Countries in the EU are modern countries and so they are capable of producing a lot of food. Some are not as good as others, but none are like third world countries.
Although it doesn't make sense since they're both EU countries... They trade in some parts they trade with other countries, like US or SA ... And so when they get those things they trade with other parts of EU. In other words, they gain new things other parts don't have. So they pretty much trade.
No. Different countries in the EU have different legal systems, so what happens in each country does not necessarily have any signficance in another EU country.
The results of the EU so far is that more countries are wanting to join the EU and that gives them more power and also more resources because the other countries are trading with them more often and it helps them succeed so overall the results have been really good for the EU.
yes i do think so !
It would be much the same. Some countries have very good relations with each other, often been historically strong, and some countries would have not so good relations. Different countries would have more in common with some countries than with others. By being part of the EU, the various countries are working more together and so generally relations would have improved.
The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.The EU is the European Union, an organisation which has 27 of Europe's countries as members. The Euro is used as the currency of 17 of those countries and so it is one of the official currencies of the European Union.
The EU allows natives from the involved countries to work in the other involved countries. The EU also manages the Euro, allowing the involved countries to work on regional issues, rather than their economy (not including the UK (The United Kingdom (England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales) which uses the British Pound). The EU also creates a mutual bond between the collection of countries part of the EU, so that if war were to break out, all those countries in the EU would be automatically in alliance.
It doesn't unite Europe, but it does enable countries that are members of the EU to work closely together. They can trade easier with each other and have more trading power when trading with countries outside the EU. There is much more co-operation and countries have to maintain standards in order for it all to work, so that helps them work more closely with each other.
The EU is an organisation, not a place, so it does not have a size. The total area of the 28 countries that are members of the EU is less than half the size of the US.
Ireland is one of the countries in the European Union, so the answer is yes.
Not easily, and it has never been done before.Many countries when they look at it discover that they are so reliant on the EU now that they can't back out without huge economic problems occurring.
No. Georgia is neither in the EU nor in the Schengen area. It is geographically separated from the EU and the Schengen area, so is unlikely to join either in the near future.