That the first mutterings by the German leadership (on a new approach to the Euro crisis) are heard is confirmation that a policy shift is needed.
Maybe it has got its own time to ripe given how complex and multiple major variables are.
Maybe the path to this point had to be travelled first.
The impotence of the EU leadership is such that every effort made so far was effectively too little too late.
Reckless indebtedness in some countries - while stronger ones incentivised, chose to look the other way or both - brought the far-sighted Euro project pegged to closer European integration to its knees.
Making decisions on the brink. Only to find the markets were not impressed and wanted more blood.
The workings of the system being what they are means little option remains other than cowering to it preparing for the worst while hoping for the best(?).
To retake centre stage, to show leadership and vision into the future.
To put good governance across the EU top of the agenda while creating better tools to deal with financial markets.
The time has come for elected governments to act boldly clearly choosing between the vital few and the trivial many.
Regaining the upper hand, the leading role, the initiative to do away with current fragility.
They suffer the triple whammy of long overdue internal adjustment, drastic austerity measures aimed at fiscal consolidation and renewed competition from the global economy.
To top it all their relative loss of competitiveness is compounded by a currency - their currency - hardly ever dented in value by smaller economies.
Sooner rather than later.
Will they?
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