No, this isn’t Europe’s ‘Hamiltonian moment’ Mark Copelovitch - May 27, 2020 It’s a reminder that a covid-19 recovery fund won’t solve the euro zone’s deeper problems
How international organizations are stepping up to respond to the pandemic Stephanie Hofmann and Christian Kreuder-Sonnen - May 4, 2020 When governments put their nations first, coronavirus cooperation falls short
Party members in Europe may not actually vote for their candidates. Here’s what’s going on. Jonathan Polk and Ann-Kristin Kölln - October 12, 2017 [caption id="attachment_64761" align="aligncenter" width="960"] Workers remove an election poster of
The E.U.’s financial rules should have stopped the euro crisis. Why didn’t they? Nicole Baerg and Mark Hallerberg - May 4, 2016 [caption id="attachment_26642" align="aligncenter" width="908"] The Euro sculptures in front of
How Greece's credit went south - July 20, 2015 [caption id="attachment_27319" align="aligncenter" width="908"] Pensioner talk with a bank employee
How Greece’s credit went south Julia Gray - July 20, 2015 [caption id="attachment_27319" align="aligncenter" width="908"] Pensioner talk with a bank employee
“One of the Fingers on the Button Will be German”: German Economic Preferences over EU Institutions and the Irish Economic Crisis Henry Farrell - January 21, 2011 Most of the contributions to this seminar begin with Germany's
Discovering the Limits of Ordnungspolitik - January 21, 2011 As the Euro crisis deepened, the German government's crisis management
Not Just a German Problem: Lessons from the EMU Sovereign Debt Crisis for Global Adjustment Matthias Matthijs - January 19, 2011 _The German question never dies. Instead, like a flu virus,