Europe's Mixed Crisis Policy: A Step Towards A More Sustainable Future?
Working PaperAuthor
Roland Benedikter - Stanford University
Issued by
Austrian Society for European Politics Vienna, July 20, 2012
Amid growing concerns about the Eurozone woes which outside Europe are widely percieved as the main risk for the global economy of the second half of 2012, the 25th of May 2012 news that Europe’s biggest crisis nation Italy now starts pursuing a new approach by „combining“ „austerity“ with „growth“ politics into a „mixed“ debt crisis management is raising dubious responses by European taxpayers and international policy makers. At least among worried citizens in Continental Europe, but also in Asia and the USA, this course change is seen rather sceptically – in particular by many Europeans who fear that their sacrifices in the framework of existing „austerity“ politics may be vanished by new governmental incentive spending. Will the new „mixed“ approach result to be progress towards a more balanced crisis management – or a confirmation of the insecure outcome of European efforts to convince the markets that problems are tackled in a clear and sustainable way?
Topics: Society | Italy | Western Europe






