This volume focuses on the aftermath of the euro crisis and whether the reforms have brought about lasting changes to the economic and political structures of the crisis countries or if the changes were short-term and easily abandoned post-bailout and post-recovery.
Starting with an analysis of the state of euro area governance at the onset of the crisis and the ensuing reforms, the book considers structural conditions as well as those specific to the domestic political economy of most of the countries affected by the crisis, including Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, and Italy. It presents up-to-date and incisive analysis of the aftermath of the crisis and suggests how we can situate it within our understanding of different national growth models in Europe.
This book will be of key interest to scholars, students and practitioners interested in the Euro Crisis, Economic and Monetary Union, European Union and European politics and more broadly to Comparative Politics, Political Economy, International Relations, Economics, Finance, Business and Industry.
After the Bailout: 10 Years of the Euro Area Crisis
págs. 1-14
The Euro Crisis: Its Unresolved Roots and Their Reform Implications
págs. 17-37
When Numbers Don’t Add Up: Bureaucratic Culture and Conflicts in EU-IMF Programs
págs. 38-58
Greece after the Bailouts: Assessment of a Qualified Failure
págs. 61-93
Ireland: Back to a Different Normal
págs. 94-121
Portugal’s Adjustment Program: The Run-up to the Sovereign Debt Crisis, Program Design, Implementation and Legacy
págs. 122-156
Using a Sectoral Bailout to Make Wide Reforms: The Case of Spain
págs. 157-180
Italy: Missed adjustments and political nemesis
págs. 181-204
Unity in diversity?: Varieties of capitalism before and after the euro crisis
págs. 207-229
Conclusion: The political economy of adjustment
págs. 229-237
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