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What Does the 1930s' Experience Tell Us about the Future of the Eurozone?

What Does the 1930s' Experience Tell Us about the Future of the Eurozone?

142/2013 Nicholas Crafts
working papers,economic history
Journal of Common Market Studies
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12145

142/2013 Nicholas Crafts

If the Eurozone follows the precedent of the 1930s, it will not survive. The attractions of escaping from the gold standard then were massive and they point to a strategy of devalue and default for today’s crisis countries. A fully-federal Europe with a banking union and a fiscal union is the best solution to this problem but is politically infeasible. However, it may be possible to underpin the Euro by a ‘Bretton-Woods compromise’ that accepts a retreat from some aspects of deep economic integration since exit entails new risks of financial crisis that were not present eighty years ago.

Economic History

Journal of Common Market Studies

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12145