EEC (European Economic Community)
economic union of some European countries creates in order to unify their trade policies and cancel tax barriers between the member nations
EEC
EEC may refer to:
European Economic Community, the former name of the
European CommunityEuropean Energy Community, a regulatory framework for trading energy in Europe
Eurasian Economic Community, an institutional framework of Eurasian countries
Embodied Embedded Cognition, a position in
cognitive scienceEnabling Environment Conference, a series of conferences aimed at spuring development of the private sector in the developing world.English Electric Company, also known as
English Electric which became part of The General Electric CompanyEnglish Electric Computers, a product line of English Electric
Extreme Elimination Chamber, a wrestling match typeExtended Error Correction, a
RAM parity feature
Embodied energy coefficient, an indicator of how much energy must be invested to mine/harvest/produce, fabricate and transport a unit of building material.
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EEC
Noun
1. an international organization of European countries formed after World War II to reduce trade barriers and increase cooperation among its members; "he took Britain into Europe"
(synonym) European Union, EU, European Community, EC, European Economic Community, Common Market, Europe
(hypernym) world organization, world organisation, international organization, international organisation, global organization
(member-meronym) Denmark, Kingdom of Denmark, Danmark
EEC
abbrev. European Economic Community.
EEC
This is the acronym for the European Economic Community - an organization set up in the 1957- to bring about economic integration in Europe. There were originally six member countries: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. In 1993, when the Treaty of Maastricht came into force, the EEC was re-named the European Community (EC) and it forms the basis of today's European Union.