Quote from RiceRocket:
Who wants out of the Euro? That is a myth. In fact the Euro has been a shelter for some of the worst countries. Secondly, the loans and real estate may be bad in the eurozone, but the US is in 10x worst shape. European banks had higher loan standards throughout the last boom. They are much more conservative than US banks. Your rhetoric is part of the crowd that wishes the euro would collapse. In France for example, you can't just walk away from your mortgage. Your wages are garnished for life until you have paid the balance.
"As historians begin to assess damage from the credit crunch, Spain will surely be singled out as a classic study for what can go wrong inside a monetary union when the policy requirements of its members become hopelessly misaligned. It is simply not possible to pursue the best interests of every participant when some nations are running trade and fiscal surpluses while others clock up huge deficits."
the whole article.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...as-spared-us-a-Spanish-style-catastrophe.html
"Had Britain been locked into Europe's single currency, at an exchange rate far higher than today's, there is good reason to believe that we, too, would be suffering double-digit unemployment. You won't read this very often under my byline, but Gordon Brown played a blinder in keeping us out."
"Euro Impasse: ECB Stands Divided on What to Try Next
Recall, yesterday I told you how European Central Bank (ECB) minister Axel Weber, confused the markets with a statement that left the traders scratching their collective heads.
Well, this morning, ECB President Trichet failed to calm the markets, and their fears of a split in the ECBâs governing body is weighing heavily on the euro.
Trichet has got to get these split factions of the ECB togetherâ¦
In one corner, we have Weber, who does NOT want to see interest rates fall below 1%, and does NOT want Quantitative Easing.
In another corner, we have the Greek contingent that wants to see deeper rate cuts, and Quantitative Easing if needed.
And then finally we have Austriaâs Nowotny, who agrees with Weber on the rate cuts, but believes that Quantitative Easing makes sense.
If Trichet canât get these factions to come together, then the euro is going to get bogged down in all this mess, because nothing will get done."
full article-
http://www.worldcurrencywatch.com/2009/04/17/we’re-calling-your-“strong-dollar”-bluff-trichet/
The problem with the euro, is you have great members and horrble members and they all want something different, gridlock it will be until nations start to bow out.