Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Euro error / Jean-Jacques Rosa ; translated under the direction of Andrea Lyn Secara.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: French Publication details: New York : Algora Pub., ©1999.Description: 1 online resource (254 pages) : 1 illustrationContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 1892941147
  • 9781892941145
Uniform titles:
  • Erreur européenne. English
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Euro error.DDC classification:
  • 332.4/94 21
LOC classification:
  • HG925 .R6713 1999eb
Online resources: Summary: Does Europe still have a choice? Do we still have a choice? The Euro was eagerly adopted by governments, the media and sometimes even by European citizens. They promised us less unemployment and more freedom. But the outcome was not so certain. It was high time for an economist, independent minded and free from special interests, to sound the alarm. Jean-Jacques Rosa denounces the creation of the European single currency as the most serious error made since the deflationist policy of the 1920s, which turned the 1929 stock market crash into a decade of tragedy. In coming to this judgement, Jean-Jacques Rosa applies logic, the truths of everyday existence, human experience and statistical proof. Isn't the Euro, then, really just the political desire to melt the European nations into one state? But wouldn't the right size for today's nations be infinitely more modest? Starting with the formation of the common market at the end of the 1950s, intended to restore the free exchange of goods, services, men and capital after the wave of protectionism and isolationism of the depression years and the war, the European leadership elites have gone on to erecting a plan for a monetary -- and thus a political -- Europe, that of a very great State and a single State. Otherwise, they suggest, we will be relegated to decline and impotence and finally to obliteration. Not to want Europe unified, statist and monetarist would be not to want Europe, as if the latter could admit only that one definition, only that one design. A typical example of politically correct thinking. Against the trend of intellectual conformity, the timidity of the elites and the knee-jerk approbation of Franco-German integration, Jean-Jacques Rosa, often polemical, suggests it's time we exited from this impasse -- from our European error. This book was originally published by Editions Grasset and Fasquelle in 1998. It is translated from French by Andrea Secara.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
eBook eBook e-Library EBSCO Business Available
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-252).

Print version record.

Does Europe still have a choice? Do we still have a choice? The Euro was eagerly adopted by governments, the media and sometimes even by European citizens. They promised us less unemployment and more freedom. But the outcome was not so certain. It was high time for an economist, independent minded and free from special interests, to sound the alarm. Jean-Jacques Rosa denounces the creation of the European single currency as the most serious error made since the deflationist policy of the 1920s, which turned the 1929 stock market crash into a decade of tragedy. In coming to this judgement, Jean-Jacques Rosa applies logic, the truths of everyday existence, human experience and statistical proof. Isn't the Euro, then, really just the political desire to melt the European nations into one state? But wouldn't the right size for today's nations be infinitely more modest? Starting with the formation of the common market at the end of the 1950s, intended to restore the free exchange of goods, services, men and capital after the wave of protectionism and isolationism of the depression years and the war, the European leadership elites have gone on to erecting a plan for a monetary -- and thus a political -- Europe, that of a very great State and a single State. Otherwise, they suggest, we will be relegated to decline and impotence and finally to obliteration. Not to want Europe unified, statist and monetarist would be not to want Europe, as if the latter could admit only that one definition, only that one design. A typical example of politically correct thinking. Against the trend of intellectual conformity, the timidity of the elites and the knee-jerk approbation of Franco-German integration, Jean-Jacques Rosa, often polemical, suggests it's time we exited from this impasse -- from our European error. This book was originally published by Editions Grasset and Fasquelle in 1998. It is translated from French by Andrea Secara.

Added to collection customer.56279.3

Powered by Koha