Quote from EMRGLOBAL:
CLASS WAR.....Im ready.
Oooohhhh. I'm really impressed.
Getting back to the topic at hand, Spain is merely the tip of the iceberg. Portugal has been struggling for years, Greece and Italy aren't much better, and the Baltics have been suffering from the effects of currency union as well.
In a currency union, interest rates are ever only matched up with the conditions in one of its regions. Mostly, they wind up matched with the region that's already doing the best, so the fact that the union's interest rates have benefited Germany's economy the most is not remotely surprising.
Germany joined the euro as the price of being able to reunify with its eastern part. Everyone else joined for the prestige: Spain, Ireland, and the other peripheral countries because the euro offered membership in the "European club", France because it still thinks it can make Paris a financial center to rival London's - DeGaulle foundered on that dream; Sarkozy, his disciple, is still trying to twist and turn into it somehow.
The euro is two spent empires, Germany and France, with a bunch of peripheral players trying to cozy up to them.
The euro may - just may - survive this crisis intact. The next? No way.