Why some countries have fared better than other after the Great Recession
by Aizhan Shorman and Thomas Pastore The European labor market is characterized by a great economical and institutional divergence. On the one hand, there is […]
by Aizhan Shorman and Thomas Pastore The European labor market is characterized by a great economical and institutional divergence. On the one hand, there is […]
By Céline Antonin The spectre of a sovereign debt crisis in Italy is rattling the euro zone. Since Matteo Salvini and Luigi di Maio came […]
By Catherine Mathieu and Henri Sterdyniak The result of the referendum of 23 June 2016 in favour of leaving the European Union has led to a […]
By Christine Rifflart With a deficit of 3.1% of GDP in 2017, Spain has cut its deficit by 1.4 points from 2016 and has been […]
By Bruno Ducoudré, Xavier Timbeau and Sébastien Villemot Current account imbalances are at the heart of the process that led to the crisis in the […]
By Bruno Ducoudré and Pierre Madec In the course of the crisis, most European countries reduced actual working hours to a greater or lesser extent […]
By Eric Heyer In May, inflation in the euro area moved closer to the ECB target. The sharp rise in inflation, from 1.2% to 1.9% […]
By Céline Antonin The question of how disposable income is shared between savings and consumption involves trade-offs that take place at the household level and […]
By Christophe Blot While the momentum for growth has lost steam in some countries – Germany, France and Japan in particular – GDP in the […]
OFCE Analysis and Forecasting Department This text is based on the 2018-2019 outlook for the world economy and the euro zone, a full version of […]
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