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Friday, 18.11.2011.

16:16

Europe's crisis: Beyond finance

Izvor: B92

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3 Komentari

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Bob

pre 14 godina

There is too much mention of 'elites' in this article. In Greece there is an elite which has over-borrowed, but there is also a large body of inefficiency, corruption and tax avoidance across the whole system that is also part of the problem. The elite in terms of the EU are to some large extent countered by the individual states. The EU itself is more than one thing - it is not just a political union, it is also a union of regulation and law strongly oriented towards ideas of coherence for the purposes of personal freedoms and open markets for trade. Even if the political union were to reduce in its headlong rush, the trading union is the biggest single block in the world, and taken in its entirety is (and will remain) a substantial force to be reckoned with.

There are many anti-EU posters who are pleased with the current economic woes - but 1) the world is always full of problems and 2) these things do pass.

The problem with the EU is not particularly to do with 'elites' it is to do with the way in which financial systems have been managed. Capitalistic systems are (and have to be) adaptable - and believe me, one way or another things will adapt. The end is not in sight, and the future has not been abolished.

wtf

pre 14 godina

Any of you fellow Serbian day-dreamers of cash raining on you for nothing (or indeed your 30 pieces of silver for overthrowing your own elected government in the 90´s) should watch this Nigel Farage video, carefully:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdob6QRLRJU&feature=player_embedded

wtf

pre 14 godina

Any of you fellow Serbian day-dreamers of cash raining on you for nothing (or indeed your 30 pieces of silver for overthrowing your own elected government in the 90´s) should watch this Nigel Farage video, carefully:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdob6QRLRJU&feature=player_embedded

Bob

pre 14 godina

There is too much mention of 'elites' in this article. In Greece there is an elite which has over-borrowed, but there is also a large body of inefficiency, corruption and tax avoidance across the whole system that is also part of the problem. The elite in terms of the EU are to some large extent countered by the individual states. The EU itself is more than one thing - it is not just a political union, it is also a union of regulation and law strongly oriented towards ideas of coherence for the purposes of personal freedoms and open markets for trade. Even if the political union were to reduce in its headlong rush, the trading union is the biggest single block in the world, and taken in its entirety is (and will remain) a substantial force to be reckoned with.

There are many anti-EU posters who are pleased with the current economic woes - but 1) the world is always full of problems and 2) these things do pass.

The problem with the EU is not particularly to do with 'elites' it is to do with the way in which financial systems have been managed. Capitalistic systems are (and have to be) adaptable - and believe me, one way or another things will adapt. The end is not in sight, and the future has not been abolished.

Bob

pre 14 godina

There is too much mention of 'elites' in this article. In Greece there is an elite which has over-borrowed, but there is also a large body of inefficiency, corruption and tax avoidance across the whole system that is also part of the problem. The elite in terms of the EU are to some large extent countered by the individual states. The EU itself is more than one thing - it is not just a political union, it is also a union of regulation and law strongly oriented towards ideas of coherence for the purposes of personal freedoms and open markets for trade. Even if the political union were to reduce in its headlong rush, the trading union is the biggest single block in the world, and taken in its entirety is (and will remain) a substantial force to be reckoned with.

There are many anti-EU posters who are pleased with the current economic woes - but 1) the world is always full of problems and 2) these things do pass.

The problem with the EU is not particularly to do with 'elites' it is to do with the way in which financial systems have been managed. Capitalistic systems are (and have to be) adaptable - and believe me, one way or another things will adapt. The end is not in sight, and the future has not been abolished.

wtf

pre 14 godina

Any of you fellow Serbian day-dreamers of cash raining on you for nothing (or indeed your 30 pieces of silver for overthrowing your own elected government in the 90´s) should watch this Nigel Farage video, carefully:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdob6QRLRJU&feature=player_embedded