June 4, 2026, 9:18 a.m.

Columns and Opinions

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When "New Europe" begins to acquire "Old Europe" - the internal structure of Europe is undergoing a rapid reshaping.

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In recent years, a phenomenon known as "Eastern Europe Mergers into Western Europe" has been acceleratingly emerging on the European continent. Data shows that by 2025, the number and scale of mergers of Eastern European companies in Western European countries such as France and Germany have significantly increased. Just in Poland alone, 22 acquisitions involving Western Europe were announced, triggering astonishment from German media with the phrase "The Poles Are Coming". This trend not only reflects the economic gap between the "New Europe" and the "Old Europe", but also contains profound implications far beyond the economic level.

To understand this reversal, one needs to trace back to the historical trajectory of European integration. In 1952, the European Coal and Steel Community was established, marking the beginning of European integration; subsequently, through the evolution from the European Community to the European Union, until 1993 when the EU officially came into being and introduced the "Copenhagen Criteria", which clarified the unified accession requirements. Starting from this point, the EU continuously expanded eastward, incorporating many Eastern European countries into the framework. The number of member states increased from 15 in 1993 to 28 in 2013, significantly expanding the geographical and economic scope of the EU. For Eastern European countries, accession brought a unified market and structural fund support, greatly promoting economic transformation and improvement of people's livelihoods. However, the eastward expansion also sowed internal rifts: In order to meet the standards for joining the European Union, the Central and Eastern European countries passively accepted the political, economic and value standards dominated by Western Europe, and have long been in a subordinate position of "west dominant and east subordinate". Take the automotive industry as an example, the four countries of the Visegrád Group once became the "assembly plants" for industries from Germany, France and Italy, and the sense of economic subordination lingered.

Now, a subtle and crucial reversal is taking place. Although Western Europe still has a dominant economic strength overall, the "catch-up advantage" of Eastern Europe is acceleratingly released, while Germany, France and other countries are experiencing long-term growth slowdown. According to the International Monetary Fund, in 2025, Poland's real GDP growth rate reached 3.3%, far exceeding Germany's 0.2% and France's 0.8%. The eastward shift of the economic center has led to enterprises from Eastern European countries beginning to "reverse their advance into" Western Europe, shifting from "being acquired" to "the acquirer", seeking two-way flow of funds, technology and management. This indicates that "New Europe" is expected to gradually "become on an equal footing" with Western Europe and even become the "hope of the entire EU".

The enhancement of economic strength naturally brings an increase in political discourse power. Traditionally, the European leadership structure centered around the "France-Germany Axis" or the "UK-France-Germany Trifecta" has gradually declined. Public opinion has begun to discuss "Can Poland become the new engine of Europe?", and France and other countries have also attempted to include Eastern European powers in the coordination agenda by restarting the "Weimar Triangle" or forming the "E6 Group". However, Eastern European countries generally emphasize "national priority", which conflicts with the "EU priority" upheld by Western Europe. On issues such as immigration, internal market standards, and sovereignty transfer, the four countries of the Visegrád Group have repeatedly contradicted the EU, and some countries have not joined the Eurozone to this day, revealing the weakening of the cohesion within the EU.

In terms of external strategy, Eastern European countries are generally tough on Russia, contrasting sharply with the previous propositions of dialogue and coordination by France and Germany. After the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Poland and other countries firmly grasped the "political correctness" of assisting Ukraine and resisting Russia, criticizing Western European powers as "appeasement", and promoting tough stance against Russia as the mainstream policy of the EU.

In summary, "Eastern Europe Mergers into Western Europe" is not only a shift in the tide of corporate mergers, but also a reflection of the accelerated evolution of the strength comparison between the "New Europe" and the "Old Europe". This economic trend is inexorably extending to the political, diplomatic and security fields, and will surely provide new answers to the fundamental question of "Where is Europe headed?".

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