Franklin Richards
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2002
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In European Union, water dehydrates YOU.




Am I the only one who feels like the world is falling apart? Massive financial unrest, social unrest, an increase in all forms of nature disaster. It's just crazy...
Compared to WWII, the 60s, the Black Death, the Crusades? We often think the world is getting worse when it's actually getting better.
- S&P has downgraded Belgium's credit rating to AA.
- Moody's has downgraded Hungary's credit rating to junk.
- Italy's 10 year bond yields has risen to 7.26% above the 7% threshold that forced Portugal and Greece to receive bailouts.
- Spain's 10 year bond yields has risen to 6.7%.
- The British government is preparing for a possible Eurozone collapse within weeks.
- The Spanish government is considering to request a bailout.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, Angela Merkel, and Mario Monti have conceded that if Italy defaults, the Euro is done.
Can someone break it down for me...i'm not the sharpest arrow in the quiver when it comes to this sort of thing.
If the financial crisis doesn't end in the Euopean Union....are they splitting up?
The European Union most likely isn't in danger of splitting up. The European Union is more than just the Eurozone.
But the major leaders concerning the Euro have conceded that if a solution isn't found soon, the Eurozone will be forced to break up. It just isn't sustainable without a central authority to control the budgets and debt of the various nations within the Eurozone. The currency just isn't sustainable when you have Greece, Spain, Italy, Ireland, Portugal, and other weaker countries dragging the currency down.
Interesting...
Would you say that Eurozone is a good example of how a world government wouldn't work? It seems like if a few countries can't keep it together...a one world united government would have an even harder time....
Pretty much. I think that even if a deal is reached, the Eurozone is still doomed. The Germans are going to have the bulk of the control in Brussels and the various people's in the European Union aren't going to like it when the Germans tell them to perform more acts of austerity.
The lack of democratic legitimacy concerning the European Union is going to be it's downfall IMO.
Interesting...
Would you say that Eurozone is a good example of how a world government wouldn't work? It seems like if a few countries can't keep it together...a one world united government would have an even harder time....
Am I the only one who feels like the world is falling apart? Massive financial unrest, social unrest, an increase in all forms of nature disaster. It's just crazy...
Compared to WWII, the 60s, the Black Death, the Crusades? We often think the world is getting worse when it's actually getting better.
Greece, Spain, and Italy have no choice but to enact austerity. You can't just print money out of nowhere, you can't just allow that much debt to accumulate, and in Greece's case: you can't lie about your numbers.
The current "capitalist" crisis isn't the result of capitalism. It's the result of bad government policies along with bloated and overly generous entitlement systems.
And yes, it's a crisis of capitalism because without the boom-and-bust cycle, without the wealthiest class in Greece deciding that country's policies, and without the rule of an unelected group of international financiers over every country's monetary policy, we wouldn't be talking about a Greek crisis right now. If Cuba was having economic problems, I'm sure you'd be quick to blame "communism" for those problems. Why so uncomfortable when the shoe's on the other foot?Let us look at some facts. According to Eurostat, Greek workers work on average longer hours than the rest of Europeans. They work a 42-hour week, while the average working week in the 27 member states of the EU is 40.3 hours and within in the “Eurozone” it is 40 hours. So that is myth number one dispelled.
Again, according to Eurostat, Greece also has the most underpaid private sector employees compared to the rest of the “Eurozone”. In Greece, the average gross monthly wage, including social security and taxes, is 803 euros [about £700 or US$1063], while the lowest gross salary in, for example, Ireland is 1300 euros, in France 1250 euros and in the Netherlands 1400 euros. So myth number two doesn’t stand up to any serious analysis of the real figures.
[...]
What about the age of retirement and pension levels? If we were to believe the bourgeois media Greeks live in a kind of workers’ paradise, where they can all retire early and nice big pensions. Again, facts and figures are stubborn things and they give a completely different picture. The average age of retirement in Greece is 61.4 years, a little higher than the European average of 61.1 years.
And what about these fat Greek pensions? According to the GSEE Labour Institution, the average pension in Greece is 750 euros per months [£650 pounds or US$990], while in Spain this figure reaches 950 euros, in Ireland 1700 euros, in Belgium 2800 euros and in the Netherlands 3200 euros. Moreover, this figure was calculated before the implementation of the new government measures, which increase the age of retirement from 65 to 67 years while at the same time cutting pensions by 30 to 50%.
Furthermore, according to the annual report of the joint GSEE-ADEDY trade union confederations on the economy and employment levels in 2009, of the current four and a half million labour force, more than a million work without any social security or other forms of legal protection. According to the report of the Commission for Social Security, established by the Greek Ministry of Labour, this figure reaches 30% of the overall workforce, while in the rest of the EU the percentage of workers in these conditions are only between 5 and 10% of the total.
And whose fault is that? Contributions are supposed to be calculated by the bosses, who pay a part themselves and the remainder is paid by the workers out of their wages. But that would mean declaring the workers legally and paying taxes on the profits made. The bosses prefer to hire a sizeable number of workers illegally, in the “black economy”, and thus save on both taxes due to the state and contributions. If the bosses had paid all taxes due in recent years, and if they had paid what they are supposed to pay into social security funds, the situation would not be anywhere as bad as it is today. It is the Greek capitalists and the foreign investors who have profited from this situation. But who are they blaming? The Greek workers and poor, of course!