To mark the 50th anniversary of its foundation, the EIB has published an academic history of the Bank: The Bank of the European Union. The EIB, 1958-2008. The tasks of designing, researching and drafting this reference work were entrusted to a group of experts on European integration from a number of EU universities.
A summary, table of contents and introduction to the authors of this elegant 386-page book can be found below.
The book is available in English, French or German for the price of EUR 25 (plus postage).
Please click on the following link to order a copy: www.ic.lu/EIB_50years
Summary
The history of the European Investment Bank cannot be dissociated from that of the European project itself or from the stages in its implementation. First broached during the inter-war period, the idea of an institution for the financing of major infrastructure in Europe resurfaced in 1949 at the time of reconstruction and the Marshall Plan, when Maurice Petsche proposed the creation of a European investment bank to the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation.
The creation of the Bank was finalised during the negotiations which preceded the signing of the Treaty of Rome establishing the European Economic Community. As well as contributing to the financing of projects of common interest, it also met the concerns of those who feared that the common market would accentuate imbalances in regional development or hasten the decline of certain industries. The Bank would thus mobilise capital to promote the cohesion of the European area and modernise the economy. These initial objectives have not been abandoned.
However, today’s EIB is very different from that which started operating in 1958. The Europe of Six has become that of Twenty-Seven; the individual national economies have given way to the ‘single market’; there has been continuous technological progress, whether in industry or financial services; and the concerns of European citizens have changed.
This work is thus a history book. It follows the successive enlargements of the European Union as well as the changes in the economic and political environment. It endeavours to understand how the EIB has set its course over half a century of upheavals whilst remaining true to plans of its founders.
Introduction of the authors
This book was co-edited by:
with contributions from:
Table of Contents
Introduction
The EIB – a key player in the European project
Part One
The birth of an institution: from a European investment fund to the European Investment Bank
Part Two
The Period of ’Little Europe’, 1958-1972
Part Four
Enlargement, growth and redeployment since mid-1980s
Partie Five
The identity of an institution
Appendices
Sources and works
Tables and Indexes
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