When the European Monetary Union was set up, member-states adopted what was essentially a foreign currency (the euro) but were left in charge of their own fiscal policy. Dimitri Papadimitriou and Randall Wray explain in a new Policy Note (“Euroland’s Original Sin“) why this basic structural defect was always bound to tear the eurozone apart. The solvency crises and the bank runs afflicting Spain, Greece, and Italy were entirely foreseeable (and as Papadimitriou and Wray point out, entirely foreseen). Unless something is done to remedy this design flaw, the EMU will continue to crumble.Read it at Multiplier Effect
The Original Sin
by Michael Stephens
1 comment:
Looks like you need to know where to draw your system boundaries... and be very careful with what you let go across them.
rsp,
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