Hegemony Without Stability: The fiscal and political vulnerabilities of monetary union. ACES Cases No. 2011.2


Autoria(s): Schelkle, Waltraud; Mabbett, Deborah
Contribuinte(s)

Silvia, Stephen J.

Data(s)

2011

Resumo

The crisis has forced the Euro area to establish an emergency fund that supports member states experiencing a sovereign debt crisis. The difficulties of coming up with such a fund for Greece and other Euro area members stands in marked contrast to the balance of payments support that non-Euro members like Hungary received, swiftly and quietly. In order to solve this puzzle, we first establish the difference between EU interventions and IMF programs and, second, trace the evolution of crisis management with France and Germany in the lead. The lens of hegemonic stability theory suggests that the Franco-German leadership is too weak to provide stability and the extensive use of conditionality is one symptom of this weakness. Providing incentives for cooperation "after hegemony" (Keohane) is the unresolved issues troubling the monetary union. Its dominant powers must acknowledge that markets perceive monetary union to be already politically more integrated than its lack of fiscal integration suggests.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/59172/1/ACES_Case_Schelkle_and_Mabbett_2011.pdf

Schelkle, Waltraud and Mabbett, Deborah (2011) Hegemony Without Stability: The fiscal and political vulnerabilities of monetary union. ACES Cases No. 2011.2. UNSPECIFIED.

Relação

http://aei.pitt.edu/59172/

Palavras-Chave #France #Germany #Greece #Hungary #EMU/EMS/euro
Tipo

Other

NonPeerReviewed