The German Constitutional called today on the ECB to justify its bond-buying program. What does today's ruling of the German Constitutional Court mean for the ECB's QE program? Could such a decision open a precedent when it comes to contesting EU law? Today, Giuseppe Porcaro and Guntram Wolff are joined by Franz Mayer, chair of Public Law at the University of Belefield, to analyse the German Constitutional Court's ruling. By: The Sound of Economics Date: May 5, 2020 Topic: European Macroeconomics & Governance
Topics:
The Sound of Economics considers the following as important: European Central Bank (ECB), European Court of Justice, European Macroeconomics & Governance, podcast, podcasts
This could be interesting, too:
The Sound of Economics writes Where did the vaccine strategy go wrong?
The Sound of Economics writes Green transformation: a Polish perspective
André Sapir writes The double irony of the new UK-EU trade relationship
Grégory Claeys, Mia Hoffmann and Guntram B. Wolff writes Corporate insolvencies during COVID-19: keeping calm before the storm
The German Constitutional called today on the ECB to justify its bond-buying program. What does today's ruling of the German Constitutional Court mean for the ECB's QE program? Could such a decision open a precedent when it comes to contesting EU law? Today, Giuseppe Porcaro and Guntram Wolff are joined by Franz Mayer, chair of Public Law at the University of Belefield, to analyse the German Constitutional Court's ruling.