An interesting article on the breakup of Europe

| No Comments
There is a term in engineering called "scope creep". You have a basic design for a nice project and then, people start asking for things to be added. Just a little change, it won't make that much difference... After a short time, the project is now unmanageable and never ships. Same thing happened when the European Union formed and now they are suffering for it. From Bloomberg:
Euro Breakup Talk Increases as Germany Loses Proxy
Romano Prodi recalls how he persuaded Germany to allow debt-swamped Italy into the euro: support our membership and we�ll buy your milk, he said.

When Prodi toured Germany�s agricultural heartland after becoming Italian leader in 1996, he pitched �a big milk pipeline from Bavaria,� pointing to a three-year, 40 percent plunge in the Italian lira that was hurting dairy sales. �To have Italy outside the euro, a huge quantity of exports from Germany would have been endangered,� Prodi, now 70, said.

Germany got the message, allowing entry rules to be bent to create a 16-nation market for its exporters. Now, German taxpayers are footing the bill for that permissiveness as Europe bails out divergent economies lashed to a single currency with little control over national taxes and spending.

The consequences are an 860 billion-euro ($1 trillion) bill for a debt binge led by Greece, sagging confidence in the European Central Bank�s independence and mounting speculation that a currency designed to last forever might break apart.

�You have the great problem of a potential disintegration of the euro,� former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, 82, said yesterday in London. �The essential element of discipline in economic policy and in fiscal policy that was hoped for� has �so far not been rewarded in some countries.�
The money quote (literally):
What was conceived as a club for Europe�s strongest economies was expanded for political reasons, leaving the currency union with minimal powers to police deficit spending and no safety net for dealing with countries, like Greece, that veer toward default.

�There was no discussion of that at all, of a crisis mechanism,� said Niels Thygesen, a retired Copenhagen University economics professor who served on the 1989 group led by European Commission President Jacques Delors that mapped out the path to the euro. �It was believed that if countries adhered more or less to prudent budgetary policies, that would not or could not happen.�
The original project -- simplifying trade between Europe's primary nations by creating a common marketplace and a common currency. The scope creep -- a number of nations whose fiscal policies were unsound wanted to ride the coattails of the EU thinking somehow that the EU's stability would somehow magically transfer to them. Now, instead, it is these nations that are dragging the economies of the EU down and bringing them into an unstable condition. Greece is in the news, Spain and Portugal aren't far away and France's clock is ticking. Like an addict, any money given to them is wasted -- they may preach reform but they will not practice it. Serious reformation needs to happen before anything will change -- conservative fiscal policies, lower taxes, smaller government. These have worked very well in the past and will continue to work if they are implemented.

Leave a comment

October 2022

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          

Environment and Climate
AccuWeather
Cliff Mass Weather Blog
Climate Depot
Ice Age Now
ICECAP
Jennifer Marohasy
Solar Cycle 24
Space Weather
Watts Up With That?


Science and Medicine
Junk Science
Life in the Fast Lane
Luboš Motl
Medgadget
Next Big Future
PhysOrg.com


Geek Stuff
Ars Technica
Boing Boing
Don Lancaster's Guru's Lair
Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories
FAIL Blog
Hack a Day
Kevin Kelly - Cool Tools
Neatorama
Slashdot: News for nerds
The Register
The Daily WTF


Comics
Achewood
The Argyle Sweater
Chip Bok
Broadside Cartoons
Day by Day
Dilbert
Medium Large
Michael Ramirez
Prickly City
Tundra
User Friendly
Vexarr
What The Duck
Wondermark
xkcd


NO WAI! WTF?¿?¿
Awkward Family Photos
Cake Wrecks
Not Always Right
Sober in a Nightclub
You Drive What?


Business and Economics
The Austrian Economists
Carpe Diem
Coyote Blog


Photography and Art
Digital Photography Review
DIYPhotography
James Gurney
Joe McNally's Blog
PetaPixel
photo.net
Shorpy
Strobist
The Online Photographer


Blogrolling
A Western Heart
AMCGLTD.COM
American Digest
The AnarchAngel
Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler
Babalu Blog
Belmont Club
Bayou Renaissance Man
Classical Values
Cobb
Cold Fury
David Limbaugh
Defense Technology
Doug Ross @ Journal
Grouchy Old Cripple
Instapundit
iowahawk
Irons in the Fire
James Lileks
Lowering the Bar
Maggie's Farm
Marginal Revolution
Michael J. Totten
Mostly Cajun
Neanderpundit
neo-neocon
Power Line
ProfessorBainbridge.com
Questions and Observations
Rachel Lucas
Roger L. Simon
Samizdata.net
Sense of Events
Sound Politics
The Strata-Sphere
The Smallest Minority
The Volokh Conspiracy
Tim Blair
Velociworld
Weasel Zippers
WILLisms.com
Wizbang


Gone but not Forgotten...
A Coyote at the Dog Show
Bad Eagle
Steven DenBeste
democrats give conservatives indigestion
Allah
BigPictureSmallOffice
Cox and Forkum
The Diplomad
Priorities & Frivolities
Gut Rumbles
Mean Mr. Mustard 2.0
MegaPundit
Masamune
Neptunus Lex
Other Side of Kim
Publicola
Ramblings' Journal
Sgt. Stryker
shining full plate and a good broadsword
A Physicist's Perspective
The Daily Demarche
Wayne's Online Newsletter

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by DaveH published on May 15, 2010 9:31 AM.

A Holder two-fer was the previous entry in this blog.

Light posting tonight - big day is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Monthly Archives

Pages

OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Powered by Movable Type 5.2.9