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Central Bank Independence and the Future of the Euro
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24 October 2019

Over the past decade central banks have taken on new and expanded roles in an attempt to manage the global financial crisis. The European Central Bank (ECB) has been no exception. If anything, because of the incomplete architecture of the euro, the ECB has faced more serious challenges than either the Bank of England or the Federal Reserve. With the onset of the euro crisis, the ECB was forced to take on powers that went well beyond the conventions of standard monetary policy to prevent European Monetary Union from unravelling.
Panicos Demetriades, former Governor of the Central Bank of Cyprus during the country's bailout in 2013, examines the role of the ECB and its adoption of these new powers, which have led to legal and political challenges, high level resignations and the controversial removal of central bankers from their posts without due process. Demetriades argues that at a time when stability and action are needed to secure the future of the euro, the very foundations of the Euro-system are being eroded, namely its ability to act independently. The book provides a lively and insightful account of the processes that can make or break the euro.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Banks & Banking, Political economy
1. Central bank roles: historical context2. Central bank independence in Europe: origins, scope and limits3. Crisis management and legitimacy4. The ECB’s policies during the crisis5. Whatever it takes6. Banking union7. Small countries and why they matter8. Political money laundering9. Can the erosion of central bank independence be reversed?