2017
DOI: 10.1080/13563467.2017.1370444
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Exporting Assets: EMU and the Financial Drivers of European Macroeconomic Imbalances

Abstract: European Economic and Monetary Union has fostered an unstable complementarity in European financial markets between the growth models favoured by European savers (in the northern 'core' of Germany and other exporting states) and its borrowers (in the debt-fuelled and demand-driven eurozone periphery, including countries like Greece and Ireland). In the 2000s, the result of this development was a sharp decrease in real interest rates across the eurozone periphery, leading to rapid but inflationary growth. This … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…As a result, wage coordination (and restraint) is less prominent in these countries, whose fragmented collective bargaining institutions further hinder attempts to deliver the type of incomes policies observed in the export growth models of Northwestern Europe (Johnston 2016). Within the Euro's early years, rising household debt, wage and credit growth, and the robust domestic demand that accompanied it, was further enhanced by a surge in access to foreign borrowing (see Fuller 2017).…”
Section: Capitalist Diversity Within the Eu: A Growth Model Theoreticmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, wage coordination (and restraint) is less prominent in these countries, whose fragmented collective bargaining institutions further hinder attempts to deliver the type of incomes policies observed in the export growth models of Northwestern Europe (Johnston 2016). Within the Euro's early years, rising household debt, wage and credit growth, and the robust domestic demand that accompanied it, was further enhanced by a surge in access to foreign borrowing (see Fuller 2017).…”
Section: Capitalist Diversity Within the Eu: A Growth Model Theoreticmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6 Wages have kept up with productivity relatively well for high value-added jobs in the manufacturing sector, but have failed to keep up even with inflation in the service sector and, partly, in the public sector (Albu et al 2018;Baccaro and Benassi 2017;Baccaro and Pontusson 2016;Di Carlo 2018). To the ex-4 For a discussion of the financial conditions that enable the asymmetric distribution of growth models between European countries, see Fuller (2018). 5…”
Section: Below)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even in the Eurozone, existing data suggest that relatively high inflation in the periphery has led to those countries' exports growing more expensive than exports from lower inflation eurozone economies. Both the current account and financial account-driven narratives of the crisis envision such inflation (Fuller, 2018). Sometimes high inflation rates reflect an increase in exchange market pressure (Barkbu, Eichengreen, and Mody, 2012).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%