Publications
One-Pager No. 24
| February 2012
Delaying the Next Global Meltdown
It’s a mistake to interpret the unfolding disaster in Europe as primarily a “sovereign debt crisis.” The underlying problem is not periphery profligacy, but rather the very setup of the European Monetary Union (EMU)—a setup that even now prevents a satisfactory resolution to this crisis. The central weakness of the EMU is that it separates nations from their currencies without providing them with adequate overarching fiscal or monetary policy structures—it’s like a United States without a Treasury or a fully functioning Federal Reserve. Without addressing this basic structural weakness, Euroland will continue to stumble toward the cliff—and threaten to pull a tottering US financial system over the edge with it.
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Debt
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)
European Central Bank (ECB)
European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF)
Eurozone debt crisis
Institutional reform
Stability and Growth Pact (SGP)