On 1 December, EU commission president José Manuel Barroso told French radio that the ‘people who matter in Britain’ were ‘closer’ to joining the euro - maybe they should?
Economic crisis in Britain: don’t mention the euro
(Image: René Ehrhardt's/ Flickr)
debate
31/12/08
Tags :
- 3 comments for “Economic crisis in Britain: don't mention the euro ”
- Print “Economic crisis in Britain: don't mention the euro ”
0votes plus 0 votes moins
For the first time since the European currency was launched in 2002, Britain has registered insecurity towards the validity and security of the good old pound sterling in the New Europe. A devaluation of 27% against the euro in the last year alone will raise some eyebrows - not just amongst the ‘people that matter’, but also the cheap holidaymakers looking to spend their hard earned cash in Benidorm, Faro or Kos. A BMW, Volkswagen or Renault is not just a more expensive commission fee - it is 27% plus a more expensive commission fee.
Pound, I love you
A devalued pound has its advantages. Exporting has become a lot cheaper and ‘continentals’ are already looking to ‘invest’ in New Years shopping trips to London instead of New York, which had been the popular destination due to the low dollar. Furthermore, the emotional sentiment to the pound is not to be underestimated.
However, what will happen when the beloved pound drops below the euro for the first time in history, something that is not unthinkable? Such a symbolic threshold may be a catalyst for a shift in public sentiment. It may also prove to be the threshold that makes Westminster realise a political case for the euro not only can be made but needs to be made. Westminster can no longer rely on its Basil Fawlty ‘Don’t mention the euro’ tactic. They have mentioned it once but did they get away with it?
- You can also read
Vote for this article 0votes plus 0 votes moins
Advertising
Our special edition Euro: the ten-year itch
Tags
On homepage
-
focus
Parkour in Italy with ‘Gato’, the Italian traceur
-
focus
St. Patrick’s: Poitín, world’s strongest alcohol
-
overview
European indie film: ‘Sundance’ in Paris
-
interview
Interviewing Turkish Armenian author Agop Hacikyan
-
pictures
‘8 kilometres’ of illegal immigration
-
review
Guide to visiting Ghana
-
interview
The lowdown on what Europarl TV is
-
testimony
UK to Poland via France: hitch-hiking Europe
French president Nicolas Sarkozy has nominated his second eldest son, the 23-year-old second year law undergraduate Jean, to be chairman of ‘La Defense’, Paris’ equivalent to the City of London. Normal?
opinions & debates on the same topic
- EU 2020 Strategy: Raising the Game! on bruxelles
- Kind of Green: is sustainable development possible during crisis? on sofia
- The EU needs a Federal Budget on federalists
- The new world monetary order and the need for an EU foreign monetary policy on federalists
- The crisis advances on wonderland
- EU institutional failure in the management of financial and economic crisis on federalists

reverse the order of comments Refresh comments Join the discussion
Got anything to say? Do it here!
Already a babelian? Log-in. Or sign up!