sábado, 20 de fevereiro de 2010
On reading 'A Grimm tale of euro-integration' from The Economist
The boosters, the bashers and the follow-the-early-facts analysts such as The Economist will reach different verdicts on the Euro's predicament.
I still firmly believe, despite current scepticism rooted in the very original edifice of the single-currency, that it is a formidable mostly successful pan-European endeavour.The people who worked tirelessly on it over many years will have been aware and will have weighed the strengths and weaknesses of the project as it was getting hammered out.There is no denying that at the time of its coming together it was politically driven by the higher goal of an ever closer European integration.
A single-currency being one step further in that direction.
Indeed a bold visionary move whereby participating countries gave up their national currency - surrendering one sovereignty tool - in exchange for a common currency that would be strong and stable backed by a newly founded institution - the European Central Bank - to manage monetary policy.
National governments would have to fulfil the very reasonable set of criteria agreed on at Maastricht.
Importantly those very reasonable set of numbers would remain compulsory targets for the years ahead.
Each country would therefore still exercise substantial sovereignty and have full control over its budget, economy and finances.
A fiscal union was not an issue because it was thought such a stage was too far-fetched - then as it still is today - without greater political union.
I can't imagine how it could be implemented within the current workings of national governments.
This is a trying time for the Euro, a terrible aftershock of the American led financial meltdown that knocked off Europe's economies especially hard causing fiscal deficits to skyrocket.
Yet, I do believe Greece was on course to produce damage to the single-currency anytime irrespective of the international slump.
Despite all the talking going around I wish and remain hopeful that Greece will sort itself out unaided.
If worst came to worst, however, then more than a serious re-think of the fundamentals of the Euro and the pillars on which it stands - as presuppositions - becomes inevitable.
I still firmly believe, despite current scepticism rooted in the very original edifice of the single-currency, that it is a formidable mostly successful pan-European endeavour.The people who worked tirelessly on it over many years will have been aware and will have weighed the strengths and weaknesses of the project as it was getting hammered out.There is no denying that at the time of its coming together it was politically driven by the higher goal of an ever closer European integration.
A single-currency being one step further in that direction.
Indeed a bold visionary move whereby participating countries gave up their national currency - surrendering one sovereignty tool - in exchange for a common currency that would be strong and stable backed by a newly founded institution - the European Central Bank - to manage monetary policy.
National governments would have to fulfil the very reasonable set of criteria agreed on at Maastricht.
Importantly those very reasonable set of numbers would remain compulsory targets for the years ahead.
Each country would therefore still exercise substantial sovereignty and have full control over its budget, economy and finances.
A fiscal union was not an issue because it was thought such a stage was too far-fetched - then as it still is today - without greater political union.
I can't imagine how it could be implemented within the current workings of national governments.
This is a trying time for the Euro, a terrible aftershock of the American led financial meltdown that knocked off Europe's economies especially hard causing fiscal deficits to skyrocket.
Yet, I do believe Greece was on course to produce damage to the single-currency anytime irrespective of the international slump.
Despite all the talking going around I wish and remain hopeful that Greece will sort itself out unaided.
If worst came to worst, however, then more than a serious re-think of the fundamentals of the Euro and the pillars on which it stands - as presuppositions - becomes inevitable.
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