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263 points toomuchtodo | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.466s | source
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decimalenough ◴[] No.44506006[source]
Credit where credit is due: the EU gets a lot of flack for being bureaucratic, hidebound, sclerotic, whatever, but the single currency has been a success and it's still expanding, 26 years after its creation.

Also, the addition of Bulgaria means it's almost possible to travel from Spain to Greece entirely through the Eurozone, with only a thin sliver of Serbia or Macedonia in the way. (Assuming we include Montenegro and Kosovo in the Eurozone: technically they aren't, but for all practical purposes they are.)

It'll also be interesting to see who's next. Czechia is not far off but doesn't seem to be in a hurry, while Romania wants in but still seems to be a ways off. Poland and Hungary will stay outside unless there are major political changes.

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carabiner ◴[] No.44506207[source]
The crazy thing is that it was US pressure on Europe in the late '90s that led to adoption of the euro.
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oaiey ◴[] No.44506262[source]
I am not aware of this. Can you give us a hint what that was?
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oaiey ◴[] No.44506552[source]
Euro was part of the Maastricht treaty which formed the EU as we know it today in 1992. The euro part was a power move of France against a reunited Germany which back story origins in the early 80s. Obviously backfired.
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1. epolanski ◴[] No.44506795[source]
How did it backfire?
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2. smcl ◴[] No.44507174[source]
Because Germany is the dominant power in the European Union and France isn't