The United States of Europe European Union and the Euro Revolution

The United States of Europe considers the post-WWII transition of Europe from a diverse and disparate continent to the economically integrated European Union of today. Initiated by the Benelux Customs Union, and later the European Coal and Steel Cooperation, the six-member European Economic Communit...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Dutta, Manoranjan.
Format: eBook
Language: English
Published: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2012.
Edition: Rev. ed.
Series: Contributions to economic analysis ; v. 292.
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ISBN: 9781780523156
Physical Description: 1 online zdroj (xxxvi, 274 p.) : ill.

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Summary: The United States of Europe considers the post-WWII transition of Europe from a diverse and disparate continent to the economically integrated European Union of today. Initiated by the Benelux Customs Union, and later the European Coal and Steel Cooperation, the six-member European Economic Community was formed in 1957, becoming the EC in 1967, and finally the EU in 1992. This process of Europeanization reached its zenith in 1987 with the approval of the Single European act, creating a single market economy. This was followed in 1993 by the Maastricht Treaty, defining the intra-EU macro- and micro-economic parameters. The inauguration of a single common currency, the euro, on 1st January 1999 was a further innovative step, a process that has enabled the EU-27 to enjoy a competitive share of the world GDP and trade.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
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ISBN: 9781780523156
ISSN: 0573-8555 ;
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