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ECB (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   141369


Analysing the Greek crisis / Gadkari, Nitin   Article
Gadkari, Nitin Article
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Key Words EU  IMF  GDP  Greek Crisis  Greek Economy  ECB 
Greek Debt Crisis  Intra - Regional Economic Alliances  Rousfeti 
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2
ID:   114066


European monetary system and the fiscal crisis: the ideology, institution and the policy / Kumar, Saurabh   Journal Article
Kumar, Saurabh Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The episode of fiscal crisis in the Euro zone has now become a recurrent theme of debate and has attracted a range of experiences regarding the nature of fiscal turmoil, its causes and effects, which vary widely across individual countries. The confidence in the European monetary system has been confounded with the European fiscal turmoil. The phases of its revival and by what method it will recoil, and at what velocity, are unanswered questions. At the centre of the European monetary system is the European Central Bank (ECB) which shapes and conducts a vigorous and complex set of policies and institutional arrangements that represent the image of neoliberal economic ideology. The debate over the European monetary system's architecture has significant ideological, economic and political implications. This article approaches the debate by assessing the monetary policy strategy and in particular the organisational structure of the ECB, and what role they play in the conduct of economic and monetary course of action in the Euro zone.
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3
ID:   139035


Leaving Europe: British process, Greek event / Jones , Erik   Article
Jones , Erik Article
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Summary/Abstract Two of the great risks facing the European economy are the exit of Greece from the single currency and the exit – or distancing – of the United Kingdom from the European Union (EU) It is easy to think of these threats as similar, even if only because they have similarly catchy names (‘Grexit’ and ‘Brexit’) for use in popular debate. But King’s College London professor Anand Menon reminded me recently that they are actually very different. His point was that British exit from the EU would be a long, difficult and conflictual process. My argument here is that any Greek exit from the euro would centre on a short, punctuated event.
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