Accra Metropolitan University

  • Home
  • Information
  • News
  • Help
  • Librarian
  • Member Area
  • Select Language :
    Arabic Bengali Brazilian Portuguese English Espanol German Indonesian Japanese Malay Persian Russian Thai Turkish Urdu

Search by :

ALL Author Subject ISBN/ISSN Advanced Search

Last search:

{{tmpObj[k].text}}
Image of France and the Politics of European Economic and Monetary Union
Bookmark Share

Economics

France and the Politics of European Economic and Monetary Union

Valerie Caton - Personal Name;


France has been widely acknowledged as the principal driving force behind European economic and monetary union (EMU). Every French president from Georges Pompidou onwards has placed the creation of EMU at the centre of France’s European policy. President François Mitterrand finally clinched the deal when, in December 1991, he secured German Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s agreement at the Maastricht summit to a specific, irreversible timetable for the move to the euro by 1 January 1999.
In my first posting to the British Embassy, Paris, during 1988–92, as First Secretary for Internal Political Affairs, I witnessed the political events around this summit including, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Mitterrand’s increasingly desperate struggle to hold together a domestic consensus behind his agenda for modernising the French economy and integrating Germany into Europe, culminating in a wafer-thin ‘yes’ vote in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty referendum. In 1997, I returned to the Paris Embassy, as Economic and Financial Counsellor, to report on the country’s recovery from the economic impact of German reunification and on the uneasy co-operation between a Gaullist President, Jacques Chirac, and a Socialist Prime Minister, Lionel Jospin, that eventually took France into the single currency in 1999.
At a reception in 1997, soon after I arrived in Paris, the Daily Telegraph correspondent asked me what my job in the Embassy was. When I told him, he looked at me pityingly: ‘What a frightfully dry subject for a woman!’, he observed. In this book, I wanted to show why, to me, it didn’t seem dry at all. On the contrary, it seemed extraordinary that, for example, a decision in 1971 by President Nixon to de-link the US dollar from gold could ripple across the Atlantic and create political crises in Europe; or that a decision to peg one currency to another, or to let it float, could make the difference in how wealth was distributed across a society, or between countries. Yet, such ‘technical’ decisions rarely entered the political domain.


Availability

No copy data

Detail Information
Series Title
France and the Politics of European Economic and Monetary Union
Call Number
-
Publisher
USA : Palgrave Macmillan., 2015
Collation
1-225
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
978–1–137–40916–4
Classification
NONE
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
1st Edtion
Subject(s)
Economics
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
-
Other version/related

No other version available

File Attachment
  • France and the Politics of European Economic and Monetary Union
Comments

You must be logged in to post a comment

Accra Metropolitan University
  • Information
  • Services
  • Librarian
  • Member Area

About Us

Accra Metropolitan University is a forward-thinking, private higher education institution in Ghana dedicated to empowering minds and shaping futures for sustainable global development. Fully accredited by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC), the university is built on the core pillars of LIFE: Leadership, Innovation, Flexibility, and Entrepreneurship.

Search

start it by typing one or more keywords for title, author or subject

Keep SLiMS Alive Want to Contribute?

© 2026 — Senayan Developer Community

Powered by SLiMS
Select the topic you are interested in
  • Computer Science, Information & General Works
  • Philosophy & Psychology
  • Religion
  • Social Sciences
  • Language
  • Pure Science
  • Applied Sciences
  • Art & Recreation
  • Literature
  • History & Geography
Icons made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com
Advanced Search
Where do you want to share?