Eurozone faces doom 'no matter what'
The eurozone is likely to break up no matter how hard France and Germany try to save it, one of the worldâs biggest investment banks is warning.
A senior employee at Bank of America Merrill Lynch says the single currency bloc has been gradually falling apart ever since it was formed almost 20 years ago.
Although several countries including Greece and Portugal received emergency bailouts during the financial crisis, richer countries like Germany have failed to redistribute wealth on a permanent basis to poorer countries in the eurozone.
London-based Athanasios Vamvakidis, who worked for the International Monetary Fund for 13 years before joining the US bank, said this has driven members apart and increased inequality.
A senior employee at Bank of America Merrill Lynch says the eurozone currency bloc has been gradually falling apart ever since it was formed almost 20 years ago (stock photo)
Although that changed briefly during the global financial crisis, he said âdivergence seems to be the norm since the eurozone was formedâ.
Describing that as a âred flag for the sustainability of the eurozoneâ, he warned poorer countries may decide to break away from the bloc as they fall further into debt.
He said: âWouldnât such countries want to have their own monetary policy at some point? Wouldnât populism find the common currency to be an easy target â" which is already happening in some countries?â
He added: âWithout growth, debt could prove unsustainable in some countries and populism against the eurozone could find support in some cases, leading to exit of a country left behind.
Emmanuel Macron (pictured), Franceâs pro-Brussels president, has proposed sweeping reforms to safeguard the single currency bloc, including introducing a new common budget
âThe probability that a country, at the core or the periphery, may decide to leave under a populist leadership at some point in the future is not low, in our view.â
Emmanuel Macron, Franceâs pro-Brussels president, has proposed sweeping reforms to safeguard the single currency bloc, including introducing a new common budget.
Germany, which would have to finance a disproportionate amount of the extra spending, has reacted cautiously to the proposals.
But Mr Vamvakidis said a wealthier country may also decide to quit because transferring wealth to poorer countries may not be âpolitically feasibleâ.
He ad ded that âeven in an ideal scenarioâ, in which these reforms were introduced, the âeurozone could still be at risk if the lack of convergence continuesâ.
The prognosis echoes that of former Bank of England governor Lord Mervyn King who said the âone-size-fits-all currencyâ was doomed.
0 Response to "Eurozone faces doom 'no matter what'"
Posting Komentar