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In: The Per Jacobsson lecture
In: Rizzoli osservatorio
World Affairs Online
In: EBSCOhost eBook Collection
History and analysis of European monetary integration and related economic, financial, monetary, and international political issues: an accesible guide.This history and analysis of the euro and the European Central Bank traces the process of European monetary integration from its beginnings as a utopian vision in the aftermath of World War II through the establishment of a single currency managed by a central bank. Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, a central banker who has been involved in the making of European monetary unification since 1979, offers an accessible guide to the euro and the European Central Bank for scholars, students, and the general reader, discussing the related economic, financial, monetary, and international political issues. In the process he also provides an overview of central banking in general and the multiple activities of a central bank; as the case of the European Central Bank illustrates, central banking involves not only monetary analysis and policy but much else, including banknote printing and handling, market operations, payment systems, bank supervision, and coordinating with other public institutions.Padoa-Schioppa begins with the historical background of European monetary integration, starting with the 1957 Treaty of Rome, which lay the foundation for the Common Market, and covering the 1992 Maastricht Treaty, the development of an anchor currency, and the "euroskepticism" of the U.K. Subsequent chapters are devoted to economic policy, monetary policy, the euro as unifier in the financial system, the payment system, the euro as an international actor outside "euroland," and the challenges ahead for the still relatively young project of European monetary integration
In: European Essay 28
In: Enlightening the debate on good governance
This European Essay is based on a lecture given to the David Hume Institute in Edinburgh in 2000. Its arguments and insights go to the heart of the current British debate on our country's role in the European Union. Particularly striking is the writer's claim that the European Union, far from being the grave-digger of the nation state, is in fact its saviour. This is in the strictest sense an authentically federalist argument.
In: Contemporanea 125
In: Diskussionspapier 1