.pl - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- European Union mulls removing US tariffs this week, Bloomberg News reports - Reuters - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- The European Union excluded Greenland from public consultations on the EU seal product ban. Why? - The Conversation - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- European Union mulls removing US tariffs this week, Bloomberg News reports - Denver Gazette - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Construction in the European Union fell by 0.5% m/m in June - GMK Center - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Facts on the ground: Confronting the hypocrisy of the European Union - JNS.org - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- European Union mulls removing US tariffs this week, Bloomberg News reports By Reuters - Investing.com - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- The State of the European Union 2025 - IIEA - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- European Mobility Week Car Free Day Concert from the Delegation of the European Union to Trkiye! - EEAS - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- 'A Principled, Thoughtful, and Steadfast Ally': CAM Reiterates Support for Embattled European Union Antisemitism Envoy Katharina von Schnurbein -... - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- Austria and Germany to become the first markets in the European Union (EU) to launch LEQEMBI (lecanemab) - Biogen - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Safety Headgear Market: Slow but Steady Growth Expected with a CAGR of +0.2% from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- U.S. and European Union trade deal to remove 20 percent tariff on American bison exports to EU - kotatv.com - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Iron Table and Kitchen Articles Market to See Marginal Growth with CAGR of +0.1% - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Granite Building Stone Market to Experience Mild Growth with +1.0% CAGR from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Sunflower Oilcake Market to Grow at a CAGR of +0.9% by 2035, Reaching $2.4B in Value - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Paper Trays Market to Reach 656K Tons by 2035, Valued at $3.1B - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Uncoated Mechanical Printing and Writing Papers Market to Grow at +1.4% CAGR from 2024 to 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Anionic Surface-Active Agents Market to Grow at 1.7% CAGR, Reaching 2M Tons by 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Electric Radiator and Convector Market to Reach 24M Units and $1.1B by 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Cucumber and Gherkin Market to Experience Slight Growth with +0.5% CAGR leading to 2.7M tons by 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- European Union's Iron or Steel Hot-Worked Helical Springs Market to Reach 421K Tons and $3.2B by 2035 - IndexBox - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- PAHO/WHO, European Union, and Ministry of Health and Wellness Conduct Palliative and End-of-Life Care and Psychosocial Support Training Workshops... - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- Postal Shipments Between the United States and the European Union Suspended - La Voce di New York - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- US and European Union have reached a trade deal Here are the terms - Cryptopolitan - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- U.S. and European Union provide fresh details of giant trade pact - The Washington Post - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- 8. The United States and the European Union commit to work together to reduce or eliminate non-tariff barriers. With respect to automobiles, the... - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- White House and European Union Announce Long-Awaited Details on Pharma Tariffs - Pharmaceutical Executive - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- United States and European Union Agree on 15 Percent Tariff for Generic Drug Imports - geneonline.com - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- The European Union Is Trying to Build Guardrails on AI. Experts Say It Hasnt Gone Far Enough - The Hollywood Reporter - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- European Union's Plastics Sheets Market to Reach 2.9M Tons and $12.4B by 2035 - IndexBox - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- 3. The United States intends to promptly ensure that the tariff rate, comprised of the MFN tariff and the tariff imposed pursuant to Section 232 of... - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- United States and European Union Agree to 15 Percent Tariff on Key Imports Including Automobiles and Pharmaceuticals - geneonline.com - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]