European Economic Integration
4.0
creditsAverage Course Rating
Reviews the role of economic forces in the process of deeper European Economic Integration (EEI). The course will offer arguments to substantiate future policy making with an adequate conceptual background, placing each topic into the historical context of the last 70 years. The core of the course is devoted to the main areas of EEI: trade, agriculture, money and finance, industry, services, regional development and welfare, with special attention to the changes brought about by the 1992 Single Market, the 1999 Single Currency and the 2004-07 enlargement. The empirical analysis is framed within economists’ theoretical frameworks on customs unions, economic convergence and polarization, the impact of technological innovations on labor markets and management styles, growing inequalities and welfare systems, and the impact of international political instability on migration flows. Special reference is made to the implications of Brexit and the consequences of war in Ukraine.
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