In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental difference between a formal sovereign default with a haircut and debt monetisation, which reduces the purchasing power for investors by the same amount. He argues that there is indeed a difference because a formal sovereign default invariably leads to a banking crisis. Moreover, within a monetary union a sovereign is more exposed to liquidity problems than a country with an independent currency and any of its problems quickly spill over into the banking system, which cannot survive without a reliable source of liquidity given that banks are by nature highly leveraged institutions. In terms of policy prescriptions, one conclusion is that le...
While acknowledging that the massive amounts of liquidity injected into the eurozone banking system ...
As the Eurozone debt crisis reaches a turning point, this Policy Brief argues for a more organised i...
This thesis studies government fiscal, monetary and debt policy, with a particular focus on debt cri...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
A key remaining issue for the completion of the Banking Union is the concentrated exposure of banks ...
In many eurozone countries, domestic banks often hold more than 20% of domestic public debt, which i...
We study the conditions under which unconventional (balance-sheet) monetary policy can rule out self...
Unlike the banking crisis of 2008; when governments had significantly lower debt burdens, government...
This paper asserts that the contagion currently afflicting sovereign bond markets in the eurozone ca...
European Monetary Union experiences the division into two major blocks according to their ability to...
Lax financial conditions can foster credit booms. The global credit boom of the last decade led to l...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
In updating their latest Commentary following the newly created €600 billion European Stabilisation ...
Even though the financial crisis might have started in the US, CEPS Director Daniel Gros finds in a ...
While acknowledging that the massive amounts of liquidity injected into the eurozone banking system ...
As the Eurozone debt crisis reaches a turning point, this Policy Brief argues for a more organised i...
This thesis studies government fiscal, monetary and debt policy, with a particular focus on debt cri...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
A key remaining issue for the completion of the Banking Union is the concentrated exposure of banks ...
In many eurozone countries, domestic banks often hold more than 20% of domestic public debt, which i...
We study the conditions under which unconventional (balance-sheet) monetary policy can rule out self...
Unlike the banking crisis of 2008; when governments had significantly lower debt burdens, government...
This paper asserts that the contagion currently afflicting sovereign bond markets in the eurozone ca...
European Monetary Union experiences the division into two major blocks according to their ability to...
Lax financial conditions can foster credit booms. The global credit boom of the last decade led to l...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
In updating their latest Commentary following the newly created €600 billion European Stabilisation ...
Even though the financial crisis might have started in the US, CEPS Director Daniel Gros finds in a ...
While acknowledging that the massive amounts of liquidity injected into the eurozone banking system ...
As the Eurozone debt crisis reaches a turning point, this Policy Brief argues for a more organised i...
This thesis studies government fiscal, monetary and debt policy, with a particular focus on debt cri...