domingo, 14 de fevereiro de 2010
The EU as I see it, posted on to The Economist's Rompuying along
The EU is going through a particularly rough patch as measured by any yardstick.
All problems and trends have been made worse by the severe economic slump that forced itself by contagion via the American invented financial crunch.
It is as if the Union's weak links came under the spotlight overnight, European leaders either caught napping or unable to charter a new course.Or both.
The 2000 Lisbon agenda set out overambitious general goals that would have been hard to achieve even under the best of circumstances.If anything, its utter failure should help the EU get real about real issues faced by a bloc that constantly calls for nurturing and strengthening from within.
Who ever thought European integration would be easy?
It was a decade of multiple challenges in a fast changing world pecking order.Up-until-recently second or third players have risen both in prominence and impact on Europe's social model.
It cannot be denied that the short-medium to long term implications have hardly been evaluated as if there was little to nothing that could be done.
President Obama's snub sends out a clear signal that the US is changing foreign relations focus according to their interests while showing displeasure for European unwillingness to readily commit militarily when requested to do so by America.
In a different light it also conveys American impatience with the EU's grand summit routines long on words but often short on realistic delivery.
The Eurozone is now experiencieng its toughest test to date, one that is stretching the 16-member club to breaking point.
Somehow I find it would be ironic if that point were reached due to Greek failings, of all nation/States.Not because it would surprise but mainly because it is Greece in spite of the Greeks.
There are underlying weaknesses to the European way and some of those have been stated in this article.
The EU has until 2014 - a 5-year period - to show that it can pull itself together and remain a major world power.
Such power will only rest secure if built upon a strong economy, the sum total of the bloc's large, medium and small economies.
All problems and trends have been made worse by the severe economic slump that forced itself by contagion via the American invented financial crunch.
It is as if the Union's weak links came under the spotlight overnight, European leaders either caught napping or unable to charter a new course.Or both.
The 2000 Lisbon agenda set out overambitious general goals that would have been hard to achieve even under the best of circumstances.If anything, its utter failure should help the EU get real about real issues faced by a bloc that constantly calls for nurturing and strengthening from within.
Who ever thought European integration would be easy?
It was a decade of multiple challenges in a fast changing world pecking order.Up-until-recently second or third players have risen both in prominence and impact on Europe's social model.
It cannot be denied that the short-medium to long term implications have hardly been evaluated as if there was little to nothing that could be done.
President Obama's snub sends out a clear signal that the US is changing foreign relations focus according to their interests while showing displeasure for European unwillingness to readily commit militarily when requested to do so by America.
In a different light it also conveys American impatience with the EU's grand summit routines long on words but often short on realistic delivery.
The Eurozone is now experiencieng its toughest test to date, one that is stretching the 16-member club to breaking point.
Somehow I find it would be ironic if that point were reached due to Greek failings, of all nation/States.Not because it would surprise but mainly because it is Greece in spite of the Greeks.
There are underlying weaknesses to the European way and some of those have been stated in this article.
The EU has until 2014 - a 5-year period - to show that it can pull itself together and remain a major world power.
Such power will only rest secure if built upon a strong economy, the sum total of the bloc's large, medium and small economies.
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