and that by huge majority agreement of bank analysts, economists, and strategists is the most likely expected outcome I read. In that those calling for Europe's demise are by definition in the minority camp, of course they are entitled to their opinion...
...but I see no reason why Greek's exit should cause the EU to disintegrate.
...but I see no reason why Greek's exit should cause the EU to disintegrate.
There's also an alternate scenario where Greece leaves the Eurozone and the EU while the unions stay intact, after all, Greece is also a tiny part of EU. It's a test of sorts, before any of this the EMU didn't follow the rules set by themselves and there's where the problems started. As with anything, if there is no discipline, it fails.
Also, the subsidy system has to be scrapped or completely redesigned.
I know people who didn't do anything but wrote EU grant requests and made a nice living off of that, scamming the system with zero benefit to society. This is a €500 billion+ business across the EU.
Portugal dealt quite well with the issues and I think will come out much stronger in the upcoming decades. It's possible that Spain will also get their act together.
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