Crisis Currency: Politics, Policy and the Eurozone
MTA
An advanced analysis of how political dynamics shaped the Eurozone crisis and ongoing monetary governance
2nd Edition
*Crisis Currency: Politics, Policy and the Eurozone* provides a comprehensive political and economic analysis of the Eurozone’s evolution, arguing that the single currency's crises were fundamentally political struggles over power, risk, and sovereignty. The book traces the Eurozone from its origins in the Maastricht Treaty—which established a centralized monetary policy but left fiscal and banking oversight to national governments—to the catastrophic shocks that exposed these design flaws. By examining the divergent economic structures of Northern and Southern Europe, the authors demonstrate how a "one-size-fits-all" monetary policy fueled internal imbalances and "doom loops" between failing banks and indebted states.
The narrative details the specific experiences of nations like Greece, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, and Italy, showing how each crisis was shaped by unique domestic institutional settings and varying "reform capacities." It highlights the critical roles of key actors, including the European Central Bank’s shift toward unconventional policies like "whatever it takes" and Quantitative Easing, and the creation of "firewalls" such as the European Stability Mechanism. Central to the book is the analysis of the political economy of austerity, illustrating how externally imposed fiscal discipline ignited populist movements, deepened social inequality, and created a pervasive democratic deficit as technocratic mandates clashed with national electoral cycles.
The later chapters examine the Eurozone’s capacity to learn and adapt, contrasting the punitive management of the sovereign debt crisis with the more unified, innovative response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The introduction of the Next Generation EU fund is presented as a landmark shift toward fiscal solidarity and common debt issuance, signaling a departure from the "no-bailout" dogma. However, the authors emphasize that the union remains incomplete, with ongoing debates over risk sharing, the missing pillars of a Banking Union, and the need for a more integrated Capital Markets Union.
Ultimately, the book argues that the Eurozone is a "perpetual construction site" rather than a finished product. Future resilience depends on navigating the twin transitions of green energy and digital industrial policy while reconciling the deep-seated cultural and economic differences between member states. The authors conclude that the euro’s survival depends not on the perfection of its rules, but on its political capacity to balance national sovereignty with a shared destiny, evolving from an incomplete union toward a more resilient, transparent, and democratically accountable federation.
Policymakers, scholars, and advanced students of political economy, EU studies, and international finance will benefit from this book's integrated analysis of how political dynamics, institutional design, and social consequences interacted during the Eurozone crisis, offering lessons for future monetary union governance.
April 30, 2026
46,950 words
3 hours 17 minutes
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