Tuesday, 21 March 2017

The day the EU dies


The EU could be on the verge of disaster.
 A series of political elections will be held in 2017, with many to be fought on lines of ‘for’ and ‘against’ membership of the euro. For the first time since its inception in 1957, the European Union cannot afford to take its future for granted.


Why?
Economic output in the region has been dire for almost 20 years.No one pretends the single currency hasn’t contributed to the malaise.
As a response to the continent’s sovereign debt crisis, the European Commission set up the ‘S0’ Indicator – to analyse a country’s economic data.
In February this year, a report from Deutsche Bank warned that, according to the S0 indicator, SIX EU member states are now a financial concern. Its conclusion is especially worrying:
“Even if impending fiscal crises are signalled correctly, there might not be enough time left to counteract the critical developments.”
This is like having an earthquake warning system in place… but with no means to evacuate.
Make no mistake about it: this is an urgent matter – and your money is at stake. As I will explain in this letter, unless evasive action is taken now, British savers and investors will not avoid the fallout of any European crisis.
Poor economic performance invariably manifests itself politically.
That makes this year a critical juncture for Europe’s future. And it will play out as the following elections take place:

France – 7th May: The far-right Front National party is the second favourite to win the Presidential election, and is avowedly anti-EU. Its leader Marine Le Pen plans to reintroduce the Franc. Even if they don’t win, they are still pulling France in an increasingly anti-EU direction.

Italy – by April 2018: General election called after pro-EU PM Matteo Renzi was comprehensively defeated on 4th December 2016 in a constitutional referendum. Italy’s three opposition parties are in favour of leaving the euro, which they believe is preventing the country’s economy from growing.

Germany – by October: Angela Merkel’s CDU party has been losing seats to the anti-EU AFD. While unlikely at this point, a Merkel defeat would be the biggest possible blow to the EU’s future. Germany is the continent’s biggest economy.
The countries listed above are the three biggest economies in the Eurozone. If one of them voted to leave the euro or the EU, it would almost certainly precipitate the end of the European Union.
But the potential dangers do not end with them.

Hungary – by Spring 2018: The popular current Prime Minister Viktor Orban has incurred the wrath of the EU by erecting wire borders around the country – in defiance of the EU, which he openly disparages.

If just one of these countries left the EU, the financial strain would be immense. The whole project would be called into question. Britain has already left. Should another nation follow… it would be like a theatre filling up with smoke – how long before it becomes a rush to the exit?

1 comment:

  1. The west is on the verge of bankruptcy all currencies seem to have cut ties with the gold standard.
    And taken up the fiat currency, bank practices that were concerned to be illegal have now been implemented and have become the norm.

    Derievitives that are produced by nation's borrowing. The debts are made into an asset and we find nation's are buying these assets.

    Austerity cuts are then implemented to keep these derivatives value.

    Corupt, politicians, with corupt systems of governance (EU) and socialist economics are all factors of the spiraling move of all nations in to poverty.

    The push of cultural Marxism as took hold of the western nations and this makes the politicians and the masses blind from seeing it's all doomed.

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