Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-330) and index
1: Introduction: The future of the Euro and the politics of embedded currency areas / Matthias Matthijs, Mark Blyth -- Section I: The Euro problem. 2: The forgotten embeddedness: history lessons for the Euro / Kathleen R. McNamara -- 3: The forgotten financial union: how you can have a Euro crisis without a Euro / Erik Jones -- 4: The elusive economic government and forgotten fiscal union / Nicolas Jabko -- 5: The forgotten problem of democratic legitimacy: 'governing by the rules' and 'ruling by the numbers' / Vivien A. Schmidt -- Section II: The Euro experience. 6. Germany's Euro experience and the long shadow of Reunification / Abraham Newman --
7. Europe's middle child: France's Statist Liberalism and the conflicted politics of the Euro / Mark I. Vail -- 8. The troubled south: the Euro experience in Italy and Spain / Jonathan Hopkin -- Section III: The Euro future. 9. Europe's new German problem: the timing of politics and the politics of timing / Wade Jacoby -- 10. European integration past, present, and future: moving forward through crisis? / Craig Parsons, Matthias Matthijs -- 11. The future of the Euro in a global monetary context / Eric Helleiner -- 12. Conclusion: The future of the Euro: possible futures, risks, and uncertainties / Matthias Matthijs, Mark Blyth
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"An attempt by political economists to analyze the fundamental causes of the euro crisis, determine how it can be fixed, and consider what likely futures lie ahead for the currency. The book makes three interrelated arguments that emphasize the primacy of political over economic factors. First, the 'euro problem' is discussed as the result of the single currency's fundamental lack of institutional embeddedness, insofar as its original design omitted three 'forgotten unions' alongside of monetary union: a financial and banking union, mutually supporting institutions of fiscal union and economic government, and a political union holding similar legitimacy to the nation-state. Second, the 'euro experience' shows how the euro's unfinished design led to economic divergence - quietly altering the existing distribution of economic and political power within Europe prior to the crisis - which in turn determined the EU's crisis response. The book highlights how the euro's four most important members - Germany, France, Italy and Spain - each changed once they adopted the euro, why the crisis affected them so differently, and how each has since struggled to live with the commitments the euro necessitates. Third, the book examines three possible 'euro futures' through the lens of the politics of its reluctant leader Germany; through the lens of the EU's capacity to 'move forward' through crises; and through the geopolitical lens of the international monetary system. The book concludes that any successful long-term solution to the euro's predicament needs to start with the political foundations of markets"--Publisher's description