The politics of bad options why the Eurozone's problems have been so hard to resolve
Why was the Eurozone crisis so difficult to resolve? Why was it resolved in a manner in which some countries bore a much larger share of the pain than other countries? Why did no country leave the Eurozone rather than implement unprecedented austerity? Who supported and opposed the different policy...
Otros Autores: | , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York, NY :
Oxford University Press
2020.
|
Edición: | First edition |
Colección: | Oxford scholarship online.
|
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009720280606719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction: Bad Options and Difficult Choices in the Eurozone Crisis
- Short Primer on the Eurozone Crisis
- Unequal Distribution of Crisis-Resolution Costs
- Bad Options, Difficult Choices
- Argument in Brief
- Plan of the Book
- Putting the Eurozone Crisis in Context: Country-Level Vulnerability Profiles
- Interest Group Vulnerability Profile and Crisis Resolution Preferences
- Crisis Politics
- Conclusion
- 2. Putting the Eurozone Crisis Experience in Perspective
- Argument: Vulnerability Profiles and Crisis Responses
- Weighing Bad Options: The Potential Costs of External and Internal Adjustment
- Relative Costs of Adjustment: Vulnerability Profiles and Policy Responses
- Research Design
- Sample Selection: Identifying Balance-of-Payment Crises
- Operationalization: Vulnerability Profiles
- How is the Euro Crisis Different? Putting the Eurozone Crisis in Context
- 1992 EMS Crisis and the Eurozone Crisis
- 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and the Eurozone Crisis
- Eastern European Responses to the 2008/9 Global Financial Crisis and the Eurozone Crisis
- Crisis Dynamics: Changing Vulnerabilities in the Eurozone Crisis
- Conclusion
- Appendix
- 3. Distributive Conflict and Interest Group Preferences in Deficit Countries
- Interest Groups and Deficit Country Policymaking
- Group-Specific Adjustment Preferences in Eurozone Deficit Countries
- Interest Group Vulnerability to External Adjustment
- Interest Group Vulnerability to Internal Adjustment
- Group-Specific Vulnerability Profiles and Preferred Crisis Resolution Strategies
- Research Design
- Case Selection
- Interest Group Survey: Sampling and Design
- Structure of the Analysis
- Policy-Specific Preferences on Eurozone Crisis Management
- Preferences about Overall Crisis Management Strategies
- External Adjustment Policies
- Internal Adjustment Policies
- Financing Policies
- Vulnerability Profiles and Preferred Eurozone Crisis Management Strategies
- Vulnerability Profiles of Deficit Country Interest Groups
- Vulnerability Profiles and Evaluations of Crisis Strategies
- Choosing Among Bad Options: Preferred Crisis Management Strategies in Trade-Off Situations
- Vulnerability Profiles and Preferred Adjustment Strategies
- Conclusion: From Adjustment Preferences to Adjustment Policies
- Appendix
- 4. Crisis Politics in Deficit Countries
- Ireland in Crisis
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding External Adjustment in Ireland
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Internal Adjustment in Ireland
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Financing in Ireland
- Crisis Politics in Ireland: Conclusion
- Spain in Crisis
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding External Adjustment in Spain
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Internal Adjustment in Spain
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Financing in Spain
- Crisis Politics in Spain: Conclusion
- Greece in Crisis
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding External Adjustment in Greece
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Internal Adjustment in Greece
- Policies and Conflict Lines Surrounding Financing in Greece
- Crisis Politics in Greece: Conclusion
- Conclusion
- Appendix
- 5. Surplus Country Vulnerability to Rebalancing: A Comparative Analysis
- Introduction
- Surplus Country Preferences and National Interests in the Eurozone Crisis
- Vulnerability Profiles
- Concept and Argument
- Weighing Bad Options: Vulnerabilities to External and Internal Adjustment
- Research Design
- Sample Selection: Identifying Surplus Countries during Balance-of-Payments Crises
- Operationalization: Vulnerability Profiles
- Creating the Cost Indexes Using PCA
- Vulnerability Profiles of Surplus Countries in the Eurozone Crisis
- Vulnerability Profiles of Non-Eurozone Surplus Countries during the Eurozone Crisis
- Vulnerability Profiles of Surplus Countries in the 1992/3 EMS Crisis
- Conclusion
- 6. Distributive Conflict and Interest Group Preferences in Surplus Countries
- Domestic Trade-Offs, Vulnerability Profiles, and Adjustment in Surplus Countries
- Research Design: Studying Interest Group Preferences in Surplus Countries
- Policy-Specific Preferences on Eurozone Crisis Management
- External Adjustment Preferences
- Internal Adjustment Preferences
- Financing Preferences
- Material Interests and Policy Preferences
- Policy Salience
- Trade-Offs and Difficult Choices between External Adjustment, Internal Adjustment, and Financing
- Vulnerability Profiles and Preferred Crisis Responses
- Conclusion
- 7. Crisis Politics in Surplus Countries: Caught between Voter Pressure and Interest Group Stalemate
- Voter Preferences about How to Resolve the Eurozone Crisis
- External Adjustment: Surplus Country Voters and a Breakup of the Eurozone
- Internal Adjustment: Public Opinion on Domestic Rebalancing
- Financing: Public Opinion on Financial Transfers to Deficit States
- Diverging Preferences: Public Opinion and Interest Group Preferences in the Euro Crisis
- Voters, Interest Groups, and Eurozone Crisis Politics in Surplus Countries
- Eurozone Crisis Politics in Germany, Austria, and the Netherlands
- Not an Option: External Adjustment
- Vocal Politics of Financing in Surplus Countries
- Context Matters: The Politics of Internal Adjustment
- Germany
- Austria
- Netherlands
- Internal Adjustment in Eurozone Surplus Countries
- Conclusion
- Appendix
- 8. Conclusion
- Three New Perspectives on the Eurozone Crisis
- What's So Special? Analyzing the Eurozone Crisis in a Comparative Perspective
- Examining the Road not Traveled: Policy Alternatives and Trade-Offs
- Looking at Both Sides of the Coin: Crisis Politics in Both Deficit-Debtor and Surplus-Creditor Countries
- Politics of Bad Options in European Crisis Management
- Research Design
- Eurozone Crisis Bargaining between Deficit-Debtor and Surplus-Creditor States
- Policy Implications and Avenues for Future Research
- Appendix.