Description

Book Synopsis
In this book, former Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis examines the European debt crisis with particular reference to the case of Greece. Greece was the first Eurozone country to face an enormous deficit, which reached 15% of GDP in 2009. As the Greek crisis unfolded, other Eurozone countries displayed identical symptoms, albeit in varying degrees of severity. From a strictly Greek predicament the debt crisis quickly turned into a problem for the European Union as a whole. This first English language translation investigates the causes of this spillover and chronicles the policy responses to combat it. It also discusses Greece''s troubled political economy, the country''s difficulties in adjusting to the demands of its creditors and the vehement social and political reactions to the policy of austerity.The central argument of the book is that the principal cause of the Eurozone''s problems was, and still remains, the indecisiveness of European elites to tackle its underlying deficien

Trade Review

'Costas Simitis has been one of the most pro-European political leaders in Greece. In this book he charts the dramatic story of the Greek crisis. This is a lesson for Europe, particularly to those who want economic growth based on solidarity and employment. This is an important book for all progressive forces within the European Union.'
Massimo D’ Alema, former Prime Minister of Italy

'A must-read book for everybody who is interested in the Euro-crisis and the how to overcome it.'
Guy Verhofstadt, MEP, former Prime Minister of Belgium

-- .

Table of Contents

Preface
Part I: How we arrived at this first Memorandum
1. Was Greece ready for the Euro?
2. New Democracy’s criminal indifference
3. PASOK’s opportunistic optimism
4. Being in denial
5. Ineffective solutions
6. The bitter truth
7. The first Memorandum: a medicine with dangerous side effects
Part II: The Memorandum’s first year of implementation
8. The crisis spreads to the Union
9. Implementing the Memorandum: an obstacle race
10. ‘An all encompassing plan’ to solve the crisis in the Eurozone?
11. ‘An all encompassing plan’ to solve the crisis in Greece?
12. A year of the Memorandum: seeking a new solution
Part III: Debt restructuring and power games
13. Debt restructuring: The decisions of 21st July
14. A dead end
15. More hitches
16. The new solution
17. Political games with unpredictable consequences
Part IV: Coalition government, psi, second Memorandum
18. A flicker of hope
19. Conflicts at the highest European level
20. The new agreement with the Eurozone (Memorandum II), the PSI
21. An evaluation of the Memorandum(s)
22. Austerity and growth: implementing the decisions of 21st February 2012
23. The crisis peaks
Part V: Elections May–June 2012
24. Elections of 6th May: Euro or drachma?
25. Cracks in the Euro
26. The Union at a dead end: change of course on 29th June
27. The elections of 17th June: a new beginning?
28. Provisional solutions. October 2012–June 2013
29. The evaluations of the assistance programme to Greece
30. Cyprus
Part VI: The future of Greece and the European Union
31. The causes of the crisis are not only economic
32. A new European policy is necessary
A. Economic governance
B. Inclusion and participation
Appendix: Key meetings and decisions of the institutions of the European Union relating to the financial crisis
Note. The main Greek political parties
Figure 1: Net borrowing of Greek government and economy (% of GDP)
Figure 2: Greece. Primary expenditure, expenditure, revenue 1988–2014
Abbreviations
Index

The European debt crisis

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    A Hardback by Costas Simitis

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      View other formats and editions of The European debt crisis by Costas Simitis

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 4/30/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719095795, 978-0719095795
      ISBN10: 0719095794

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In this book, former Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis examines the European debt crisis with particular reference to the case of Greece. Greece was the first Eurozone country to face an enormous deficit, which reached 15% of GDP in 2009. As the Greek crisis unfolded, other Eurozone countries displayed identical symptoms, albeit in varying degrees of severity. From a strictly Greek predicament the debt crisis quickly turned into a problem for the European Union as a whole. This first English language translation investigates the causes of this spillover and chronicles the policy responses to combat it. It also discusses Greece''s troubled political economy, the country''s difficulties in adjusting to the demands of its creditors and the vehement social and political reactions to the policy of austerity.The central argument of the book is that the principal cause of the Eurozone''s problems was, and still remains, the indecisiveness of European elites to tackle its underlying deficien

      Trade Review

      'Costas Simitis has been one of the most pro-European political leaders in Greece. In this book he charts the dramatic story of the Greek crisis. This is a lesson for Europe, particularly to those who want economic growth based on solidarity and employment. This is an important book for all progressive forces within the European Union.'
      Massimo D’ Alema, former Prime Minister of Italy

      'A must-read book for everybody who is interested in the Euro-crisis and the how to overcome it.'
      Guy Verhofstadt, MEP, former Prime Minister of Belgium

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Part I: How we arrived at this first Memorandum
      1. Was Greece ready for the Euro?
      2. New Democracy’s criminal indifference
      3. PASOK’s opportunistic optimism
      4. Being in denial
      5. Ineffective solutions
      6. The bitter truth
      7. The first Memorandum: a medicine with dangerous side effects
      Part II: The Memorandum’s first year of implementation
      8. The crisis spreads to the Union
      9. Implementing the Memorandum: an obstacle race
      10. ‘An all encompassing plan’ to solve the crisis in the Eurozone?
      11. ‘An all encompassing plan’ to solve the crisis in Greece?
      12. A year of the Memorandum: seeking a new solution
      Part III: Debt restructuring and power games
      13. Debt restructuring: The decisions of 21st July
      14. A dead end
      15. More hitches
      16. The new solution
      17. Political games with unpredictable consequences
      Part IV: Coalition government, psi, second Memorandum
      18. A flicker of hope
      19. Conflicts at the highest European level
      20. The new agreement with the Eurozone (Memorandum II), the PSI
      21. An evaluation of the Memorandum(s)
      22. Austerity and growth: implementing the decisions of 21st February 2012
      23. The crisis peaks
      Part V: Elections May–June 2012
      24. Elections of 6th May: Euro or drachma?
      25. Cracks in the Euro
      26. The Union at a dead end: change of course on 29th June
      27. The elections of 17th June: a new beginning?
      28. Provisional solutions. October 2012–June 2013
      29. The evaluations of the assistance programme to Greece
      30. Cyprus
      Part VI: The future of Greece and the European Union
      31. The causes of the crisis are not only economic
      32. A new European policy is necessary
      A. Economic governance
      B. Inclusion and participation
      Appendix: Key meetings and decisions of the institutions of the European Union relating to the financial crisis
      Note. The main Greek political parties
      Figure 1: Net borrowing of Greek government and economy (% of GDP)
      Figure 2: Greece. Primary expenditure, expenditure, revenue 1988–2014
      Abbreviations
      Index

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