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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Giuseppe Celi , Andrea Ginzburg , Dario Guarascio , Annamaria SimonazziPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.566kg ISBN: 9781138685833ISBN 10: 1138685836 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 11 January 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction, Part 1: A medium term perspective, 1. The current Euro crisis: a faulty institutional construction, 1. Introduction, 2. The Werner Report and the idea of Europe, 3. The Snake and the EMS, 4. The bumpy road to the EMU, 5. The EMU’s institutional flaws, 6. In the crisis: bail-outs, politics, reforms, 7. Conclusions, 2. The European core-periphery divergent development paths before the crisis: 1999–2008, 1. Introduction, 2. Germany: from Europe's sick man to export superstar, 3. Wage moderation, 4. Housing: a ‘non-tradable’ sector?, 5. The construction of the Central European Manufacturing Core, 6. Conclusions, 3. France: the waning of a core country, 1. Introduction, 2. From dirigisme to statist liberalism, 3. The waning of a key sector: the automotive industry, 4. Conclusions, 4. The Eurozone’s double-dip recession: interpretations and policies, 1. Introduction, 2. A standard balance of payments crisis?, 3. The Target2 debate: a stealth bail-out?, 4. The unfolding of the crisis and the role of austerity, 5. The structural impact of the crisis, 6. Conclusions, 5. Inequality, poverty and imports: core, periphery and beyond, 1. Introduction, 2. Rich Germany, poor Germans, 3. Poor Southern Europe, poor Southern Europeans, 4. South of South: the case of the Italian Mezzogiorno, 5. Conclusions, 6. The network of European trade between core and periphery, 1. Introduction, 2. The European trade networks, 3. The structure of trade, 4. The evolution of the automotive industry in Europe, 5. Conclusions. Part II: European de-industrialization processes in a long-term perspective, 7. The weakening of the European growth engine, 1. Introduction, 2. The fading of the golden age, 3. Heterodox explanations of the fall in investment: industry and finance, 4. Orthodox explanations of the fall in investment: secular stagnation, 5. Financialization and Europeanization6. Conclusions, 8. The interruption of industrialization in Southern Europe: a centre-periphery perspective, 1. Introduction, 2. The embeddedness of centre-periphery relations, 3. The global crisis of the mid-1970s in Southern Europe: peripheral tertiarization and impoverishment of the productive structures, 4. The European integration of a latecomer country: Italy, 5. The late-latecomers’ European integration, 6. Democratic transition and restructuring without re-industrialization, 1975–1985, 7. The financialization of the European periphery, 8. The German internationalization strategy: 'widen the market and narrow the competition', 9. Conclusions, 9. A policy divide: industrial policies in the ‘core’ and ‘peripheral’ countries, 1. Introduction, 2. The vicissitudes of a concept, 3. European industrial policy, 4. The Investment Plan for Europe (Juncker Plan), 5. Industry 4.0: a Europe-wide opportunity or a new factor of divergence?, 6. Conclusions, 10. Conclusions, 1. Institutional flaws and policy mistakes, 2 Structural differences, 3 Partial, cautious reforms, 4 Institutional reforms, 5 A German Europe, 6 A European Germany, 7 A longer-term perspective, 8 Income distribution and the European social model for long-term sustainability, 9 Towards a shared alternative programmeReviewsAuthor InformationGiuseppe Celi is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Foggia, Italy. He has been the coordinator of the university’s Economic Theory PhD programme. Andrea Ginzburg was Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy. Dario Guarascio is a researcher in applied economics at the National Institute of Public Policy Analysis (INAPP), Italy. He is in charge of the research unit 'Skills and labour market transitions'. Annamaria Simonazzi is Professor of Economics at La Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. She is co-editor of Economia & Lavoro and on the editorial board of inGenere. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |