
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We talk to political economist Helen Thompson about the birth of the Euro and its tortuous recent history. Whose idea was it in the first place and how much of its current troubles were baked into its origins? A story of ambition, intrigue and unintended consequences.
Talking Points:
The euro was the brainchild of the French government, sometime around late 1987.
The French persuaded the rest of the European community to set up a committee to look into monetary union, which was chaired by the former French finance minister.
The Maastricht Treaty was agreed in December 1991—ratification went on for two years.
The general improvement in economic conditions in the mid-1990s allowed the monetary union to proceed.
Before the euro itself got going, there was the convergence of interest rates. Even for states like Italy and Greece, that has been a clear advantage.
If the euro were to end now, it would be because of an implosion not states voluntarily seceding.
There is a recession coming; this will put more pressure on this system.
Further Learning:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By David Runciman and Catherine Carr4.7
622622 ratings
We talk to political economist Helen Thompson about the birth of the Euro and its tortuous recent history. Whose idea was it in the first place and how much of its current troubles were baked into its origins? A story of ambition, intrigue and unintended consequences.
Talking Points:
The euro was the brainchild of the French government, sometime around late 1987.
The French persuaded the rest of the European community to set up a committee to look into monetary union, which was chaired by the former French finance minister.
The Maastricht Treaty was agreed in December 1991—ratification went on for two years.
The general improvement in economic conditions in the mid-1990s allowed the monetary union to proceed.
Before the euro itself got going, there was the convergence of interest rates. Even for states like Italy and Greece, that has been a clear advantage.
If the euro were to end now, it would be because of an implosion not states voluntarily seceding.
There is a recession coming; this will put more pressure on this system.
Further Learning:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

314 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

428 Listeners

141 Listeners

186 Listeners

183 Listeners

75 Listeners

193 Listeners

55 Listeners

481 Listeners

41 Listeners

3,858 Listeners

851 Listeners

347 Listeners

125 Listeners

26 Listeners