Description

Book Synopsis

This book is an essential analysis of what really happens behind closed doors during and after a bailout.

In the last decade, five Eurozone governments in economic difficulty received assistance from international lenders on the condition that certain policies specified in the Memoranda of Understanding were implemented. How did negotiations take place in this context? What room for manoeuvre did the governments of these countries have? After conditionality, to what extent were governments willing and able to roll back changes imposed on them by the international lenders?

This book explores the constraints on national executives in the five bailed out countries of the Eurozone during and beyond the crisis, from 2008 to 2019. The authors argue that despite international market pressure and creditors’ conditionality, governments had some room for manoeuvre during a bailout and were able to advocate, resist, shape or roll back some of the policies demanded by external actors. Under certain circumstances, domestic actors were also able to exploit the constraint of conditionality to their own advantage.

Capitalising on constraint shows that after a bailout programme, governments could use their discretion to revert the measures that brought the greatest benefits at a lower cost. The authors provide a valuable insight into the determinants of bargaining leverage, the importance of credibility, and the limits of conditionality that might inform the design of international and European lending during future crises.



Trade Review

Shortlisted for the UACES Best Book Prize 2022

'Capitalising on Constraint is a perfect example that, when done with rigour, comparative case study research remains as key as compelling in order to address ambitious research questions involving macro processes and cross-national comparison.'
Amandine Crespy, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Political Studies Review

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
1 The politics of conditionality: a theoretical framework
2 Greece
3 Ireland
4 Portugal
5 Spain
6 Cyprus
7 Capitalising on external constraint: six things you should know about Eurozone bailouts

References
Index

Capitalising on Constraint: Bailout Politics in

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    A Hardback by Catherine Moury, Stella Ladi, Daniel Cardoso

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      View other formats and editions of Capitalising on Constraint: Bailout Politics in by Catherine Moury

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 12/10/2021
      ISBN13: 9781526149886, 978-1526149886
      ISBN10: 1526149885

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book is an essential analysis of what really happens behind closed doors during and after a bailout.

      In the last decade, five Eurozone governments in economic difficulty received assistance from international lenders on the condition that certain policies specified in the Memoranda of Understanding were implemented. How did negotiations take place in this context? What room for manoeuvre did the governments of these countries have? After conditionality, to what extent were governments willing and able to roll back changes imposed on them by the international lenders?

      This book explores the constraints on national executives in the five bailed out countries of the Eurozone during and beyond the crisis, from 2008 to 2019. The authors argue that despite international market pressure and creditors’ conditionality, governments had some room for manoeuvre during a bailout and were able to advocate, resist, shape or roll back some of the policies demanded by external actors. Under certain circumstances, domestic actors were also able to exploit the constraint of conditionality to their own advantage.

      Capitalising on constraint shows that after a bailout programme, governments could use their discretion to revert the measures that brought the greatest benefits at a lower cost. The authors provide a valuable insight into the determinants of bargaining leverage, the importance of credibility, and the limits of conditionality that might inform the design of international and European lending during future crises.



      Trade Review

      Shortlisted for the UACES Best Book Prize 2022

      'Capitalising on Constraint is a perfect example that, when done with rigour, comparative case study research remains as key as compelling in order to address ambitious research questions involving macro processes and cross-national comparison.'
      Amandine Crespy, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Political Studies Review

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      1 The politics of conditionality: a theoretical framework
      2 Greece
      3 Ireland
      4 Portugal
      5 Spain
      6 Cyprus
      7 Capitalising on external constraint: six things you should know about Eurozone bailouts

      References
      Index

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