“Euactive”: Albania in the EU in 2050

“Most aspiring countries for EU membership will not be able to become part of the bloc before 2050”, writes “Euracistic<3>, media platform specialising in publication “line” of policymakers in Europe. Citing a new study, carried out on the practical, legal, and technical aspects of further expansion [...]
“Most aspiring countries for EU membership will not be able to become part of the bloc before 2050”, writes “Euracistic<3>, media platform specialising in publication “line” of policymakers in Europe.
Citing a new study, implemented on the practical, legal and technical aspects of further expansion of the European Union, it says that only one of these states, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, can meet the union criteria before 2023, writes Tch.
Serbia, currently considered set on the front line of these efforts, along with Montenegro, will fail to fully comply with EU laws before the mid-2030s, and that applies to Turkey.
In the study of Professor Tina Freyburg of St. Gallen University, it is said that Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina will meet membership conditions from 2050.
The report seeks to show how the countries' political ambitions in question overcome the reality of the situation. The bloc's expansion during Jean-Claude Juncker's European Commission mandate for 2014-2019 is strictly disfellowshipped, but the question of what hopefuls would join the EU after that deadline has sparked an interesting debate.
The bloc's emphasis on enlargement is small, and in September it was dawned, after many years of secrecy, the fact that the European Court of Auditors had initially opposed the membership of Romania and Bulgaria, with the argument that they were not ready.












