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This book revisits the economic relationship that ties the UK andIreland to the United States in the aftermath of the greatest economic crisisof the past fifty years.
2 Turning the Telescope Around: The Anglo-American 'Special' Economic Relationship in the 'Post-American' World.-
3 Irish-US Economic Relations: End of an Era of a Promising Future?.-
4 American Investment in Ireland: Strategies, Incentives and Perspectives.-
5 The Role of Finance in US-UK Relations Today and Its Global Influence.-
6 Albion's Global Reach: British Influences on US and EU Financial Regulation in the 1980s and the Era of the 'Great Recession'.-
7 British and American Monetary Policies Convergence: Structural Coincidence of Transatlantic Mutual Influence?.-
8 The US and UK (1970-2010): Ordinary Trading Partners?.-
9 Transatlantic Service Trade and Investment: Dynamics of and Challenges to the 'Special Relationship' in the 21st Century.-
10 Irish-Owned Exporting Companies: Looking East, Looking South but Still Going West.
Anne
Groutel is an associate
professor at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University (France) where she teaches
English applied to economics, business and management. Her publications
include: “Whither the State? The Recent Evolution of the Role of the State in
Ireland”, Irish Studies in
Europe Series, (2012) and “Engaging the Irish Diaspora in Ireland’s
Economic Development: a Double-edged Sword?”, Irish
Studies in Europe Series, (2014).
Marie-Christine
Pauwels is an associate
professor of American Studies in the Foreign Languages Department of the
University of Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense (France). She has written several
books on American culture and society including, The Civilization of the United
States (regularly updated)
and The American Dream (1997).
Valérie
Peyronel is a professor
of Anglo-Irish Studies at Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3 University (France) and
has been the director of CERVEPAS (Centre d’Étude et de Recherche sur la Vie
Économique des Pays Anglophones) since October 2012. She has published and
co-edited several works on these issues, including La crise financière et les
économies du monde Anglophone (2010)
and “Crisis: what crisis?”, Etudes
irlandaises, Autumn issue
(2015).
This book revisits the economic relationship that ties the UK and
Ireland to the United States in the aftermath of the greatest economic crisis
of the past fifty years. When
considering recent developments to these economic links, it appears that
oppositional forces are at work. On one hand, globalization and the rise of new
economic powers may undermine the ties. Besides, Ireland’s and the UK’s European
Union membership could also loosen their economic ties with the US. Conversely,
the future Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership agreement may well
strengthen trade and investment links between the US and Europe.
Are the economic bonds between the US, the UK and Ireland waning, as
some pundits purport? Or are those claims overstated? Could their economic
relationship simply be going through a process of change? Although there may
not be a single and straightforward answer to these questions, the authors seek
to address these issues and provide insight into the changing dynamics of this
historic economic relationship.