by Roger Cohen
New York Times
June 20, 2011
Greece has long held emotional sway over Europe. All the cradle-of-Western-civilization talk earned it leniency, even indulgence. The European Union was not ready to go mano-a-mano with the birthplace of democracy.
Past glory is a wonderful thing — and a lousy guide for present policy. That’s true in the Holy Land, in Kosovo and in Athens. Greece should not have been allowed into the euro. It failed to join in 1999 because it did not meet fiscal criteria. When it did meet them in 2001, the fix came through phony budget numbers.
But Europe’s bold monetary union required an Athenian imprimatur to be fully European. So everyone turned a blind eye.
More
No comments:
Post a Comment