Greek riot police battle demonstrators in downtown Athens during rebellions against the imposition of a new round of austerity measures in the European state. The world capitalist crisis has swept through Europe causing great destruction., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Cameron says Euro needs single government: report
10:17pm EDT
LONDON (Reuters) - A successful euro zone requires a single government if it is to work properly, British Prime Minister David Cameron said in a newspaper interview on Wednesday.
"There's nowhere in the world that has a single currency without having more of a single government," Cameron told Britain's Daily Mail.
"Making sense of the euro for me would mean that those euro zone countries would have to have much more co-ordinated economic policy, much more co-ordinated debt policy," he said.
Cameron, who opted out of a new European economic pact late last year, advocated Britain's position outside the euro and its ability "to do things to ourselves, for ourselves, by ourselves.
"I have always believed different countries at times will need different economic policies, interest rates tailored to their own needs."
Cameron said, however, that it is in Britain's interest to see a return to growth in the euro zone, which accounts for 40 percent of UK exports.
"We want them to sort out the problems that they have. We want to be in the single market, we want European co-operation, we don't want to be in the euro," Cameron said.
"The euro is a project in transition that could go in a number of different ways ... all these countries have to make their own choices."
(Reporting by Stephen Mangan; editing by Christopher Wilson)
He's right. It'll never happen, but he's right.
ReplyDeleteThis is the instrumental problem with the Euro and the Eurozone at large: the diversity of governments make one cohesive economic policy virtually impossible.
For the Euro to pull itself out of the ground, it needs strong central governance, which Germany is slowly gaining. However, with the new socialist government in France waiting to be inaugurated, Frau Merkle no longer has a steadfast ally.
The nationalist feeling in most Eurozone nations is strong, and it's with this patriotic strength that the system is being ripped apart.