Beyond austerity : democratic alternatives for Europe / Stuart Holland.
Publisher: Nottingham : Spokesman, 2016Description: 154 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780851248547.Subject(s): Europe -- Economic conditions -- 21st century | European Union countries -- Economic conditions -- 21st centuryDDC classification: 338.543094Item type | Current library | Class number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 338.543094 HOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 013416 |
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338.54209 QUI Boom and bust : a global history of financial bubbles / | 338.54209041 DOW Major recessions : | 338.5420973 NAT A history of the United States in five crashes : | 338.543094 HOL Beyond austerity : | 338.6048094 GAR A guide to United Kingdom and European Union competition policy / | 338.6440973 COW Big business : | 338.7 TET Anthro-vision : how anthropology can explain business and life / |
Introduction; Chapter One: Democracy in Question; Chapter Two: Learning Up from the New Deal; Chapter Three: The Case for a Social Europe; Chapter Four: The Feasibility of a European New Deal; Chapter Five: Beyond a German Europe; Chapter Six: Regaining the Case; Annex: A Modest Proposal for Resolving the Eurozone Crisis; Glossary; Biographical Note; Endorsements of Europe in Question
Beyond Austerity argues that the European Union already has the means to finance the equivalent of the Roosevelt New Deal, which saved the US from Depression in the 1930s, without needing either fiscal federalism or 'ever closer union'. This is highly relevant to the referendum on British membership of the EU. How can Europe's economic recovery be accomplished? The European Investment Bank and the European Investment Fund can issue Eurobonds that do not count on the debt of EU member states, nor need national guarantees, nor require fiscal transfers between Germany and Greece or any other countries. Heads of state and government in the European Council have the right to define 'general economic policies' that the European Central Bank is obliged to support. The European Commission has displaced this important capacity, although the structure for European recovery was carefully assembled by Jacques Delors, its former President, in conjunction with the author during the 1990s. Who will make the first move beyond austerity and start to put Europe back to work?