1st Edition

The Effects of the Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis Differentiated Integration between the Centre and the New Peripheries of the EU

Edited By Christian Schweiger, Jose Magone Copyright 2015
    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    The book analyses the emerging centre-periphery divisions within the European Union which result from the unprecedented conditions created by the 2008-09 global financial crisis and the subsequent Eurozone sovereign debt crisis. The multiple layers of policy coordination which emerged in response to the crisis have initiated a process by which the EU is increasingly divided in terms of the level of vertical integration between the Eurozone core group and differentiated peripheries amongst the outsiders. At the same time the sovereign debt crisis has created a periphery of predominantly Southern European countries within the Eurozone that became dependent on external financial support from the other member states. The contributions in this book critically examine various aspects of the emerging internal post-crisis constellation of the EU. The main focus lies on national and supranational governance issues, national dynamics and dynamics in the Eurozone core as well as in the periphery.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Perspectives on European Politics and Society.

    1. Differentiated Integration and Cleavage in the EU under Crisis Conditions

    Christian Schweiger and José M. Magone

    2. Framing the Crisis, Defining the Problems: Decoding the Euro Area Crisis

    Brigid Laffan

    3. Boundaries of Welfare between the EU and Member States during the ‘Great Recession’

    Caroline De La Porte and Philippe Pochet

    4. The EU-25 Fiscal Compact: Differentiated Spillover Effects under Crisis Conditions

    Christian Schweiger

    5. Why has the German Job Market done astonishingly well despite the 2008-2009 ‘Great Recession’? New Economic Miracle, Institutional Transformation or Beggar-thy-Neighbour Policies?

    Lothar Funk

    6. The Limits of Transnational Solidarity and the Eurozone Crisis in Germany, Ireland and Slovakia

    Stefan Auer

    7. From Grexit to Grecovery: The Paradox of the Troika’s Engagement with Greece

    Anna Visvizi

    8. Portugal is not Greece: Policy Responses to the Sovereign Debt Crisis and the Consequences for the Portuguese Political Economy

    José M. Magone

    9. The Tale of two Peripheries in a divided Europe

    Bela Galgoczi

    10. Poland under economic Crisis Conditions

    Maciej Duszczyk

    11. Hungary and the Eurozone – the need for a more systematic Approach

    Oliver Kovács

    Biography

    Christian Schweiger is Senior Lecturer in the School of Government and International Affairs at Durham University, UK. His main research interests are the political economy of the EU, national varieties of economic and social development in the member states and transatlantic relations.

    José M. Magone is Professor of Regional and Global Governance at the Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany. He has published widely on European politics, particularly on Southern Europe and European integration.