Product details
- Categories: Monetary Policy & Euro
- Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- ISBN: 9781107104891
- Publication Date: 01/11/2015
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 353
- Language: English
Summary
How and why did the euro crisis happen? What are the implications for the economic and political future of Europe? The euro is an extraordinary political and economic experiment, the results of which are still highly uncertain. This book, written by a leading commentator on the economics of the European Union, provides a clear and analytical guide to the euro experiment and the subsequent crisis. Written in a balanced way that is neither pro-euro nor euro-sceptic, it explains the political forces that helped to create and maintain the single currency. Further, it argues that the recent crisis can be best understood in terms of six fundamental issues: sovereign debt, banking, private debt, macroeconomic imbalances, defective economic governance, and the interplay of national and European politics. This accessible account will appeal to a wide readership, including general readers and students as well academics and policymakers working in banking and public policy.
- Clear, analytical guide to the euro crisis by a leading economics journalist
- Unbiased account that is neither euro-sceptic nor euro-enthusiast
- Provides a broad historical context with analyses from political, legal, economic and financial perspectives
Table of contents
Preface
1. A question of survival
2. Defective design
3. Fragile strength
4. Greeks bearing debts
5. Bad banks
6. Hotel California: the existential crisis
7. Defender of last resort
8. Sovereign remedies
9. Debtors' prison
Notes
Index.