[Inhoudsopgave]: Part I Europes Present Condition: A Diagnosis CHAPTER 1 Introduction: From the Challenge of 2015 to the Shock of 2022 CHAPTER 2 Europes 250-Year Project CHAPTER 3 Triumphant Capitalism: Bold Assumptions of an Overconfident Age CHAPTER 4 Europes Confusion and Reorientation Part II Europes Mission: Developing Responsible Capitalism CHAPTER 5 The First Pillar of Renewal: Europes Ideals CHAPTER 6 The Second Pillar of Renewal: Inspiration from Revaluing Europes Story CHAPTER 7 The Third Pillar of Renewal: Ideas about Economics CHAPTER 8 The Fourth Pillar of Renewal: Indicators and the New Art of Measurement CHAPTER 9 The Fifth Pillar of Renewal: Institutions and the Multiactor Approach CHAPTER 10 The Flying Wheel of Responsible Innovation (A): the Makers of a New Economy (Business, Finance, Consumers) CHAPTER 11 The Flying Wheel of Responsible Innovation (B): the Embedders of a New Economy (Government, Nature, Community, Civil Society) CHAPTER 12 The Flying Wheel of Responsible Innovation (C): the Critical Innovators of a New Economy (Media, Research and Education, Imaginative Reflection) Part III Europes New Position: Global Player for the Common Good CHAPTER 13 A New World Order is Emerging CHAPTER 14 Europes Contribution in Tomorrows World CHAPTER 15 In Conclusion: Challenges and Recommendations for a Rejuvenated Europe EPILOGUE: Towards an Economics of Hope[Flaptekst]: Capitalism has gone astray. Today we face ecological exhaustion, persistent inequality, financialization, stress on communities, short-termism, and new power concentrations. An avalanche of new economic thinking and a reorientation of European values show the way toward a different economy. A new perspective is necessary if we want to implement the Sustainable Development Goals and if we consider our planet as Our Common Home, for present and future generations. This book argues that European economies should be the initiators of a global transition toward a sustainable and inclusive world economy. Together, amid severe geopolitical and geoeconomic challenges, they need to develop their own perspective on what a good economy really is, in distinction to Chinese state capitalism and American big business capitalism. Crucially, this requires the rediscovery of key European values, a coherent view on responsible capitalism, and a new self-awareness as a global player for the Common Good in todays and tomorrows world.