Article HN2Q Brutish, nasty – and not even short: theominous future of the eurozone | Wolfgang Streeck

Brutish, nasty – and not even short: theominous future of the eurozone | Wolfgang Streeck

by
Wolfgang Streeck
from on (#HN2Q)
During the Greek crisis Europe missed a historic chance to fix its currency. Now the mess continues

Now the dust has temporarily settled over the ruins of Greece's economy, it is worth asking if there wasn't a brief moment when the actors had found a way to cut the eurozone crisis's Gordian knot. At some point in July German finance minister, Wolfgang Schiuble, appeared to have realised that his dream of a "core Europe" with a Franco-German avant-garde would vanish into thin air if Greece was allowed to remain in the economic and monetary union. Rewriting the rules of the union to accommodate the Greeks, Schiuble realised, would pull the euro southwards, and France, Italy and Spain with it - forever breaking up the European core.

His Greek equivalent Yanis Varoufakis, for his part, may have learned from his encounters of the third kind with the Eurogroup that the only role there was for Greece in the Europe of monetary union was that of an underfed and overregulated welfare recipient. Not only was this incompatible with Greek national pride; more importantly, what the governors of Europe would be willing to offer the Greeks by way of "European solidarity" would, at best, be too little to live on.

Related: Why is Germany so tough on Greece? Look back 25 years | Dirk Laabs

Very few people believe that programmes of this kind - like a Marshall plan - can "kickstart" an economy like Greece's

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