How can you take seriously the views of BLOOMBERG and its biased guests. The station is always cheerleading the american economy and pouring doubt on China and the euro.This is to bolster the dollar even as the dollar printing presses are going into overdrive.Sterling has also fallen against the dollar yet that fact is ignored.
It would be one thing to bring in new punts, it would be another to get people to use them without it turning into a Zimbabwe situation.
You only get a Zimbabwe situation where you have a State run economy that has no idea about real economics.
If the economy is sound and supported by a large private sector and small public sector then a Zimbabwe situation shouldn't occur.
If you allow the currency to float freely, have no cost controls in place, and have 'real' producing private sectors of the economy, that sell products to the world with a large trade surplus then you will have a strong currency.
Also an economy that-
- Allows inward and outward free movement of international capital without any restrictions.
- Has low corporation and personal taxes.
- A large private healthcare and education system reducing the burden on the state.
- Is 85%-90% private sector. A minimal state sector is required to create real wealth.
It is bad government policies (socialism and statism) that leads to a currency collapse, not the fact that a country has a small economy and currency relative to the rest of the world.
Look at the economic success of Singapore over the past 40 years. An excellent model for any small country to copy.
4.5 Million population and an unbelievably amount of wealth held in their Soverign Wealth funds and foreign currency reserves.
Probably the richest nation on earth (per person), yet one of the smallest.
As this question ranks alongside other questions such as:
"What would happen if aliens invaded the earth?" and "What would happen to my mortgage repayments if a nuclear war obliterated civilisation?".
does it really have a place on a serious discussion board such as askaboutmoney?
It's very easy for the likes of McWilliams and George Lee to say that the country would be better off if we took their advice and pulled out of the Euro because they know it will never happen so they will never be proven wrong.
Turn back the clock a couple of thousand years and the equivalent question would be
"Should we stop using gold coins and go back to bartering?".
You cant stop progress.
The euro has many fundamental flaws.
Please could you clarify? Do you think it's a foregone conclusion that the Euro will break up?"What would happen if aliens invaded the earth?" and "What would happen to my mortgage repayments if a nuclear war obliterated civilisation?".
does it really have a place on a serious discussion board such as askaboutmoney?
Please could you clarify? Do you think it's a foregone conclusion that the Euro will break up?
At the moment, it does seem frighteningly likely, but it hasn't happened yet!
I was thinking a possible solution to save the Euro would be tax harmonisation coupled with universal public sector benchmarking across the EU.
The Euro wont break up.
What about a country leaving? Having control over its own interest rates and being able to devalue a currency might outweigh any benefit of being a euro member.
This might appeal to smaller countries.
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