A powerful and united Europe
is not possible without a sound European economy. In a time of economic crisis
such as now, people all over the continent blame the European Union for its
economic woes. This is, for the most
part, an unfair accusation , yet, it is one that cannot easily be dismissed or
completely refuted. People will always find a scapegoat in times of economic
crisis, and the European Union is a great candidate. The euro, in particular, has
been blamed, often and repeatedly, for the economic problems that Europe now faces.
However, the reality is that the European Union's system of
free circulation of people and goods is a major plus for the continent's economy. The same could also be said for the existence of a stable common currency such as the Euro.
In spite of all of this, however, much needs to be done in
order to improve the European economy. These changes must come from the
European Union, the national governments as well as the people of Europe and its businesses, big and small. Solutions for
current problems must be found on all of these levels if the European economy
is to truly improve in a sustained and durable manner.
What cannot happen and will not, in any case, bring good
results, is for people to blame the economic crisis on whatever or whoever they
can think of, without truly thinking rationally about these issues and
accepting their share of the blame. Right now, we have the Greeks blaming the
Germans and the Germans blaming the Greeks. We have the Portuguese blaming
Angela Merkel and the European Union. We have the British blaming Europe and foreigners in general. We have France blaming
the EU and the Muslims. And so on... Yet, if we really want to improve the situation, it is necessary to first blame
ourselves. And then to blame a number o national governments who have
systematically mismanaged national finances and robbed the state arcs. No one
is more responsible for the economic problems of Greece,
Portugal, Spain and Italy than their own politicians,
who have spent decades making a career out of robbing the people who elected
them and mismanaging the finances of their countries.
Europeans need to elect better leaders but they also need to
start thinking and acting differently. The first step is to stop blaming
everyone else for their problems, including Europe
and the Euro, and to start assuming some responsibility for their mistakes. The
second step is to identify the problems and the third step is to start solving
them.
The European Union and the European Central Bank need to
start looking closely at their shortcomings and start to correct them. They
should assume responsibility for their past mistakes and start doing a better
job. This is the only way to gain the people's support.
National governments need to put a stop to corruption,
especially in the southern countries. They also need to start spending less
money than they make. This might sound like a very obvious thing, but in spite
of being obvious it is a principle that is constantly overlooked by
irresponsible national governments. The national debts of European governments,
particularly southern ones, is too high and is constantly getting bigger. This
leads to situations like those of Portugal
or, especially, Greece.
There is also a problem of over-taxation in many European
countries. This makes it hard for new companies to survive, and even harder fro
them to thrive and expand, which in turn leads to shortcomings in the creation
of jobs. An outlook of over-taxation discourages potential entrepreneurs, which
in turn leads to fewer jobs, high
unemployment, low consumption and even lower tax income for governments.
European governments must encourage, not discourage, the creation of companies.
This will lead to the creation of more jobs which will allow people to spend
more money in the economy and pay higher taxes which will ultimately benefit
everyone.
A new age of prosperity can only be possible in an
environment where people are willing to create new means of production, namely
businesses. European economies have become stagnated and this is due, in no
small degree, to the poor entrepreneurial spirit of young Europeans when
compared to their American and even Asian counterparts. In an age of high
unemployment, it is more important than never to create new businesses, to
invest in businesses with growth potential and to develop and apply financial
creativity. The new generations of Europeans will have to overcome the current
difficulties of a stagnated European economy by proving themselves to be
active, adventurous, hard working, imaginative, financially responsible and
intrepid members of the active population.
I agree 100%!! There is so much potential to form new businesses, but I think a lot of people don't even want to try with that high taxation. I think another important thing that governments need is balance, like we saw in France. You can't just have "free healthcare" - it's never free! You have to find a healthy balance between affordable healthcare and reasonable taxes so that the system doesn't implode. Awesome article, Bruno! One of your best, most definitely.
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