Ruling Europe : the politics of the Stability and Growth Pact

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Ruling Europe : the politics of the Stability and Growth Pact

Martin Heipertz and Amy Verdun

Cambridge University Press, 2011

  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 296-310

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) is central to Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) in Europe. Initiated by Germany in 1995 and adopted in 1997, it regulates the fiscal policies of European Union Member States. Following numerous violations of its deficit reference value, the Pact's Excessive Deficit Procedure was suspended in 2003. The decision to suspend was brought before the European Court of Justice in 2004 and the SGP then underwent painstaking reform in 2005. After a period of economic prosperity and falling budgetary deficits, the global economic crisis put the system under renewed stress. Ruling Europe presents a comprehensive analysis of the political history of the SGP as the cornerstone of EMU. It examines the SGP through different theoretical lenses, offering a fascinating study of European integration and institutional design. One cannot understand the Euro without first understanding the SGP.

Table of Contents

  • Foreword Jean-Claude Juncke
  • 1. The politics of the Stability and Growth Pact
  • Part I: 2. States, intergovernmentalism and negotiating the SGP
  • 3. Opening the box: a domestic politics approach to the SGP
  • 4. The functional logic behind the SGP
  • 5. The role of experts and ideas
  • Part II: 6. Implementation of the SGP in good and in bad times
  • 7. From bad times to crisis
  • 8. The SGP before the European Court of Justice
  • 9. The SGP in times of financial turbulence and economic crisis
  • 10. Conclusion: the past, present and future of the SGP and implications for European integration theory
  • Appendix.

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