Despite its huge consequences for European integration, European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) has not, until recently, gained the attention of as many legal academics as other supposedly more mainstream areas of European Union law. Even after the establishment of the European System of Central Banks and the introduction of a single currency, the implications of EMU are primarily discussed in terms of the effectiveness and efficiency of the legal framework and its economic implications. While the shortcomings of the present regulatory system, which have contributed to the Euro zone debt crisis since 2010, certainly justify such analyses, they deflect from the question whether and to what extent EMU actually contributes to European integ...