The future of the EU
Posted on June 17, 2010 by Shay Greenberg for Luckyroom.com
European leaders are required to make important decisions as they should give their opinion and agree upon crucial issues that will determine where the future of the Union is heading to and where the path of the single currency will lead to; even more will they will be called to make decisions that will determine the future of the lives of the citizens of the Union in a whole. In practice, the heads of member states are obliged to design and implement a new economic model that serves as the crawling policy for more than a decade. It is perhaps the most critical juncture for the European Union since its conception. A juncture that is not only about the crisis that is ongoing in several countries and which requires convincing answers, but a junction regarding the big criticism of the failure of the Union, its mechanisms and its leaders which anticipate major problems.
It is no coincidence that the top spot in focusing criticism on the existence of a stronger link between the disparate elements that characterize public entities, that of a common currency and the problems it has caused in individual economies that were not ready to adopt it. The biggest problem towards finding the new balance in the European Union is that, given the image of a political and economic imbalances synthesis and its components are now more than ever, conflicting views and goals. In this environment the leaders of the Union and countries must demonstrate that excuse as such. To find gold intersections between austerity and growth, poverty reduction and fiscal discipline. We believe that the known reference to “every nation has the government it deserves,” may be trite but true is applicable to any size.

