Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Rotten Heart of Europe: The Dirty War for Europe's Money

Rate this book
The European Exchange Rate Mechanism has affected all our lives. Monetary union, the ERM's offspring, would affect us even more. The Rotten Heart of Europe, exposes the doubletalk surrounding the efforts of politicians, bankers and bureaucrats to force Europe into a crippling monetary straitjacket. Hidden agendas are laid bare, skulduggery exposed and economic fallacies are skewered in a devastating account of the confidence trick played on Europe by the would-be 'monetary masters of the world'.
Bernard Connolly could hardly have been better placed to write the inside story of the dirty war for Europe's money. For years he has been at the heart of the ERM, as head of the Commission unit responsible for monitoring and servicing the system. Respected by academics, officials and financial market players for his economic expertise and his straight talking, he writes with a deep commitment to restoring the right of the peoples of Europe to order their own affairs. It is this commitment which makes his portrait of the sinister motives and back-to-front reasoning of many Euro-propagandists so powerful and convincing.
The Rotten Heart of Europe is written with a sureness of economic understanding and a depth of political insight that make the arcane world of European monetary politics accessible. It is a dark story leavened with humour and informed with passion - a passion to tell the true story of a mechanism as politically damaging as it is economically perverse, and of the march to Monetary Union that, the author argues, 'is a threat not only to our prosperity but also to our liberties and, ultimately, to our peace'. No one who wants to understand how Britain has been taken for a ride by the proponents of federalism, and why Europe is economically underperforming and politically imploding, can afford to miss this enthralling and disturbing book.

Hardcover

First published September 21, 1995

47 people are currently reading
266 people want to read

About the author

Bernard Connolly

6 books5 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
35 (29%)
4 stars
39 (32%)
3 stars
32 (26%)
2 stars
7 (5%)
1 star
6 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Owlseyes .
1,805 reviews306 followers
Want to read
March 22, 2017




https://soundcloud.com/theeconomist/t...

"Words of a Euro Doomsayer Have New Resonance"
in:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/18/bus...




7th September 2015.

UPDATES

Today’s elections in Holland make this book mandatory; so attention on the affirmations of the head of Turkey:
"Erdogan reportedly said during a press conference on Tuesday: ‘We know the Dutch from the Srebrenica blood bath. We know how their perverse their character has become through the mass murder of 8,000 Bosnians there.’"

in: http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives...


"Uma vitória de Wilders seria equivalente ao terramoto de 1755 em Lisboa"
["A Wilders victory would be the equivalent to the 1755, Lisbon quake"].
Writer Rentes de Carvalho, 86 years old, living in Holland it's been 60 years.
I'LL BE BACK.
15th March 2017

As for the results, Wilders is up, yet not shaking Holland,
16th March 2017

“You can’t spend all the money on drinks and women and then ask for help."
EUROGROUP head Jeroen Dijsselbloem.
in: http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/7...

Comment: poor men of Southern Europe...
22nd March 2017
Profile Image for Arturo.
58 reviews50 followers
September 13, 2016
I have struggled to assign a 'rating' to this book. On one side, you can see the book is really well written and researched. The author clearly has 'insider' knowledge, not surprising as he worked for the EC until he was dismissed allegedly when his ideas where clearly too radically in opposition to the main current converging towards monetary union. A dismissal which if you believe the author was clearly unfair and disgraceful in the way it was handled. Apart from this, given when the book was written (mid 90's) it is clear the author knows what he is talking about - the proof is in how many of his forecasts where spot on, and clearly recognizable way after the book was published in 1995. The author portrays very well how non-sensical was to enter into fixed exchange currency rates and how economics and national interests were always second role against the political ambitions of the different players, mainly the German Government, the Bundesbank, the French Government and the 'Enarques' (the most senior French technocrats). He illustrates the idea very well:

"In understanding the collapse of the ERM, however, what is important is that to subordinate domestic (that is, national) economic considerations to national foreign policy goals almost always corresponds to subordinating the preferences of the population at large to those of a political élite, and can never be unconditional, except – possibly – in the most ruthlessly efficient totalitarian state."

The text is in some points hilarious as he illustrates very vividly the main shortcomings of the different characters. But here is when one becomes a bit skeptical. One things the author maybe is too biased, he is a devoted fan of the late Lady Thatcher by the way, and one is never sure if his illustrations and the narration of the facts are too influenced by his political values. The demonisation of the French socialists (even if one would like to believe) and the ridiculisation of others detracts a bit of credibility. The characters seem too flat in these instances. He does however paint more nuanced pictures of others. All this, even if the author's values and political leanings resonate with my own ideas, make me hesitant about how much truth the narrative contains.

I will still recommend the book to anyone interested in the developments leading to the monetary union and in the tensions leading into it, but as I'm saying always keeping a critical eye. Another criticism is that the author doesn't succeed in addressing the lay reader - you will need some economics / finance / monetary basis to understand a big part of the book. And one might argue that the author never portrayed to address the book to everyone but I would say that why then does he every now and then go into explaining concepts which are really simple without doing the same for much more complex situations.

I will finish with a golden but ominous nugget situated towards the end of the book:

"In EMU, those market signals (interest rates and exchange rates) would not be able to operate. Instead, the strain would have to be taken by employment, wages, migration, budgetary transfers among member countries and unsustainable fiscal expansion."
3 reviews1 follower
December 9, 2020
A very reasonable explanation as to why I voted for BREXIT and why the rest of the country should do the same. The deep state in the US is one thing far removed, the machinations of the deep state in Europe is too close for anyone to be comfortable with. The bare fact that Europe has had a civil war every 50-100 years since the Romans ditched us says it all (thanks to Mrs. Grant, my O'level history teacher for that info). That Connolly was sacked for his whistle blowing on its own makes this a "must read" Adam. Love the front cover pic...literally "pissing on Europe".
1 review
February 14, 2021
An essential account of European political and monetary history

For anyone too young to have lived through the formation of the ERM personally (those under the age of 50), this is a thrilling first-hand account of how the European Union as we know it came to be. The author’s identification of the system’s disregard for economic logic and the problems that it would ultimately create have been proven stunningly accurate by the march of history. This should be required reading for all in public office in the United Kingdom.
3 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2018
A very interesting analysis of the real story that is the EU. Far from being a cushy little club, it is in fact a mechanism for the French and Germans to manipulate and gain advantage from the faux institution they have designed for their own benefit.

Sadly the ideal in the long run, is not a bad one, but the means to get there is corrupt and deceitful. Well worth a read whether you agree or disagree with the author's perspective
Profile Image for Chris McRobbie.
52 reviews
October 30, 2023
two take aways:
1) if a sovereign wants to manipulate or alter the value of its currency relative to another sovereign, it does so by adjusting short term interest rates. the world economy is based on (fake) paper money, which is essentially the issuance of debt and the market value of debt. JP Morgan went to Congress and said “gold is money, everything else is credit” true. recommend next to read David Graeber’s book about debt.
2) “Europe is France and Germany, the rest is just trimmings.” true as it has been since the founding of the Holy Roman Empire in the 9th century. contemporary control of the EU and ECB are shared between german and french aristocracy; despite the fact they advertise to the plebs that they’re socialist. a continual hypocritical joke to maintain inherited and/or earned control of the region.
8 reviews
Want to read
June 3, 2016
ordering it now. Anyone who gets fired after telling the truth on the inner workings is worth the read. Ordering it now and looking forward to the read.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.