Economic Ideas and Political Action in Shaping Economic and Monetary Union: Pierre Werner and Luxembourg

peer reviewed ; The international financial centre in Luxembourg grew considerably in the 1960s, driven by proactive government policy, flexible regulation, a willingness to harness external opportunities and the establishment of Community institutions and European funding institutions in the country. As Luxembourg was in a currency union with Belgium within the Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union and did not have its own Central Bank, these developments were all the more meaningful. When the European integration process experienced a series of major crises – including the failure of the Europea... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Danescu, Elena
Dokumenttyp: conference paper
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Verlag/Hrsg.: De Gruyter
Schlagwörter: Economic and Monetary Union / Luxembourg in European integration history / European single currency / Financial integration / Luxembourg international financial centre / Pierre Werner / The Werner Report / The Werner Committee / European institutions / Belgian-Luxembourg Economic Union / Benelux / Interdisciplinarity / Archival sources / Oral history / European integration history / Law / criminology & political science / Political science / public administration & international relations / Business & economic sciences / Macroeconomics & monetary economics / International economics / General economics & history of economic thought / Finance / Arts & humanities / History / Droit / criminologie & sciences politiques / Sciences politiques / administration publique & relations internationales / Sciences économiques & de gestion / Macroéconomie & économie monétaire / Economie internationale / Economie générale & histoire de la pensée économique / Arts & sciences humaines / Histoire
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27134020
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/51154

peer reviewed ; The international financial centre in Luxembourg grew considerably in the 1960s, driven by proactive government policy, flexible regulation, a willingness to harness external opportunities and the establishment of Community institutions and European funding institutions in the country. As Luxembourg was in a currency union with Belgium within the Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union and did not have its own Central Bank, these developments were all the more meaningful. When the European integration process experienced a series of major crises – including the failure of the European Defence Community and European Political Community in 1954, the empty chair crisis in 1966 and General de Gaulle’s veto on British accession in 1962 and 1967 –, Luxembourg set out on the path of European monetary integration, under the impetus of Finance Minister and Prime Minister Pierre Werner. In October 1970, the Werner Report provided a detailed blueprint for Economic and Monetary Union and laid the foundations for the euro. The Luxembourg financial centre would serve as a “laboratory” for the future single currency. This paper makes extensive use of relevant European and international archives and original interviews, adopting an interdisciplinary approach to analyse Luxembourg’s leading role in reconciling different views on EMU and fostering political commitment to a European currency among the Member States.