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The management of the Eurozone in crisis times: Actors, institutions and the case of bailout packages
Author(s) -
Michel Goyer,
Miguel Glatzer,
Rocío Valdivielso del Real
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european journal of industrial relations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.251
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1461-7129
pISSN - 0959-6801
DOI - 10.1177/09596801211011355
Subject(s) - bailout , austerity , devaluation , european debt crisis , economics , decentralization , liberalization , historical institutionalism , collective bargaining , international economics , economic system , business , financial crisis , economic policy , european integration , market economy , european union , exchange rate , political science , macroeconomics , politics , law
The adjustment to the financial crisis was particularly brutal for Eurozone countries targeted by private bondholders. Financial assistance through the newly created Eurozone governance system was conditional on the implementation of austerity measures and the introduction of structural reforms in industrial relations (decentralization of collective bargaining and liberalization of employment protection). Our analysis focuses on the formation process and the structural features of Eurozone supranational institutions. Building from the insights of actor-centred institutionalism, we illustrate the importance of coalitions among some, but not all, important actors based on the overlapping of their non-monolithic preferences in the process of institutional innovation. The structural features of Eurozone institutions curtailed member states’ ability to effectively resist the imposition of internal devaluation policies. A contested outcome, these institutional features were secured by a specific coalition of important actors – most notably, the German government and the European Central Bank – based on their overlapping interests around internal devaluation policies.

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