1930s or 2020s? A European Growth Strategy
The main onus of responsibility for the current global economic predicament is on the financial system, not on a lack of fiscal discipline. Nonetheless, the crisis is having an extremely severe impact on the real economy, which is felt most acutely in the southern Eurozone member states. Since the end of the deepest phase of the crisis in 2009, European governments have committed themselves to fiscal consolidation. The results of these policies have been perverse: the impact of fiscal tightening during a depression may result in depressed output and high unemployment, without lowering the debt-Gross Domestic Product ratio. In light of this, we make a case for restoring growth in Europe without further delay, and discuss the role of the EU budget as an instrument for setting and implementing a real EU growth strategy.
Paper prepared within the framework of the IAI project "The Political Future of the Union".
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Details
Roma, Istituto Affari Internazionali, 2012, 11 p. -
Issue
1229 -
ISBN/ISSN/DOI:
978-88-98042-70-8
1. Introduction
2. Exiting the crisis
3. The Growth Compact
4. The EU budget
References
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Ricerca06/01/2014
The Political Future of the European Union
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