Missed our webinar "Strategic Autonomy and Europe’s Shattered Single Market"?
Watch the recording of this very ins… https://t.co/nH5hFNUzbV"Something needs to change and as a start that has to be the EU and US being more open to discussing their actions… https://t.co/LXupWACIUBSince Russia's invasion of Ukraine, not all EU member states have been able to reduce trade with Russia; in fact so… https://t.co/ccBiIz12VCRT David Henig 🇺🇦 aka @DavidHenig@mastodonapp.uk @DavidHenigUK: Delighted to say my new paper "Building a Mature UK Trade Policy" is finally published.
Answering the question, wh… https://t.co/xYSbM4LTbn🧐Want to conduct empirical research on #DigitalTrade?
Browse the digital trade integration #dti database that is… https://t.co/Hw0uIlCJIM
Expectations were low as European leaders gathered in Brussels on Thursday last week for yet another summit to deal with an escalation of the crisis. But on Friday morning markets rushed on the news that Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, had climbed down from previous positions and agreed to sweeping changes in Eurozone crisis policy to help Spain and Italy. Even the connoisseurs of Eurozone crisis politics were taken by surprise. So, was this summit the much-wanted turning point in the crisis, with leaders finally doing the right thing after having exhausted all the alternatives?No