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From sick man of Europe to economic superstar: Germany’s resurgence and the lessons for Europe

Dustmann, Chr., Fitzenberger, B., Schönberg, U., Spitz-Oener, Al., “From sick man of Europe to economic superstar: Germany’s resurgence and the lessons for Europe”, www.voxeu.org, 3 Φεβρουαρίου.  In a slow-growth, high-unemployment continent, Germany’s performance stands out. The success is often ascribed to the politically difficult Hartz labour-market reforms. This column discusses evidence to the contrary. The Hartz reforms played no essential role. Rather, the key was the threat of offshoring to …Read More

Cut the Spending, Spare the Poor

Pisani-Ferry, J., (2014), “Cut the Spending, Spare the Poor”, www.project-syndicate.org, 30 Ιανουαρίου. Why do some governments spend more than others? The question is more complicated than it appears, especially in the case of European governments. The answer may look obvious when comparing, say, Denmark (where public spending, excluding interest payments on debt, amounted to 58% of GDP in 2012) and the United States (where the same number was 35%). Extensive …Read More

PADRE: Politically Acceptable Debt Restructuring in the Eurozone

Pâris, P. and Wyplosz, Ch., (2014) “PADRE: Politically Acceptable Debt Restructuring in the Eurozone”, 28 Ιανουαρίου. The average public debt level of Eurozone countries now stands at 95.5% of GDP, and it is much higher in a number of countries. There is a lively debate about whether public debts can be too big and, if so, what the threshold is. At the very least, large public indebtedness is unhelpful, and …Read More

Jobs and Growth: Supporting the European Recovery

Lagarde, Ch.,(2014), “Jobs and Growth: Supporting the European Recovery”, iMF  Direct, 28 Ιανουαρίου. As we begin the new year, Europe confronts both good and bad news. First the good news. Growth is finally picking up in the euro area as it is slowly emerging from the deep recession.  The bad news? Still nearly 20 million people are unemployed. Until the effects on employment have been reversed, we cannot say that …Read More

Is the world recovery really strengthening?

Blanchard, Ο., (2014), “Is the world recovery really strengthening?”,  27 Ιανουαρίου 2014. The global economy seems to be on the mend. In this column, IMF Chief Economist Olivier Blanchard provides a quick overview of the likely developments. The key points are that the recovery is happening as expected, but it remains fragile and uneven across major economies. Normalising monetary policy poses risks for vulnerable emerging markets and deflation is a …Read More

Squaring the Eurozone’s Vicious Circle

Reichlin, L. and Garican, L., (2014), “Squaring the Eurozone’s Vicious Circle”, Project Syndicate, 27 Ιανουαρίου. The eurozone is caught in a diabolical loop, in which weak banking systems harm their sovereigns’ fiscal positions, which in turn compromise the banking system’s stability. But, over the last couple of years, policymakers have focused largely on reducing banks’ impact on their sovereigns – for example, through a Europe-wide supervisory authority and efforts to …Read More

Yes, it’s the economy, stupid, but is it demand or supply?

De Grauwe, P., (2014), “Yes, it’s the economy, stupid, but is it demand or supply?”, Economic Policy, CEPS Commentaries, Centre for European Policy Studies, 24 Ιανουαρίου. The change in policy strategy of François Hollande and his embrace of Say’s law are surprising on another count. As mentioned earlier, supply-side economics together with a rejection of demand management is based on an ideological premise that markets have self-regulating characteristics, and that unemployment will …Read More

Europe Can Be Optimistic—in the Long Term

Nixon, S., (2014), “Europe Can Be Optimistic—in the Long Term”, The Wall Street Journal, 26 Ιανουαρίου. How one thinks about the outlook for Europe depends partly on whether one regards high unemployment, rising inequality and loss of trust as a leading or lagging indicator. Has the European economy undergone a structural shift in which case high unemployment and growing inequality could be harbingers of worsening political instability? Or do today’s …Read More

European merger policy reform

Duso, T.,  Gugler, K. and Szücs, Fl., (2014), “European merger policy reform”, VoxEu, 26 Ιανουαρίου. In 2004, European merger law was substantially revised, with the aim of achieving a ‘more economic approach’ to merger policy. This column discusses a recent empirical assessment of European merger cases before and after the reform. Post-reform, the outcomes of merger cases became more predictable, and the Commission prohibited fewer pro-competitive mergers. While there remains …Read More

A Disillusioned Guide to Spread Reductions

Giuli, M., (2014), “A Disillusioned Guide to Spread Reductions”, Madariaga Paper – Vol. 7, No. 1, Ιανουάριος. The present commentary will focus on the case of Italy, where in January 2014 the spread fell to under 200 points, recording a reduction of 80 points over the previous year. The current differential between Italian and German 10-year sovereign bond yields is back to 2011 levels, when the imminent risk of losing …Read More