mike777, on 2015-July-18, 00:00, said:
As many point out the purpose of the Euro was to prevent another France vs Germany war.
Now they expect Greeks to pay the price of peace.
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As Y66 pointed out in his posts, Europe needs a kindly old sugar daddy.
A sugar daddy that will demand and expect a few favors now and then but not that many as he is older and kinder.
In return Europe gets a Daddy.
The point of the European Union (not of the Euro) was to create a peaceful Europe. The Euro was sort of forced upon Germany as a demand for unification. At the time, especially in Britain, there was a lot of distrust in Germany, which is shown in the fact that Germany was forced to sign a document that it would recognize the Oder-Neiße border to Poland. I mean what kind of treaty is that? If someone like Hitler comes to power again, sure he'll say: "OK let's bring back Alsace back but for Pomerania I have this treaty here saying my eastern border is at the Oder". I doubt it.
Anyway for me as a Dutchman I would probably have supported the German reunion on the premises that if the most powerful country suddenly needs to incorporate a technically bankrupt and economically messed-up country (which was the case in East-Germany) that's fine. And in fact it did cost about a trillion Euro already and still the East is economically behind. Also no one is or should be complaining about this reunification, since it was the right way to go. There would have been no way to fix former East Germany to where it is now if it had remained an independent country.
When the Euro started, in fact it was the "north" that was most sceptical about the Euro, I mean not having to exchange currency when going on holiday is nice, but in the "north" we had nice stable currencies and were happy with them. Why risk pulling in some weaker candidates like Spain and Italy?
On the other hand, the "south" saw the Euro as great opportunity, and in the short term it helped them as they now had a currency much more trusted than Peseta or Lire. It was so attractive, that Greece (which didn't qualify) hired Goldman & Sachs to make it look like they did meet the targets. Also many European politicians thought it would be strategically helpful to have Greece in.
Then the Euro came, and the "south" was happy, and the "north" was sceptical. And rightly so. The "south" had all reason to be happy, since they could now lend money cheaply with a trusted currency. In the "north", not much changed except that we didn't have to exchange money anymore. In fact people remained sceptical as the perceived inflation increased. This is a psychological effect since people still perform the exchange in their head and their reference price remains stuck in the last century.
And now suddenly Germany is the bad guy, although it really was the rest of Europe who were worried about too much German dominance and wanted to reduce this with the Euro.