2012
Restructuring the social agenda: economic, social and fiscal preconditions
Publication
Publication
Summary
Introduction
The crisis which began in 2007 and deepened dramatically in 2008 has exposed deep rifts in the architecture
of the European monetary union. Harsh austerity policies which were first imposed on
countries in Eastern Europe, and subsequently on the countries in the euro area periphery, are now
beginning to be implemented in countries of the European core. The crisis is highlighting the deeply
undemocratic construction of the EU, as the Commission assumes ever greater powers to control
national budgets, without any serious oversight by the European Parliament. At the same time, the
position of the core countries of the North, and in particular Germany, has been strengthened in
relation to the countries of the periphery. But Germany’s economy, which has depended on stagnant
wages and a rising export surplus, cannot be a model for the whole EU. In the face of global climate
change, the EU’s approach to the Rio+20 conference in July 2012 contributed to its failure to reach
any serious agreement.
Additional Metadata | |
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hdl.handle.net/1765/50901 | |
ISS Staff Group 4: Rural Development, Environment and Population | |
Organisation | International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University (ISS) |
Meskoub, M., & Leaman, J. (2012). Restructuring the social agenda: economic, social and fiscal preconditions. In EuroMemorandum 2013. The deepening crisis in the European Union: The need for a fundamental change (pp. 1–45). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/50901 |