ABSTRACT

This book explores the way in which the financial crisis that began in the US spread to the economy of the European Union. It takes a critical look at the measures adopted by EU institutions in response to that crisis, seeking to explain the rationale behind them, their context, their development and why different exit strategies were not adopted. In doing this, the book makes comparisons with the measures adopted by institutions in the US and the UK.

As the crisis has shown that the financial supervision frameworks prevailing in 2007 were not fully able to deal with the largest financial crisis in history, this volume also reviews the proposals that have been designed to reform the supervisory architecture in financial services in the EU.

The book concludes that the EU member states under most pressure from financial markets do suffer from intrinsic problems, but that the economic effects of the crisis have been exacerbated by shortcomings in economic governance within the EU.

This work will be highly relevant to policy makers and scholars looking at EU integration, finance and market regulation.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

part I|80 pages

Economic crisis in the European Union

chapter 2|18 pages

The great recession and economic policy

Roots and consequences

chapter 3|21 pages

Financial supervision reform in the EU

A comparison with the UK and the US

chapter 5|22 pages

Why so slow?

The crisis and the structural weaknesses of the EU

part II|91 pages

Praxis of European governance facing the economic crisis

chapter 6|21 pages

A critical view of the governance of the crisis in Europe

The rationales inherent in exit strategies

chapter 7|20 pages

Questioning the myth of expansionary austerity

European macroeconomic policy during the crisis and its aftermath

chapter 8|21 pages

The European sovereign debt crisis and the new governance

A conservative alternative to European economic government