European financial crisis : debt, growth, and economic policy, The

Financial crises Europe bailouts banking union bond risk central bank independence central bank policy currency risk currency union debt crisis timeline ECB EU EU institutions European Central Bank European debt crisis European integration European politics European unemployment European Union Eurozone financial uncertainty fiscal policy Germany Greek debt crisis IMF International Monetary Fund macroeconomics monetary policy recession sovereign debt the Euro the troika
Business Expert Press
2014
First edition.
EISBN 9781606497074
Acknowledgements.
Part I. Introduction: understanding the problem. Why is this so hard?.
1. Introduction: where there's smoke, there's fire.
Part II. The imperfect architecture of the Eurozone.
2. The flawed governmental architecture of the Eurozone.
3. The flawed economic architecture of the Eurozone.
4. The flawed sociopolitical architecture of the Eurozone.
Part III. Evolution of the Euro crisis.
5. Flight of the bumblebee: precrisis structural imbalances and their influence in the Eurozone.
6. Misperception of European risk, market reactions, and policy response: a timeline of the Euro crisis.
Part IV. Moving forward.
7. Where are we now?.
8. What happens next?.
9. From forest fires to bumblebees and hammers and nails, lessons from the Euro crisis.
Notes.
References.
About the author.
Index.
The European debt crisis has posed a challenge for many people to understand, both non-Europeans and Europeans alike. Even economists, finance specialists, and market commentators are often uncertain of its causes or in the interpretation of events ongoing, or of past events that have taken place that then shaped the current situation. Typically, this lack of comprehension results from a lack of understanding of how European institutions work, the structure of European politics and the Eurozone, the economics of the financial system, or the relationship of debt markets to current government policies in the European Union (EU). The purpose of this book is to describe the causes and outcomes of the European debt crisis (to the date of publication) within the context of three questions most often asked about the debt crisis: (i) what happened, (ii) why did it happen, and (iii) why has the crisis been so difficult for policy makers to address?
Part I. Introduction: understanding the problem. Why is this so hard?.
1. Introduction: where there's smoke, there's fire.
Part II. The imperfect architecture of the Eurozone.
2. The flawed governmental architecture of the Eurozone.
3. The flawed economic architecture of the Eurozone.
4. The flawed sociopolitical architecture of the Eurozone.
Part III. Evolution of the Euro crisis.
5. Flight of the bumblebee: precrisis structural imbalances and their influence in the Eurozone.
6. Misperception of European risk, market reactions, and policy response: a timeline of the Euro crisis.
Part IV. Moving forward.
7. Where are we now?.
8. What happens next?.
9. From forest fires to bumblebees and hammers and nails, lessons from the Euro crisis.
Notes.
References.
About the author.
Index.
The European debt crisis has posed a challenge for many people to understand, both non-Europeans and Europeans alike. Even economists, finance specialists, and market commentators are often uncertain of its causes or in the interpretation of events ongoing, or of past events that have taken place that then shaped the current situation. Typically, this lack of comprehension results from a lack of understanding of how European institutions work, the structure of European politics and the Eurozone, the economics of the financial system, or the relationship of debt markets to current government policies in the European Union (EU). The purpose of this book is to describe the causes and outcomes of the European debt crisis (to the date of publication) within the context of three questions most often asked about the debt crisis: (i) what happened, (ii) why did it happen, and (iii) why has the crisis been so difficult for policy makers to address?
