Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780815704874 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

The Global Debt Crisis

Haunting U.S. and European Federalism
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
Debt crises have placed strains not only on the European Union's nascent federal system but also on the federal system in the United States. Old confrontations over fiscal responsibility are being renewed, often in a more virulent form, in places as far flung as Detroit, Michigan, and Valencia, Spain, to say nothing of Greece and Cyprus. Increasing the complexity of the issue has been public sector collective bargaining, now a component of most federal systems. The attendant political controversies have become the debate of a generation. Paul Peterson and Daniel Nadler have assembled experts from both sides of the Atlantic to break down the structural flaws in federal systems of government that have led to economic and political turmoil. Proposed solutions offer ways to preserve and restore vibrant federal systems that meet the needs of communities struggling for survival in an increasingly unified global economy. Contributors: Andrew G. Biggs (American Enterprise Institute); Cesar Colino (National Distance Education University, Madrid, Spain); Eloisa del Pino (Instituto de Politicas y Bienes Publicos, Madrid, Spain); Henrik Enderlein (Hertie School of Governance, Berlin, Germany); Cory Koedel (University of Missouri, USA); Carlos Xabel Lastra-Anadon (Harvard University, USA); Daniel Nadler (Harvard University, USA); Shawn Ni (University of Missouri, USA); Amy Nugent (Government of Ontario, Canada); James Pearce (Mowat Centre, University of Toronto, Canada); Paul E. Peterson (Harvard University, USA); Michael Podgursky (University of Missouri, USA); Jason Richwine (Washington, D.C. USA); Jonathan Rodden (Stanford University, USA); Daniel Shoag (Harvard University, USA); Richard Simeon (University of Toronto, Canada); Camillo von Muller (University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, and Leuphana University, Germany); Daniel Ziblatt (Harvard University, USA)
Paul E. Peterson is the Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Government and director of the Program on Education Policy and Governance at Harvard University and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. His many books include The Price of Federalism (Brookings). Daniel Nadler is a visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve and a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University.
" The Global Debt Crisis is a brilliant advance on the central peril of modern democracy.Peterson and Nadler and their colleagues show, in lucid detail, that the American andEuropean debt crises grew from within our federal systems of layered sovereignty andthat the way out requires strengthening, not weakening, our federal structures. Readerswill learn how federalism and financial markets can fortify democratic accountability atevery level and how centralizing debt can jeopardize both solvency and democracy. Thisis first-rate scholarship with political punch." Christopher DeMuth, former president of the American Enterprise Institute
Google Preview content