This CEPS Commentary argues that the way in which the burden of adjustment to the imbalances in the eurozone is borne almost exclusively by the deficit countries in the periphery produces a deflationary bias in the region as a whole. Against the threat of double-dip recession, Paul De Grauwe asserts that the adjustment could be done differently and calls for implementation of a more symmetric macroeconomic policy that reduces the deflationary bias
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
The first act of the eurozone debt drama was about whether any European Union member country could e...
After a decade of struggles, Daniel Gros urges eurozone leaders not to forget that predominantly dom...
This CEPS Commentary argues that the way in which the burden of adjustment to the imbalances in the ...
This month the eurozone returned to recession, three years after it emerged from the deep recession ...
The analysis in this Commentary provides strong evidence that the burden of the adjustments to the i...
The analysis in this Commentary provides strong evidence showing that the burden of the adjustments ...
This policy contribution describes the unresolved adjustment problems confronting the eurozone, and ...
For years, the eurozone has been perceived as a disaster area, with discussions of the monetary unio...
The recent slight improvement in the GDP growth rates in the eurozone has led European policy-makers...
In this Commentary Daniel Gros argues that austerity has been unavoidably associated with a high cos...
After five years of crisis there are now signs that the eurozone economy is recovering, but it is fa...
Against the background of the IMF’s latest global economic forecast, Jørgen Mortensen and Cinzia Alc...
In response to the often-heard accusation that “austerity is killing growth in Europe”, Daniel Gros ...
CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores in this Commentary why the crisis in the eurozone is going from b...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
The first act of the eurozone debt drama was about whether any European Union member country could e...
After a decade of struggles, Daniel Gros urges eurozone leaders not to forget that predominantly dom...
This CEPS Commentary argues that the way in which the burden of adjustment to the imbalances in the ...
This month the eurozone returned to recession, three years after it emerged from the deep recession ...
The analysis in this Commentary provides strong evidence that the burden of the adjustments to the i...
The analysis in this Commentary provides strong evidence showing that the burden of the adjustments ...
This policy contribution describes the unresolved adjustment problems confronting the eurozone, and ...
For years, the eurozone has been perceived as a disaster area, with discussions of the monetary unio...
The recent slight improvement in the GDP growth rates in the eurozone has led European policy-makers...
In this Commentary Daniel Gros argues that austerity has been unavoidably associated with a high cos...
After five years of crisis there are now signs that the eurozone economy is recovering, but it is fa...
Against the background of the IMF’s latest global economic forecast, Jørgen Mortensen and Cinzia Alc...
In response to the often-heard accusation that “austerity is killing growth in Europe”, Daniel Gros ...
CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores in this Commentary why the crisis in the eurozone is going from b...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
The first act of the eurozone debt drama was about whether any European Union member country could e...
After a decade of struggles, Daniel Gros urges eurozone leaders not to forget that predominantly dom...