There is a prevalent view outside Greece that promotion of competitiveness is tantamount with price reductions for Greek goods and services. Massive horizontal salary cuts appear, at first, to promote competitiveness by reducing unit labor costs and to reduce fiscal deficits by reducing the wage bill of the public sector. Upon closer look, however, horizontal salary cuts have been much greater than needed for Greek competitiveness, providing an alibi vis a vis the Troika for reforms that are still to be implemented, but at the same time undermining both competitiveness and the potential to reduce public debt through sustainable development
Underlying Greece's public debt crisis is a fundamental economic problem: its lack of international ...
The current monograph is a collection of essays on the productivity-trade nexus. In a world, where m...
In 2003 Chancellor Schroeder launched an ambitious structural reform package (Agenda 2010), that sim...
There is a prevalent view outside Greece that promotion of competitiveness is tantamount with price ...
I was looking again yesterday at last week’s press-conference by Poul Thomsen, the International Mon...
ABSTRACT: The on-going and seemingly endless financial crisis within the European union in conjuncti...
In this commentary, CEPS Director Daniel Gros argues that the current emphasis on wage divergences i...
Since the beginning of the financial crisis, Greece has implemented a number of deep spending cuts, ...
It is well known that in the last five years Greek wages have collapsed both in the public and in th...
A recent article by Dani Rodrick ends with the following statement: “As economies develop and become...
A flexible labor market framework is a main instrument for the economy’s adjustment in EMU, while wa...
Labor market deregulation has been the dominant approach towards the development of a single Europea...
The discussion on the causes of the Greek crisis has focused on the twin deficits: the fiscal and cu...
Increasing fragmentation of production across borders is changing the nature of international compet...
Proceedings Link http://icehm.org/upload/2682ED1116027.pdfIn this paper, we introduce the Global Co...
Underlying Greece's public debt crisis is a fundamental economic problem: its lack of international ...
The current monograph is a collection of essays on the productivity-trade nexus. In a world, where m...
In 2003 Chancellor Schroeder launched an ambitious structural reform package (Agenda 2010), that sim...
There is a prevalent view outside Greece that promotion of competitiveness is tantamount with price ...
I was looking again yesterday at last week’s press-conference by Poul Thomsen, the International Mon...
ABSTRACT: The on-going and seemingly endless financial crisis within the European union in conjuncti...
In this commentary, CEPS Director Daniel Gros argues that the current emphasis on wage divergences i...
Since the beginning of the financial crisis, Greece has implemented a number of deep spending cuts, ...
It is well known that in the last five years Greek wages have collapsed both in the public and in th...
A recent article by Dani Rodrick ends with the following statement: “As economies develop and become...
A flexible labor market framework is a main instrument for the economy’s adjustment in EMU, while wa...
Labor market deregulation has been the dominant approach towards the development of a single Europea...
The discussion on the causes of the Greek crisis has focused on the twin deficits: the fiscal and cu...
Increasing fragmentation of production across borders is changing the nature of international compet...
Proceedings Link http://icehm.org/upload/2682ED1116027.pdfIn this paper, we introduce the Global Co...
Underlying Greece's public debt crisis is a fundamental economic problem: its lack of international ...
The current monograph is a collection of essays on the productivity-trade nexus. In a world, where m...
In 2003 Chancellor Schroeder launched an ambitious structural reform package (Agenda 2010), that sim...