Publication

Nov 2010

Roger Ailes, a former advisor to Ronald Reagan, recalls in his book an intriguing practice of the ancient Romans: when they finished building a bridge or an arch, they enforced accountability by placing the engineer in charge beneath the construction when the scaffolding was removed. If the edifice did not hold, he was the first to know. We do not follow such drastic practices these days in Europe, but with some European economies shaking and the Greek sovereign debt crisis still not over, the architecture of the euro area has certainly come under severe stress. Unfortunately, the 28-29 October 2010 European Council Summit has not made this architecture much safer.

Download English (PDF, 4 pages, 160 KB)
Author Christian Fahrholz, Cezary Wójcik
Series CEPS Policy Briefs
Issue 217
Publisher Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
Copyright © 2010 Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
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