Abstract The ruling of the Federal Constitutional Court on ECB policy is quite inadequate to address the strategic problem of monetary policy. In particular, the artificial distinction between permitted ‘monetary policy’ and unauthorised ‘economic policy’ is inappropriate. The resulting demand for an evaluation process not only turns institutional principles of monetary policy upside down in Germany, but also proves to be narrow-minded and hardly applicable, apart from the demand for more transparency
In the Weiss case the BVerG resoundingly disproved the ECJ on the point of proportionality of the Pu...
The European Central Bank has been active since the sovereign debt crisis that struck European Union...
The Eurozone banking and sovereign debt crisis has brought the fragility of the European monetary un...
The Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) of Germany has invented a new and impossible test of proporti...
In monetary policy public power seems to go unchecked by law, even if law is a central component of ...
The German Constitutional Court (BVG) recently referred different questions to the European Court of...
The relationship between the European Union (EU) and its member states has recently been the subject...
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has held that the European Central Bank (ECB) enjoys considerabl...
In Gauweiler v. ECB, the German Constitutional Court referred for the first time a case to the Europ...
This article analyses the new challenges the ECB faces in implementing its monetary policy and asks ...
The ruling of the German Federal Constitutional Court and its call for conducting and communicating ...
This article studies the hidden blemishes of two benchmark rulings of the European Court of Justice ...
Does the European Central Bank (ECB) have a mandate to do ‘whatever it takes’ to save the Euro? Not ...
peer reviewedThe controversy over the degree of judicial review of monetary policy decisions trigger...
The European Central Bank has been active since the sovereign debt crisis that struck European Union...
In the Weiss case the BVerG resoundingly disproved the ECJ on the point of proportionality of the Pu...
The European Central Bank has been active since the sovereign debt crisis that struck European Union...
The Eurozone banking and sovereign debt crisis has brought the fragility of the European monetary un...
The Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) of Germany has invented a new and impossible test of proporti...
In monetary policy public power seems to go unchecked by law, even if law is a central component of ...
The German Constitutional Court (BVG) recently referred different questions to the European Court of...
The relationship between the European Union (EU) and its member states has recently been the subject...
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has held that the European Central Bank (ECB) enjoys considerabl...
In Gauweiler v. ECB, the German Constitutional Court referred for the first time a case to the Europ...
This article analyses the new challenges the ECB faces in implementing its monetary policy and asks ...
The ruling of the German Federal Constitutional Court and its call for conducting and communicating ...
This article studies the hidden blemishes of two benchmark rulings of the European Court of Justice ...
Does the European Central Bank (ECB) have a mandate to do ‘whatever it takes’ to save the Euro? Not ...
peer reviewedThe controversy over the degree of judicial review of monetary policy decisions trigger...
The European Central Bank has been active since the sovereign debt crisis that struck European Union...
In the Weiss case the BVerG resoundingly disproved the ECJ on the point of proportionality of the Pu...
The European Central Bank has been active since the sovereign debt crisis that struck European Union...
The Eurozone banking and sovereign debt crisis has brought the fragility of the European monetary un...