What I was trying to suggest is that in a full currency union such as exists in the UK and USA no poor region or state could effectively be allowed to go bankrupt - it would be bailed out. Yet the eurozone is not set up like that - transfers of funds to bail out poor states are not supposed to be permitted, hence the tortuous procedures involving the IMF needed to tide the indebted countries over each successive crisis (with the rich countries grumbling bitterly about each tranche of aid and imposing harsh measures on the recipients).
The Farce Goes On
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the criteria for membership of the Euro stipulated controls on inflation, a fixed exchange rate (obviously) and various other economic indicators that had to be met.
Very basic economics suggests that if you control certain criteria, then as economies move at varying speeds, something else must give.
That something else is basically unemployment.In the poorer countries. As we have seen, a very big price to pay.
Incidentally, why could we not run the euro as a shadow currency...for everyday use?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Indeed aeolium
but that doesn't really explain the almost frenzied opposition to the simple idea of sharing a currency (not necessarily physical either !) amongst people with whom one does business. There was a nominal currency that the EU used before the Euro but i've forgotten what it was called ? I was involved in a pan European music project funded by the EU that had to have it's budgets all translated into this , which was (for the administrators) a total nightmare as everything was constantly moving about.
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There was a nominal currency that the EU used before the Euro but i've forgotten what it was called ?
The thing would work if they had a fiscal union with tax and spending centrally controlled, and an understanding that richer countries would need to make periodic transfers to poorer countries (for which they would demand central oversight of national budgets). But think of the rancour and the mud-slinging that would be stirred up - sovereignty is the sticking point.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by aeolium View PostWhat I was trying to suggest is that in a full currency union such as exists in the UK and USA no poor region or state could effectively be allowed to go bankrupt - it would be bailed out. Yet the eurozone is not set up like that - transfers of funds to bail out poor states are not supposed to be permitted, hence the tortuous procedures involving the IMF needed to tide the indebted countries over each successive crisis (with the rich countries grumbling bitterly about each tranche of aid and imposing harsh measures on the recipients).
The problem is not the Euro, it is simply that it is currently still only half-baked.
That's why some of us want it to be properly cooked ... ideally by way of a fully Federal Europe!
PS ... I see you got in first about fiscal union!!!
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Originally posted by aeolium View Postsovereignty is the sticking point.
but IS it really ?
after all we have privatised our public space (you try walking across Trafalgar square with a microphone in a windshield and headphones on and see how quickly you get pounced on for "illegally recording" on private land)
and given vast sums to unelected banks to spend on bonuses instead of lending to businesses
i'm not sure that we have a great amount of "sovereignty" anyway anymore as the world is run by big concerns that have little regard for any of that
or is it (as I suspect) some kind of knee jerk reaction to having the same coins as the Germans ? (et al)
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but IS it really ?
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Thinking on the hoof here...and I have very deep reservations about the EU project....however I agree with MrGG that non governmental powers like the banks are running everything.As small individual nations there is unlikely to be much we can do to change this situation, not least since in the UK for instance, all the major parties do whatever big money wants them to.
So perhaps, just perhaps, thing getting steadily worse in the EU might be the catalyst for some concerted international effort to break the power of the banks/arms dealer/power companies/drugs companies and other assorted tax avoiders.
Get someone with the will to fight these interests from the centre of Europe and good change might come.
But I'm not holding my breath, because institutions always turn those who participate into insiders.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThinking on the hoof here...and I have very deep reservations about the EU project....however I agree with MrGG that non governmental powers like the banks are running everything.As small individual nations there is unlikely to be much we can do to change this situation, not least since in the UK for instance, all the major parties do whatever big money wants them to.
So perhaps, just perhaps, thing getting steadily worse in the EU might be the catalyst for some concerted international effort to break the power of the banks/arms dealer/power companies/drugs companies and other assorted tax avoiders.
Get someone with the will to fight these interests from the centre of Europe and good change might come.
But I'm not holding my breath, because institutions always turn those who participate into insiders.
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Thanks for the link Aeolium.
Scary. Of course, the question about who really benefits from all of this. Real people are having their assets stripped, their hard won rights ripped up, and as ever, the people are being set against each other, in the interests of the avaricious few.
Who kmows, perhaps the EU will be the vehicle for a stop to be put to this devastation. but it won't be under the current leaders I guess.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Once socialism is ruled out of any agenda by the commentariat, this will be what you get - as the late Prof Hobsbawm rightly (in this connection) predicted in what was politically a grievously slanted radio discussion I made a point of taping for posterity, about 20 years ago, titled, "What's the Big Idea? End of the Socialist Dream".
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOnce socialism is ruled out of any agenda by the commentariat, this will be what you get - as the late Prof Hobsbawm rightly (in this connection) predicted in what was politically a grievously slanted radio discussion I made a point of taping for posterity, about 20 years ago, titled, "What's the Big Idea? End of the Socialist Dream".
Did you get to the Demo OK, S_A? How did it go?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postexcellent point.
Did you get to the Demo OK, S_A? How did it go?
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