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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-13-11 09:57 AM
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Krugman: Can Europe Be Saved?

Can Europe Be Saved?

By PAUL KRUGMAN

THERE’S SOMETHING peculiarly apt about the fact that the current European crisis began in Greece. For Europe’s woes have all the aspects of a classical Greek tragedy, in which a man of noble character is undone by the fatal flaw of hubris.

Not long ago Europeans could, with considerable justification, say that the current economic crisis was actually demonstrating the advantages of their economic and social model. Like the United States, Europe suffered a severe slump in the wake of the global financial meltdown; but the human costs of that slump seemed far less in Europe than in America. In much of Europe, rules governing worker firing helped limit job loss, while strong social-welfare programs ensured that even the jobless retained their health care and received a basic income. Europe’s gross domestic product might have fallen as much as ours, but the Europeans weren’t suffering anything like the same amount of misery. And the truth is that they still aren’t.

Yet Europe is in deep crisis — because its proudest achievement, the single currency adopted by most European nations, is now in danger. More than that, it’s looking increasingly like a trap. Ireland, hailed as the Celtic Tiger not so long ago, is now struggling to avoid bankruptcy. Spain, a booming economy until recent years, now has 20 percent unemployment and faces the prospect of years of painful, grinding deflation.

The tragedy of the Euromess is that the creation of the euro was supposed to be the finest moment in a grand and noble undertaking: the generations-long effort to bring peace, democracy and shared prosperity to a once and frequently war-torn continent. But the architects of the euro, caught up in their project’s sweep and romance, chose to ignore the mundane difficulties a shared currency would predictably encounter — to ignore warnings, which were issued right from the beginning, that Europe lacked the institutions needed to make a common currency workable. Instead, they engaged in magical thinking, acting as if the nobility of their mission transcended such concerns.

more

Very long and interesting article, especially the contrast between Ireland and Nevada.

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creon Donating Member (723 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-13-11 10:10 AM
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1. A bridge too far
Europe went a bridge too far.

Europe does not have the political and economic integration necessary for a common currency.

It is not one country; and, it is likely that it never will be.
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Celeborn Skywalker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-13-11 10:33 AM
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2. 20% unemployment in Spain?!
That's insane, I didn't know Spain was going through such hard times. That's worse than places like Michigan in the USA.
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ret5hd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-13-11 12:43 PM
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3. Only worse than what is REPORTED in places like Michigan.
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