This article seeks to explain why the second Grand Coalition was less ambitious in pursuing systemic transformation in macro-economic policy than its predecessor in 1966–69; why the biggest financial and economic crisis in post-war German history produced the seeming paradox of strengthening ordo-liberal ideas and practices (notably the ‘debt brake’) and shifting political discourse towards the centre-left; and why, in contrast to the first Grand Coalition, the Federal Chancellor rather than the Federal Finance Minister was the major political beneficiary. March 2003 and September 2008 emerge as the ‘pivot’ points in shifting trajectories of policy development. The article examines how the dynamics of crisis attribution, and how they differ...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to understand in which direction policies change in p...
The article details the dominant narrative on the EMU crisis, the so-called “Berlin View”, centered ...
This article compares government responses to the Great Recession of 2008–2009 with government respo...
This article seeks to explain why the second Grand Coalition was less ambitious in pursuing systemic...
This article examines the central role of the West German state in the transition from the golden to...
In our book, The Gathering Crisis: The 2005 Federal Election and the Grand Coalition (Miskimmon et a...
The transformation of Germany's political economy in the last few decades has strongly been influenc...
Based on interviews with the main German actors and on secondary sources, the article examines the r...
In 2008-2009, a severe economic crisis struck the world economy. Many macroeconomists assumed that t...
The article discusses the impact of the financial crisis on the German political economy and the fis...
Economic crises are, theoretically, fertile ground for alternative policy-relevant ideas. Through an...
The Euro-crisis is the most severe crisis the European Union has ever faced. Despite its scale and u...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to understand in which direction policies change in p...
This paper puts the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 into its historical and economic context. It poi...
Labelled ‘the sick economy of Europe’ during the late 1990s, it was suggested that the semi-sovereig...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to understand in which direction policies change in p...
The article details the dominant narrative on the EMU crisis, the so-called “Berlin View”, centered ...
This article compares government responses to the Great Recession of 2008–2009 with government respo...
This article seeks to explain why the second Grand Coalition was less ambitious in pursuing systemic...
This article examines the central role of the West German state in the transition from the golden to...
In our book, The Gathering Crisis: The 2005 Federal Election and the Grand Coalition (Miskimmon et a...
The transformation of Germany's political economy in the last few decades has strongly been influenc...
Based on interviews with the main German actors and on secondary sources, the article examines the r...
In 2008-2009, a severe economic crisis struck the world economy. Many macroeconomists assumed that t...
The article discusses the impact of the financial crisis on the German political economy and the fis...
Economic crises are, theoretically, fertile ground for alternative policy-relevant ideas. Through an...
The Euro-crisis is the most severe crisis the European Union has ever faced. Despite its scale and u...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to understand in which direction policies change in p...
This paper puts the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 into its historical and economic context. It poi...
Labelled ‘the sick economy of Europe’ during the late 1990s, it was suggested that the semi-sovereig...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to understand in which direction policies change in p...
The article details the dominant narrative on the EMU crisis, the so-called “Berlin View”, centered ...
This article compares government responses to the Great Recession of 2008–2009 with government respo...