The long-running saga in the Eurozone appears finally headed towards a change of approach.
It took a new French President to push for that change.
Nobody knows what form or shape the final fix for the Euro will take but important points are now being discussed in broad daylight. This is no minor milestone in a currency union whose construction was left grossly unfinished. It would always be both hard and challenging building it to completion.
The Economist has raised all the right points.
I would, however, wish to highlight that simple question on the interest rate differential between Spain and Germany.
Two States sharing the same currency cannot forever face such disparate financial terms.
Which therefore puts the focus sharply on the best path available aimed at closing a widened gap for the unacceptable consequences it produces.
It would seem to me that the stage is nearly set for major evolution (or something else) to occur within the Eurozone.
It has been suggested that the critical make or break point is now reached whichever way the currency (dis)union is looked at.
______________________________
In reply to a reader who argued that Spain and Germany could have such diverging borrowing costs as a result of interest rates reflecting premium risk on their sovereigns.
Why not?
The point you make is exactly the presupposition on which the Eurozone has worked since inception with the known outcomes.
An incomplete currency union without every relevant tool in place to back it up has created the atrocious disparities now seen.
Ultimately the EU-European Union might evolve in the direction of a USE as suggested by you. That will have been the vision of the EEC/EU's founding fathers and many European believers over many years.
I don't see that happening anytime soon either.
The 17 Eurozone nations have already pooled significant chunks of their sovereignty. The major task now is to find a midway compromise that makes the common currency work towards prosperity in the real economy across all countries using it.
As it is we may agree that it has done/is doing the opposite even after issues to do with good government/governance are discarded.
A complex balancing act it is but one that can no longer be put back.
It took a new French President to push for that change.
Nobody knows what form or shape the final fix for the Euro will take but important points are now being discussed in broad daylight. This is no minor milestone in a currency union whose construction was left grossly unfinished. It would always be both hard and challenging building it to completion.
Two States sharing the same currency cannot forever face such disparate financial terms.
Which therefore puts the focus sharply on the best path available aimed at closing a widened gap for the unacceptable consequences it produces.
It has been suggested that the critical make or break point is now reached whichever way the currency (dis)union is looked at.
In reply to a reader who argued that Spain and Germany could have such diverging borrowing costs as a result of interest rates reflecting premium risk on their sovereigns.