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The summit will prove a footnote

At first glance, the outcome of last week’s European Union summit looks historic. European states have agreed a plan that appears to be an important step towards fiscal and political union. Britain has refused to go along – and looks isolated and possibly on its way out of the EU.

If all this could be taken at face value, it would indeed be big stuff. But the outcome of the Brussels meeting is much more likely to end up as a footnote in the history books than a bold new chapter.

Markets and voters are increasingly refusing to obey the grand pronouncements issued by EU leaders at their ever more frequent crisis summits. Add to that the growing tensions between EU members, which go well beyond the isolation of Britain, and you have a formula for continuing confusion and disunity – rather than the decisive moment that so many commentators think they have witnessed.

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吉狄恩•拉赫曼

吉狄恩•拉赫曼(Gideon Rachman)在英國《金融時報》主要負責撰寫關於美國對外政策、歐盟事務、能源問題、經濟全球化等方面的報導。他經常參與會議、學術和商業活動,並作爲評論人活躍於電視及廣播節目中。他曾擔任《經濟學人》亞洲版主編。

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