ABSTRACT

Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2009. Before its birth many observers were concerned about its viability. This volume examines a number of noteworthy concerns that were heard a decade ago and it assesses what has become of them. The contributors to this volume examine various topics. Has EMU been a failure or success? Does EMU require more political integration? What type of deeper integration in the financial market has occurred because of EMU? Does the public like EMU? Does EMU cause a decline of the welfare state, reduce the role of labour unions and are adjustments now made mainly through the labour market? Do countries in EMU become more similar over time? Is EMU sustainable in the long-run? Will EMU survive the global financial crisis? The contributors to this book are leading Political Scientists in the field, and draw on a wealth of research and experience.

This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.

chapter 2|18 pages

EMU's teenage challenge

What have we learned and can we predict from political science? *

chapter 3|19 pages

EMU and political union

What, if anything, have we learned from the euro's first decade?

chapter 4|18 pages

On consensus, constraint and choice

Economic and monetary integration and Europe's welfare states

chapter 5|19 pages

EMU's diverging micro foundations

A study of governments' preferences and the sustainability of EMU

chapter 7|19 pages

Emu

The last stand for the policy convergence hypothesis?

chapter 9|17 pages

Political science and the ‘Cinderellas’ of economic and monetary union

Payment services and clearing and settlement