What point shouldn't be missed is that Cyprus' solution was to nationalize the bank, it's now the government who cannot afford this bailout...and it highlights what can happen when a central government bank dictates policy.
What point shouldn't be missed is that Cyprus' solution was to nationalize the bank, it's now the government who cannot afford this bailout...and it highlights what can happen when a central government bank dictates policy.
Expropriation of bank's management is inevitable in these cases, when you consider it as one of the rings that runs economy. I guess the same 'solution' have employed in the US with some differencesin the near past.
I think these trade agreements are bad. NAFTA, EURO, seem to only benefit the big guys then the little guys have to bail em out when they make the wrong decisions.
I think these trade agreements are bad. NAFTA, EURO, seem to only benefit the big guys then the little guys have to bail em out when they make the wrong decisions.
Trade agreements which are real trade agreements are generally good things- free trade tends to work in favor of most people in both countries.
The Euro is not a trade agreement though. It is a monetary union- think of it like the United States having a Federal currency and the states all use the currency but also set their own fiscal policies- the states in the case of the Euro have more soverignty and fiscal power than the states in the US of course (which is part of why the monetary union doesn't work).