Originally posted by BobTheCrate
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Reply to: So has the Euro been saved?
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Previously on "So has the Euro been saved?"
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The Euro most certainly has not been saved.
Irrespective of its short term perils, in the mid to long term there is one fundamental reason why the Euro will fail.
No matter how close political convergence, now matter how well fiscal policies are aligned, (and each of those will attract much strife) there's just no getting away from the fact that the better performing north European economies are forced to operate the same exchange rate as the poorer south European economies. The social costs of the south European nations being consistantly paid for by the taxes of the better performing economies (mostly Germany, lesser extent France). In other words the German economy in particular, becomes grotesquely under-valued, and the weaker economies become grotesquely over-valued. And I stress that word 'grotesquely'.
And that put simply just aint sustainable - something will snap, including German tax payer patience.
How will it resolve itself ? By the Eurozone either becoming much, much smaller, or its planned ditching.
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So has the Euro been saved?
Beeb
The deal still has to be agreed by a number of national parliaments, and the reaction of the financial markets suggests it has failed to bring a swift end to the euro crisis.
The BBC's Rob Cameron in Prague said: "Commentators here have taken a more cautious - and arguably more accurate - view, reflecting the fact that the Czechs haven't signed up to anything yet."
The current French presidential front-runner, Socialist Francois Hollande, said on Monday that if he was elected next May he would renegotiate the accord, saying: "This accord is not the right answer."
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Originally posted by zeitghostOh, yes.
And buy some guns & baked beans whilst they're still available.
One can't be too careful.
I'm off to halfords to buy all of their jerry cans and fill with asda petrol, and then Lidl to buy cheap immitation spam for trading, and then real spam for eating.
Think I may get one of those steel doors to replace the front door. One with a sliding hatch at the top for trading and poking your 12 bore shotgun out of
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I saved quite a lot of euros, not just the one. Then some bankers lost them, correction, pissed them up against the wall, snorted cocaine through them, bought themselves Ferraris and then said they'd lost them.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostThe summit doesn't really seem to have tackled the excessive debt, forced austerity leading to civil unrest and economic depression, Greek default etc.
Complacent politicians may find out that while "everyone in Europe speaks German", the markets speak English.
There have been some worrying headlines from the central bankers recently which are almost running in a different and possibly independent timeline to the politicians.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostThe summit doesn't really seem to have tackled the excessive debt, forced austerity leading to civil unrest and economic depression, Greek default etc.
Complacent politicians may find out that while "everyone in Europe speaks German", the markets speak English.
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Originally posted by doodab View PostI thought you were in favour of reducing the size of the public sector?
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What makes it worse is that even the minor EU states outside of the Euro are having to bail out economies that have a much better standard of living than them
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostThe Euro has not been saved - but the UK has been appointed official receiver for when it fails.
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostThe Euro has not been saved - but the UK has been appointed official scapegoat for when it fails.
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The Euro has not been saved - but the UK has been appointed official scapegoat for when it fails.
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