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In this book leading financial professionals and academics examine the prospects for the European single currency. The impact of the Euro is assessed in terms of risks and opportunities for financial intermediaries, challenges for monetary and supervisory authorities and issues for portfolio management and corporate finance. eBook available with sample pages: 020346236X
In this book leading financial professionals and academics examine
the prospects for the European single currency. The impact of the
Euro is assessed in terms of risks and opportunities for financial
intermediaries, challenges for monetary and supervisory authorities
and issues for portfolio management and corporate finance.
The accession of ten new members to the European Union on May 1st
2004 was among the most significant developments in the history of
European integration. Based upon studies conducted by the European
Forecasting Network, this 2006 book analysed key aspects of the
impact of this enlargement with reference to eight of the ten new
Member States, namely the Central and Eastern European countries
(CEECs). It demonstrated that the enlargement had the potential to
create profound consequences for both the new Member States and the
pre-accession members of the Union, given the unparalleled
magnitude of the enlargement, the fact that the CEECs had levels of
prosperity and economic development well below the Union average,
and their history of participation in centrally planned regimes.
The contributions examined regional policy, the debate about
accession to the EMU, the macroeconomic trajectories of the Central
and Eastern European economies and their likely development.
The accession of ten new members to the European Union on May 1st
2004 was among the most significant developments in the history of
European integration. Based upon studies conducted by the European
Forecasting Network, this 2006 book analysed key aspects of the
impact of this enlargement with reference to eight of the ten new
Member States, namely the Central and Eastern European countries
(CEECs). It demonstrated that the enlargement had the potential to
create profound consequences for both the new Member States and the
pre-accession members of the Union, given the unparalleled
magnitude of the enlargement, the fact that the CEECs had levels of
prosperity and economic development well below the Union average,
and their history of participation in centrally planned regimes.
The contributions examined regional policy, the debate about
accession to the EMU, the macroeconomic trajectories of the Central
and Eastern European economies and their likely development.
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