1st Edition

European Defence Decision-Making Dilemmas of Collaborative Arms Procurement

By Antonio Calcara Copyright 2020
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    174 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book comparatively examines the preferences of four key arms-producing states towards European joint armaments programmes.





    The European defence market is characterised by a mixture of inter-state competition and European cooperation, and this work assesses why countries sometimes decide to cooperate with their partners, while in other instances they refrain from doing so. In order to shed light on this empirical puzzle, the book focuses on state-defence industry relations in the four major European arms producers: France, Germany, Italy and the UK. The main argument is that the public or private governance of industrial suppliers and market size are the two decisive variables that explain the simultaneous presence of cooperation and competition in European defence procurement. Specifically, it argues that in public governance ecosystems, arms industries are able to "capture" the state's decision-making processes to their own advantage. In private governance ecosystems, the state is relatively autonomous from defence industry's influence and able to pursue larger macro-economic and military benefits. Moreover, the strategy pursued by governments and defence firms is decisively shaped by market size because of its importance in determining the relative costs and benefits of collaborative arrangements.





    This book will be of much interest to students of EU policy, defence studies, European politics and International Relations.

    1. Introduction

    2. Explaining European Defence-Industrial Cooperation: A Theoretical Framework

    3. Defence-Industrial Decision-Making: France, Germany, Italy and the UK

    4. The NATO Helicopter for the 90s

    5. The Eurofighter

    6. Airbus A400M

    7. Conclusions

    Biography

    Antonio Calcara is a Post-Doctoral Researcher at Luiss Guido Carli University, Italy, and Adjunct Professor at Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Belgium.