Beyond austerity : reforming the Greek economy / edited by Costas Meghir, Christopher A. Pissarides, Dimitri Vayanos and Nikolaos Vettas.
2017
HB3807.5 .B49 2017
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Details
Title
Beyond austerity : reforming the Greek economy / edited by Costas Meghir, Christopher A. Pissarides, Dimitri Vayanos and Nikolaos Vettas.
ISBN
9780262339216 (electronic bk.)
0262339218 (electronic bk.)
9780262035835
0262035839
0262339218 (electronic bk.)
9780262035835
0262035839
Published
Cambridge : MIT Press Ltd., [2017]
Copyright
©2017
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (x, 720 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
HB3807.5 .B49 2017
Dewey Decimal Classification
330.9495
Summary
More than eight years after the global financial crisis began, the economy of Greece shows little sign of recovery, and its position in the eurozone seems tenuous. Between 2008 and 2014, incomes in Greece shrank by more than 25 percent, homes lost more than a third of their value, and the unemployment rate reached 27 percent. Most articles on Greece in the media focus on the effects of austerity, repayment of its debt, and its future in the eurozone. In 'Beyond Austerity: Reforming the Greek Economy', leading Greek economists from institutions both within and outside Greece, take a broader and deeper view of the Greek crisis, examining the pathologies that made Greece vulnerable to the crisis and the implications for the entire eurozone. Each chapter takes on a specific policy area, examining it in terms of Greece's economic reality and offering possible directions for policy. The topics range from macroeconomic issues to markets and their regulation to finance to the public sector.0Individual chapters address the costs and benefits of participation in the eurozone, Greece's international competitiveness, taxation, pensions, the labor market, privatization, product markets, finance, education, healthcare, corruption, the justice system, and public administration. The contributors argue that Greek institutions require a deep overhaul rather than quick fixes to enable long-term growth and prosperity.
Note
More than eight years after the global financial crisis began, the economy of Greece shows little sign of recovery, and its position in the eurozone seems tenuous. Between 2008 and 2014, incomes in Greece shrank by more than 25 percent, homes lost more than a third of their value, and the unemployment rate reached 27 percent. Most articles on Greece in the media focus on the effects of austerity, repayment of its debt, and its future in the eurozone. In 'Beyond Austerity: Reforming the Greek Economy', leading Greek economists from institutions both within and outside Greece, take a broader and deeper view of the Greek crisis, examining the pathologies that made Greece vulnerable to the crisis and the implications for the entire eurozone. Each chapter takes on a specific policy area, examining it in terms of Greece's economic reality and offering possible directions for policy. The topics range from macroeconomic issues to markets and their regulation to finance to the public sector.0Individual chapters address the costs and benefits of participation in the eurozone, Greece's international competitiveness, taxation, pensions, the labor market, privatization, product markets, finance, education, healthcare, corruption, the justice system, and public administration. The contributors argue that Greek institutions require a deep overhaul rather than quick fixes to enable long-term growth and prosperity.
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