ABSTRACT

This book is a Festschrift to Annamaria Simonazzi and embraces the themes that she has contributed to over the years through her insightful and inspiring works. It brings together contributions from a number of distinguished European economists, which pay tribute to her by engaging in a dialogue with her research, simultaneously reflecting on the process of growing economic disintegration in the European Union, its causes and its possible remedies.

The book shows the deep interrelations between macroeconomic issues and the social sphere, and points to the need to rethink the very foundations of European economic policies as an effective antidote to growing imbalances and disintegration. In particular, the effects of austerity are assessed alongside the dimensions of inequality, gender discrimination, poverty, and unemployment, broadening the perspective also beyond the Eurozone. The authors envision a progressive society, in which investments in research and intelligent industrial policies govern the processes of technological change and drive the economy towards a more efficient and more equal model of development characterized by high productivity and high wages. While some chapters deal directly with policy issues, policy suggestions and proposals are scattered throughout the whole book.

This volume will appeal to academics, economists, and policy-makers interested in understanding the policy response of European institutions to the challenges posed by both the Great Recession and subsequent developments in the European economies. The book is written in an engaging and accessible way, and the themes are broad enough to generate interest from the international public.

part I|2 pages

Europe in crisis

chapter 1|22 pages

The economic consequences of the Maastricht Treaty

Why Italy’s permanent crisis is a warning to the Eurozone

chapter 2|16 pages

Recovery or stagnation?

Spain and Italy after the Great Recession

part II|2 pages

Integration and disintegration in the European Monetary Union

chapter 6|18 pages

The Italian economy from WWII to the EMU

Structural weaknesses and external constraint

part III|2 pages

The social effects of neoliberal macroeconomics

part IV|2 pages

Technological challenge and policy

chapter 11|16 pages

Is automation beneficial for society as a whole?

What we can learn re-reading Ricardo and Marx on machinery and labour

chapter 13|17 pages

Digital transformation in the automotive supply chain

A comparative perspective

chapter 15|10 pages

Vision vs improvisation

On the industrial future of Italy