After the Crisis reassesses the twin projects of structural reform and European integration in the wake of the Great Recession and the European Sovereign Debt Crisis. The book surveys the state of the structural-reform agenda, its successes, failures, and priorities for further action. It also focuses on the fiscal-policy response to the crisis and advocates a greater balance between supply-side reforms and demand-side management. The book examines the cyclical behavior of output and financial indicators, as well as the counter-cyclical role of macro-financial policies, both at the national and the European level. It also studies changes in Europeans' attitudes, demographic challenges facing Europe, and the challenge of inequality and geographical income clustering for further integration.