Affiliation:
1. Department of Banking and Financial Management, University of Piraeus, Piraeus, Greece
Abstract
The conventional narrative for the European debt crisis stresses three
factors, namely, bad policies and profligacy in the afflicted countries -
mostly southern ones, flaws in the EMU design, and wise policies in the
northern frugal countries. This paper argues that the root causes of the
crisis lie in the failure of many ?safety valves? of market economies, at
many levels of the society, both in the crisis countries and in the more
?prudent? EMU countries, in an economic environment where unfettered finance
can overwhelm even the biggest and best managed economies. Hence, the policy
responses based on the conventional narrative are akin to treating the
?symptoms?, not the ?disease?. As such, they may be setting the foundations
for a bigger crisis in the future by strengthening the always-present
perverse incentives of many economic players and by proposing complex and
unworkable regulatory and supervisory structures. This, together with the
unequal sharing of the burden of adjustment - both across and within
countries, bodes ill for the long-term prospects of EMU, despite that the
aforementioned failures are not intrinsically related to the euro.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
11 articles.
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