Economic Consequences of the Euro

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A New Bretton Woods
A01=Ernest Pytlarczyk
A01=Kamil Kami?nski
A01=Stefan Kawalec
Author_Ernest Pytlarczyk
Author_Kamil Kami?nski
Author_Stefan Kawalec
Balanced Current Account
Banking sector systemic risk
Category=JP
Category=KCBM
Category=KCP
Competitive Countries
competitive devaluation
Controlled dismantling of the Euro zone
coordinated eurozone exit strategy
currency
Currency Coordination
Currency Coordination System
Current Account Surpluses
Deflationary Policy
ECB
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU Member State
EUR
Euro
Euro area
Euro crisis
European Central Bank
European economy
European integration
European monetary history
European Union
Eurozone at a crossroads
Eurozone Country
Eurozone crisis
exchange rate policy
fiscal integration challenges
Fiscal Transfers
Fiscal Union
Gdp Growth
Global Imbalances
Hartz Reforms
IMF
Internal Devaluation
International Competitiveness
International Monetary Fund
Keynes
macroeconomic adjustment
monetary union dissolution
New European grand strategy
Post-war
Real Gdp
saving the common market
saving the Eurozone
Saving the Eurozone and common market
Southern Eurozone Countries
Unlimited
Wo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367149352
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book presents a new narrative on the eurozone crisis. It argues that the common currency has the potential to kill the European Union, and the conventional wisdom that the eurozone can be fixed by a common budget and further political integration is incorrect.

The authors address key questions such as why the European Union and the single market have been successful, why the common currency poses a threat to European integration, and whether it is possible to either fix the eurozone or dissolve it while keeping the EU and the single market. Contrary to the view that it would be best if the Southern European countries left the eurozone first, the book makes the case that the optimal solution would be to start the process with the most competitive countries exiting first. The authors argue that a return to national currencies would be beneficial not only to the crisis-ridden southern countries, but also to France and Germany, which were the main promoters of the single currency. An organised unwinding of the euro area would be beneficial both for the European economy and for Europe’s main trading partners.

The authors contend that to defend the euro at all costs weakens the European economy and threatens the cohesion of the European Union. If pro-European and pro-market EU leaders do not dismantle the eurozone, it will most likely be done by their anti-European and anti-market successors. If that happens, the European Union and the common market will be destroyed.

This book will be a useful and engaging contribution to the existing literature in the fields of macro, monetary and international finance and economics.

Stefan Kawalec is the CEO of Capital Strategy, a strategy consulting company in Poland, and a co-founder of the European Solidarity Manifesto.

Ernest Pytlarczyk is the chief economist at mBank S.A., one of the biggest commercial banks in Poland and a subsidiary of Germany’s Commerzbank.

Kamil Kamiński is an advisor to the CEO of PKO Bank Polski S.A., Poland’s biggest commercial bank.

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