The EU debate - Part III

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
Status
Not open for further replies.
The issue about the single currency is it inhibits governments from being able to improve their economies
it's not the rate of the euro against other currencies
exactly, and even if it was, it still loses! <laugh>
 
  • Like
Reactions: DMD
<laugh>
What a waste of money, and time, just to conclude with what we all knew to be true in the first place.

... so true ... remember watching the news unfold and getting angrier and angrier with that coxless **** of a Tory Sports Minister, Moynihan, blaming it all on drunken football hooligans ... only the Tories could think that a small man without a penis sitting in a boat watching muscly big guys rowing would be a suitable qualification for overseeing the nation's beautiful game ...

... akin to making Pete Minister responsible for combatting obesity <whistle>
 
The issue about the single currency is it inhibits governments from being able to improve their economies
it's not the rate of the euro against other currencies
If that were true then the EUR economies would have performed less well than the GBP economy leading to people selling EUR and buying GBP so the GBP would have gone up relative to the EUR. A strong currency is an indication of economic performance. the EUR was not implemented that well but its far from the disaster that everyone believes. The fact that the EUR went up against the GBP on the Brexit vote just demonstrates that people think the UK will suffer more from leaving than the EU will.
 
  • Like
Reactions: paultheplug
If that were true then the EUR economies would have performed less well than the GBP economy leading to people selling EUR and buying GBP so the GBP would have gone up relative to the EUR. A strong currency is an indication of economic performance. the EUR was not implemented that well but its far from the disaster that everyone believes. The fact that the EUR went up against the GBP on the Brexit vote just demonstrates that people think the UK will suffer more from leaving than the EU will.
It's the uncertaintly that increases the risk and increased risk reduces value
 
The issue about the single currency is it inhibits governments from being able to improve their economies
it's not the rate of the euro against other currencies
Not true.
The issue with the single currency is that debt and liability are detached. It allowed countries to improve their economies way beyond sustainable levels.

Countries are able to borrow way above their means based on all the Eurozone countries underwriting the debt and so they get in over their heads. The problem Greece found itself in was that the Germans refused to cover the debt they had originally underwritten, all be it whilst pretending they weren't.

It requires more integration to work effectively and the central power taking on and controlling national debts. That does not mean countries economies are weakened, but it does mean countries have to have any debt approved by the ECB.
Whether when these stresses threaten to break the system an agreement of further integration is reached or countries decide to back out of the currently flawed structure is anyone's guess tbh.
 
I suppose if you were married and you didnt like your wife any more that you would stay married because divorce was too much hassle

... nah ... but I might consider staying if the divorce was going to be financially catastrophic for me and the family ... it's not all about the self you narcissist <laugh>
 
don't you mean relative value?
No. Bodanki seems to think that the fact that the EUR is worth more than one GBP is of some relevance. I was just trying to explain that that was not true. the Yen is worth much less than either but has been a stronger currency mostly.
 
No. Bodanki seems to think that the fact that the EUR is worth more than one GBP is of some relevance. I was just trying to explain that that was not true. the Yen is worth much less than either but has been a stronger currency mostly.
No......I am saying it isn't, you are saying it is.
You tried to use the fact that the pounds value has dropped against the EUR as proof that the single currency has been a success.
Which is irrelevant.
I made the point that is not proof of anything as far the the Euro goes, all it proves is that the pound is weak right now.
Then I added, even if it WAS about relative value, the EURO would still lose :p
 
  • Like
Reactions: petersaxton
No......I am saying it isn't, you are saying it is.
You tried to use the fact that the pounds value has dropped against the EUR as proof that the single currency has been a success.
Which is irrelevant.
I made the point that is not proof of anything as far the the Euro goes, all it proves is that the pound is weak right now.
exactly
it is weak because of the uncertainty
the euro isn't "strong" except relative to the pound
the euro is getting weaker relative to the dollar
 
Anyway, most expert opinions on the Eurozone have ranged from "Disappointing" to "abject failure".
I think you are very much in the minority in wanting the UK to join the Eurozone mate, even on this board.
Even the remainers on here were largely against it.
 
exactly
it is weak because of the uncertainty
the euro isn't "strong" except relative to the pound
the euro is getting weaker relative to the dollar
Bull ****
Euro - Dollar has remained largely unchanged and the dollar is weaker today at 0.90-0.92 than it was nearly a year ago when it was 0.94.
 
  • Like
Reactions: paultheplug
@PowerSpurs

Even the CER, which usually tongues the EU ring piece with gusto, came to the consensus that it was a failure.
http://www.cer.org.uk/publications/archive/report/2016/has-euro-been-failure

There was broad consensus that the euro had been a disappointment: the currency union’s economic performance was very poor, and rather than bringing EU member-states together and fostering a closer sense of unity and common identity, the euro had divided countries and eroded confidence in the EU. While only a few participants thought it possible or advisable to dismantle the eurozone, there was broad pessimism over the ability of the eurozone political elite to sell the needed integrationist steps to their increasingly disillusioned electorates.

For most participants there was a widening gap between what was needed – more integration, risk sharing, and solidarity – and what electorates were prepared to support. The eurozone could only flourish with institutions founded on democracy; rules were a poor substitute and lacked legitimacy as they were effectively set by a select group of member-states and the ECB. For a minority, the rules were the right ones, and the eurozone could work if countries abided by them. For another minority, the problems were the result of policy mistakes, not the eurozone’s institutional set-up.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.