2. Date, place and participants countries
Was signed on 25 March 1957 in
Rome
West Germany, Belgium, France,
Italy, Luxembourg and the
Netherlands.
3. What was te Treaty of Rome?
There were two agreements which
established the European Economic
Community (EEC) in the first and
second treaty established the
European Atomic Energy Community
(EAEC or Euratom)
4. What was the Tretay of Rome?
It was an organization created in 1957 to achieve
economic integration in Europe and originally
consisted of six Member States appointed on slide
number two. In 1993, upon entry into force of the
Maastricht Treaty, renamed "European Community"
(EC) and forms the basis of today's European
Union.
5. What was the Treaty of Rome?
It was an organization created in 1957 by the six
countries that name before and its goal is the joint
production of atomic energy for peaceful purposes.
It has its headquarters in Brussels.
6. What was the Treaty of Rome?
They were the first international
organizations after the supranational
European Coal and Steel Community
(ECSC), created a few years earlier. The
three make up the "Treaties establishing"
of the European Communities.
7. Aims and Objectives of the Treaty
•Create a European Common Market in the
early viable proposals
•Create Prosperity and Economic Union in the
European Community
• Common laws
8. Signatories
Christian Pineau France
Joseph Luns Netherlands
Paul Henri Spaak Belgium
Joseph Bech Luxembourg
Antonio Segni Italy
Konrad Adenauer Federal Republic
Germany.
10. Common Market
Actually affected only the free movement
of goods. The free movement of
people, capital and services continued to
suffer significant limitations. Actually, it was
not until the Single Act of 1987 that gave
the final impetus was that in 1992 led to
the establishment of a unified market.
11. Main Problem
The main political problem that started with
the EEC was a country of the importance of
the UK to stay away. The British refused to
sign for several reasons:
12. Main Problem
1
The importance of trade ties, political and
even sentimental with its colonies and
former colonies, mostly grouped in the
Commonwealth.
13. Main Problem
2
His refusal to enter into a customs union.
London defended the creation of a free trade
area, which will abolish internal customs
duties but in every country should be free to
set their own tariffs on third countries.
14. Main Problem
3
The British unwillingness to embark on a project in the
long term that is posed by the transfer of sovereignty of
each state for the benefit of European supranational
institutions. Put another way, the British were, and yet
many are still very far from the goal of European political
unity.