segunda-feira, 29 de março de 2010
TEc "The myth of the periphery" On the divide inside the Eurozone
A very realistic assessment of the divide within the European Union at large, limited to Euroland here.
Absolutely a worthwhile read that brings under sharp focus the historical/social contexts.
This partly explains partner countries sharing a single currency presenting such different approaches and results to economic policy.
There does need to be a broadened consensus on fundamentals though.
Or it might be said pessimistically that the Euro is doomed at some point down the line.
Poor accounting or outright fudging, massaging or cheating is simply unnacceptable whether you share a currency or not.This is down to good or bad governance.
If Greece were not in the Eurozone to still use the drachma what then would its current situation be like?
Conversely, would it have afforded or allowed itself to move in this direction in the first place?
The answers to both questions are plain and clear.
Sharing the Euro has meant its domestic long-standing issues have become to a degree those of others as well.This is exactly where the line must be drawn for each and every member country to understand and commit fully.
True the Euro project was born out of a desire to deepen European integration from a monetary union as much as from a political union perspective.Yet the laws of economics and finance are straightforward enough not making much room for reckless government indefinitely.
This is why I consider Greece's case a peculiar one for the wrong reasons.
Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy or non-Euro-member UK have overlapping problems too.
None, however, would like to be confounded with Greece for the striking differences that brought each to their current status.
As for the North-South divide - I don't think it is quite like that - there is one doubtless, unlikely to disappear anytime soon.
Acknowledging it would be a first step to reinvent the European ideal as dreamt by the EEC's founding fathers.
That will take political drive that is not forthcoming under present economic conditions and challenges facing each of the EU's core countries.
Absolutely a worthwhile read that brings under sharp focus the historical/social contexts.
This partly explains partner countries sharing a single currency presenting such different approaches and results to economic policy.
There does need to be a broadened consensus on fundamentals though.
Or it might be said pessimistically that the Euro is doomed at some point down the line.
Poor accounting or outright fudging, massaging or cheating is simply unnacceptable whether you share a currency or not.This is down to good or bad governance.
If Greece were not in the Eurozone to still use the drachma what then would its current situation be like?
Conversely, would it have afforded or allowed itself to move in this direction in the first place?
The answers to both questions are plain and clear.
Sharing the Euro has meant its domestic long-standing issues have become to a degree those of others as well.This is exactly where the line must be drawn for each and every member country to understand and commit fully.
True the Euro project was born out of a desire to deepen European integration from a monetary union as much as from a political union perspective.Yet the laws of economics and finance are straightforward enough not making much room for reckless government indefinitely.
This is why I consider Greece's case a peculiar one for the wrong reasons.
Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy or non-Euro-member UK have overlapping problems too.
None, however, would like to be confounded with Greece for the striking differences that brought each to their current status.
As for the North-South divide - I don't think it is quite like that - there is one doubtless, unlikely to disappear anytime soon.
Acknowledging it would be a first step to reinvent the European ideal as dreamt by the EEC's founding fathers.
That will take political drive that is not forthcoming under present economic conditions and challenges facing each of the EU's core countries.
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