Thursday, October 13, 2005

The European Union was discussed the other day in my Peoples of the Baltic class, specifically new members and the economic implications. When the idea that Turkey should be allowed to join the EU there was much opposition to the notion, bordering on revulsion. One of the minor reasons was that Turkey is considered part of the Middle East and not Europe. One of the other reasons was that Turks would be a bad influence if they were allowed free passage through Europe, claiming that neighborhoods go downhill whenever Turks move in. Clearly Europeans are not as civilized as they would have everyone believe. The guest speaker explained that Turkey entering the EU would be an economic strain on the other EU members as they would have to invest a large amount of money to bring Turkey to the same level as the rest of Europe. That was the same reason why he said that Russia would not be able to join the EU for a very, very long time; Russian membership would bankrupt the EU.
So, membership in an organization that promotes equal economic footing for all its members has to exclude nations that are substantially poorer. Also, a particularly rich country (Norway) would not want to join such a union if membership would actually reduce their economic strength.
This got me thinking about the economics of the Federation in Star Trek. Since the Federation is largely modeled after unions of nations on Earth, such as the UN and one would presume some of the EU, would the same rules still apply? In Insurrection, they say that they're giving Federation membership to a race that just became warp capable the year before. One must assume that they are nowhere near as economically powerful as, say, Earth. As large as the Federation is, modernizing an entire planet with technology centuries ahead its time and making it economically stable would be financially draining. Would that be where the Prime Directive comes in? Now not just as a rule designed to protect cultures from outside contamination but also relieving the Federation of the obligation to instantly modernize new members, as the EU protects itself from having to equalize economically weaker countries. Would they then create trade barriers with this new member planet to keep the more powerful nations from exploiting it? That doesn't seem like it would ahve happened in this case considering they say that the reason they want the planet to join is because they need all the help they can get to fight a war. Since the race isn't technologically advanced enough to provide military support, the only thing they could really offer are raw materials. So if they can't instantly modernize them and don't have the time to gradually modernize them, the only thing the Federation could do to make use of the planet is to colonize it. That would definitely contaminate their culture , not to mention that colonialism is something Earth supposedly eliminated centuries before. So unless there's another option provided by some alien economic system, this planet and its inhabitants really got screwed.
So, back in real life the EU can't accept Turkey without hurting itself in its obligation to equalize the member nations, it sure as hell can't colonize Turkey, so the only thing that can be done is try to help it improve its economy until it is strong enough to be an EU member. Given that Turkey is roughly the European equivalent of Mexico right now, that might take awhile. And who knows, maybe by that time there won't be as many bigots opposed to Turks in Europe.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's mentioned in the shows every now and again that a planet hoping to join the Federation is trying to "make code," so there definitely are standards before one can join. It's my understanding that these standards are humanitarian rather than economic or technological (within reason). But if you're even considering joining, the Prime Directive is moot. PD is strictly for people who don't know about the Federation yet and remains so, IMHO.

It stands to reason that newly joining planets are not power-leveled by the Federation, but rather given the opportunity to trade freely for kick-ass gear. This lag time wouldn't be as much of a problem as you might think. Simply having more allies is a major advantage in war (think Soviet bloc). I don't remember the planet under dicussion here, but if, say, the Federation could launch ships or build a repair station there, that could potentially be a big strategic advantage. Maybe joining the Federation (gaining protection) is the only thing keeping that planet from destruction, and the Fed considers them valuable enough to speed up the membership process. Or maybe the people can shoot laser beams out of their eyes. Something.

It should also be pointed out that the financial risk in the Federation is spread out over a jillion planets, so the bigger they get, the more tolerant of economic diversity they can be. Think how reluctant Vulcan was to give away technology to pre-Federation Earth: the financial risk was wholly assumed by Vulcan, which was therefore understandably balky (but also populated largely by bigots).

Kevin said...

well the Prime Directive was used to keep the Federation out of a Klingon civil war so it's not just to keep primitive cultures from knowing about aliens.
As for free trade, the economics are sketchy but I can't imagine that it would be good for the planet any more than free trade with the US would be good for a country like Haiti. Not all of the members would abide entirely by the ethics of the Federation (that's pretty much what Insurrection is about) and would try to take advantage of the new member.
Wouldn't any starbase or shipyard built around the planet need to be crewed by the inhabitants? That seems like something they would insist on, otherwise they're just being used.
The military advantage would definitely not be an immediate one, since the planet lacked any meaningful infrastructure. It would be like if Andorra joined the Axis powers in WWII, it might have made some difference but really not anything appreciable.
And the analogy is tricky I know, since the Federation is huge and it's just one more planet, the size difference is much greater than between the EU and Turkey. The better analogy would be if a big empire, financially drained by war and in desperate need of rebuilding were to apply for Federation membership, fitting all the ethical criteria would the Federation allow them membership?