Under extreme pressure from the financial markets and from Germany, member countries of the eurozone feel obliged to introduce balanced budget clauses into their constitutions. In this new Commentary, CEPS Senior Associate Research Fellow Paul De Grauwe explains why the balanced budget rule is a bad idea
The European Union has performed exceptionally badly in economic terms in comparison with the world ...
By the end of this year the European Commission intends to publish guidelines on freedom of expressi...
The Eurozone crisis has brought the EU’s division into two types of membership into relief, with the...
Under extreme pressure from the financial markets and from Germany, member countries of the eurozone...
Judging by the recent economic news, the real culprits in the crisis have finally been identified. I...
The financial crisis has revealed that the growth regime characterizing the world before 2008 was un...
As the European debt crisis enters its sixth year, European elites continue to propose new policy “s...
In view of rising concerns over increasing inequality in the European Union since the financial cris...
Martin Myant of the European Trade Union Institute presents evidence from a new book analysing natio...
The euro zone financial crisis remains unresolved. The euro zone economy is slipping into recession ...
An important argument for the adoption of the euro was the expectation that it would boost trade. Ex...
This article looks critically at the explanation provided by the so‐called ‘normalisation’ literatu...
After nearly a century of dominance of the international monetary system, has the US dollar finally ...
The introduction of the euro meant that countries with sovereign debt problems could not use monetis...
CEPS Senior Fellow Paul De Grauwe expresses astonishment in this new Commentary at the continued ins...
The European Union has performed exceptionally badly in economic terms in comparison with the world ...
By the end of this year the European Commission intends to publish guidelines on freedom of expressi...
The Eurozone crisis has brought the EU’s division into two types of membership into relief, with the...
Under extreme pressure from the financial markets and from Germany, member countries of the eurozone...
Judging by the recent economic news, the real culprits in the crisis have finally been identified. I...
The financial crisis has revealed that the growth regime characterizing the world before 2008 was un...
As the European debt crisis enters its sixth year, European elites continue to propose new policy “s...
In view of rising concerns over increasing inequality in the European Union since the financial cris...
Martin Myant of the European Trade Union Institute presents evidence from a new book analysing natio...
The euro zone financial crisis remains unresolved. The euro zone economy is slipping into recession ...
An important argument for the adoption of the euro was the expectation that it would boost trade. Ex...
This article looks critically at the explanation provided by the so‐called ‘normalisation’ literatu...
After nearly a century of dominance of the international monetary system, has the US dollar finally ...
The introduction of the euro meant that countries with sovereign debt problems could not use monetis...
CEPS Senior Fellow Paul De Grauwe expresses astonishment in this new Commentary at the continued ins...
The European Union has performed exceptionally badly in economic terms in comparison with the world ...
By the end of this year the European Commission intends to publish guidelines on freedom of expressi...
The Eurozone crisis has brought the EU’s division into two types of membership into relief, with the...