Okay, so I'm not an economist, but I been following the whole Eurozone Debt Crisis for a while now. The CFC Off-Topic threads on the subject seem unusually well-informed and well-behaved, so I guess I'll ask this: what caused this mess and how can it be fixed?
From what I've read, here is a ridiculously tl;dr summery: the single biggest problem with the Eurozone is that is a monetary union without a fiscal union, so that the imbalances induces by the former cannot be patched up with the latter. The decision making process of the European Union is such that it is hard to come up with quick and co-ordinated action to resolve this. In the end, it comes up with short-term, kick the can down the road solutions that just don't solve anything in the end.
The long term solution is either create a fiscal union to go along with the monetary union or break up the whole thing. Both of these choices are problematic. Proposals on how a fiscal union should work are vague, and it seems unlike that it can be implemented with another treaty. Breaking the Eurozone into two or more piece also seems troublesome, as it entail a lot of costs and could decrease trade between Eurozone members.
Obviously this is ridiculously short version, but is it correct in the outline? Again, what caused this mess and how can it be fixed?
From what I've read, here is a ridiculously tl;dr summery: the single biggest problem with the Eurozone is that is a monetary union without a fiscal union, so that the imbalances induces by the former cannot be patched up with the latter. The decision making process of the European Union is such that it is hard to come up with quick and co-ordinated action to resolve this. In the end, it comes up with short-term, kick the can down the road solutions that just don't solve anything in the end.
The long term solution is either create a fiscal union to go along with the monetary union or break up the whole thing. Both of these choices are problematic. Proposals on how a fiscal union should work are vague, and it seems unlike that it can be implemented with another treaty. Breaking the Eurozone into two or more piece also seems troublesome, as it entail a lot of costs and could decrease trade between Eurozone members.
Obviously this is ridiculously short version, but is it correct in the outline? Again, what caused this mess and how can it be fixed?