Europe must be cautious as to how it should proceed with its
relationship with the US. It must not have false hopes due to the election of
the new Biden administration which faces many challenges, mainly how to bring
together the various factions of its fragmented electorate.
The America that Biden has inherited must be understood in light of
the insurrection in Washington and the slim lead the Democrats achieved, barely
gaining control of the US Senate while losing seats in the House of
Representatives. Three-quarters of Trump voters believe he won the election
with only 15% of Americans thinking that American democracy is working well.
Biden is committed to building transatlantic ties but Europeans
must understand that the American public is deeply split and any negotiations
between Europe and the US must be designed towards bringing the two sides
together.
Europeans are now engaging in a long overdue debate over sovereignty
and autonomy. They must assert themselves and put pressure on the United Statas
to do what is in their mutual self-interests, but at the same time should not
create transatlantic divisions. This was the case in signing the EU-China
Comprehensive Agreement on Investment in 2020 which was a dramatic assertion of
European sovereignty, but it was an ill-timed first step.
With the new Biden administration, Europeans should lead efforts
with the US by leveraging climate action, global economic recovery efforts and
by creating a more regulated framework for the digital economy. Trump was quick
in taking the US out of the Paris Climate Agreement which Biden will reverse
-in fact he did so already- to meet his pledge of zero carbon dioxide emissions
by 2050. This on its own requires massive internal change.
Biden has also promised to impose higher fuel efficiency standards,
to control methane emissions from fracking and to launch other regulatory
initiatives to slow global warming. However, courts can, and they have blocked
executive orders and the conservative Supreme Court seems poised to curtailing
the executive branch’s regulatory discretion.
Europe must take a leading role in this relationship. It should
impose a carbon emissions border adjustment price on products from the United
States which would give the Biden administration some much needed leverage with
its domestic climate change deniers, who will then have to choose between
paying a domestic tax on carbon emissions or alternatively pay Europe.
Since the financial crisis of 2009, the United States has faced its
slowest recovery in modern times and the US needs more money to stimulate its
economy. For Biden, this means increasing corporate levies and higher income
taxes on the rich that will undoubtedly face serious opposition.
As the Biden administration will be focusing efforts on internal
fiscal reform, the burden of global economic revival will rest more on European
shoulders for which the €750 billion European Union recovery fund was a good
first step.
It is clear that the digital economy is the future of the
transatlantic marketplace and there is a real need for the EU to start
immediate negotiations on a new transatlantic data privacy accord in light of
the European Court of Justice’s invalidation of the US-EU privacy shield
agreement. Not having such an agreement in place will seriously impede the flow
of data between the EU and the United States, and it in turn will negatively
affect the digital economy.
The EU has proposed a tougher oversight of technology providers and
should push for a joint US-EU review of the technology giants; their practices
and policies. It is time that the US and EU forged a strong alliance in this
important area rather than each one going down a separate regulatory path.
Developing a healthy digital economy also means that the US and the
EU need to resolve their differences with regards to digital taxation to ensure
that a robust framework is developed so technology companies pay their fair due
of tax. If Washington continues to drag its feet in the ongoing OECD
negotiations on this issue, European governments should impose their own
digital taxes. This may be the only way to force an American debate about
digital companies paying their fair share.
The United States is in much need of a strong partnership and the
days of America leading with Europe following are gone. Europe must play the
role of the big brother and be courageous enough to step up and lead this
partnership for the betterment of both parties.
* Bruce Stokes is the executive director of the Transatlantic Task
Force and senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund. He was the director of
Global Economic Attitudes at the Pew Research Center in Washington, DC, and is
a former international economics columnist for the National Journal, a
Washington-based public policy magazine. He is also a former senior fellow at
the Council on Foreign Relations.