This chapter reconstructs the formative decades of European integration from the perspective of three German political economists: the ordoliberals Wilhelm Ropke, Ludwig Erhard, and Alfred Muller-Armack. In their multiple roles of theorists, public intellectuals, and policymakers, the ordoliberals shaped the incipient integration process from the immediate postwar years to the mid-1960s. They outlined two potential trajectories for the European project. While both imply a common market, the "large Switzerland" trajectory stands for political decentralization and non-protectionism, while the "large France" trajectory leads to political centralization and protectionism. The ordoliberals openly preferred the former, especially its emphasis on subsidiarity and federalism. The chapter concludes by identifying a movement toward a "large France" since the mid-1980s and discusses the reformability of today's European Union toward a "large Switzerland. "
CITATION STYLE
Kolev, S. (2021). “Large Switzerland” or “large france”? The ordoliberals and early European integration. In The Liberal Heart of Europe: Essays in Memory of Alberto Giovannini (pp. 47–66). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-60368-7_5
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