History, asked by chiragjainw5868, 7 months ago

How did the European governments support their respective trading companies?

Answers

Answered by ellaoloyede375
1

ANSWER:

The EU actively engages with countries or regional groupings to

negotiate tre markets of both the EU and the countries concerned. EU companies ade agreements. These agreements grant mutually-beneficial access to thcan grow their business, and can also more easily import the raw materials they use to make their products.

The EU supports and defends EU industry and business by working to remove trade barriers so that European exporters gain fair conditions and access to other markets. At the same time, the EU supports foreign companies with practical information on how to access the EU market.

Exporting from the EU

Importing into the EU

The EU also works with the World Trade Organization (WTO) to help set global trade rules and remove obstacles to trade between WTO members.

Explanation:

The EU has delivered more than half a century of peace, stability and prosperity, helped raise living standards and launched a single European currency: the euro. More than 340 million EU citizens in 19 countries now use it as their currency and enjoy its benefits.

Thanks to the abolition of border controls between EU countries, people can travel freely throughout most of the continent.

The EU’s main economic engine is the single market. It enables most goods, services, money and people to move freely. The EU aims to develop this huge resource to other areas like energy, knowledge and capital markets to ensure that Europeans can draw the maximum benefit from it.

The EU remains focused on making its governing institutions more transparent and democratic. Decisions are taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen.

The EU is governed by the principle of representative democracy, with citizens directly represented at EU level in the European Parliament and Member States represented in the European Council and the Council of the EU.

What the European Union does

The second part of this publication presents a summary of what the EU does in 35 different policy areas, including useful links to more information.

The EU’s health policy focuses on tackling serious EU-wide health threats, preventing diseases and ensuring an equal chance of good health and quality healthcare for all. A population in good health is also good for the economy, and therefore the EU’s ambition is to ensure the accessibility, effectiveness and resilience of health systems in the EU.

The EU is active in many different areas, such as capacity building to increase the uptake of vaccinations, pooling knowledge on cancer, promoting a healthy lifestyle, and combating smoking through tobacco legislation. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control assesses emerging threats so the EU and national health authorities can respond rapidly. And to ensure patients get the best treatment, all medicines in the EU must be approved at the national or EU level (through the European Medicines Agency) before going on the market.

The European Health Insurance Card helps travellers obtain treatment if they fall ill while visiting another EU country, while EU law on cross-border healthcare sets out citizens’ rights when crossing borders for planned care. Through European reference networks patients with rare or complex diseases benefit from the best expertise from across Europe without even leaving

The Commission has proposed a deep reform of existing asylum laws in line with current and future needs. The basic principle will remain the same: people should apply for asylum in the first EU Member State they enter unless they have family elsewhere, but whenever a Member State is overwhelmed, there must be solidarity and a fair sharing of responsibility within the EU.

Answered by gurumahamk
0

Answer:

ANSWER:

The EU actively engages with countries or regional groupings to

negotiate tre markets of both the EU and the countries concerned. EU companies ade agreements. These agreements grant mutually-beneficial access to thcan grow their business, and can also more easily import the raw materials they use to make their products.

The EU supports and defends EU industry and business by working to remove trade barriers so that European exporters gain fair conditions and access to other markets. At the same time, the EU supports foreign companies with practical information on how to access the EU market.

Exporting from the EU

Importing into the EU

The EU also works with the World Trade Organization (WTO) to help set global trade rules and remove obstacles to trade between WTO members.

Explanation:

The EU has delivered more than half a century of peace, stability and prosperity, helped raise living standards and launched a single European currency: the euro. More than 340 million EU citizens in 19 countries now use it as their currency and enjoy its benefits.

Thanks to the abolition of border controls between EU countries, people can travel freely throughout most of the continent.

The EU’s main economic engine is the single market. It enables most goods, services, money and people to move freely. The EU aims to develop this huge resource to other areas like energy, knowledge and capital markets to ensure that Europeans can draw the maximum benefit from it.

The EU remains focused on making its governing institutions more transparent and democratic. Decisions are taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen.

The EU is governed by the principle of representative democracy, with citizens directly represented at EU level in the European Parliament and Member States represented in the European Council and the Council of the EU.

What the European Union does

The second part of this publication presents a summary of what the EU does in 35 different policy areas, including useful links to more information.

The EU’s health policy focuses on tackling serious EU-wide health threats, preventing diseases and ensuring an equal chance of good health and quality healthcare for all. A population in good health is also good for the economy, and therefore the EU’s ambition is to ensure the accessibility, effectiveness and resilience of health systems in the EU.

The EU is active in many different areas, such as capacity building to increase the uptake of vaccinations, pooling knowledge on cancer, promoting a healthy lifestyle, and combating smoking through tobacco legislation. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control assesses emerging threats so the EU and national health authorities can respond rapidly. And to ensure patients get the best treatment, all medicines in the EU must be approved at the national or EU level (through the European Medicines Agency) before going on the market.

The European Health Insurance Card helps travellers obtain treatment if they fall ill while visiting another EU country, while EU law on cross-border healthcare sets out citizens’ rights when crossing borders for planned care. Through European reference networks patients with rare or complex diseases benefit from the best expertise from across Europe without even leaving

The Commission has proposed a deep reform of existing asylum laws in line with current and future needs. The basic principle will remain the same: people should apply for asylum in the first EU Member State they enter unless they have family elsewhere, but whenever a Member State is overwhelmed, there must be solidarity and a fair sharing of responsibility within the EU.

Explanation:

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