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Why do people still promote shared currencies as an economic solution to anything?

Adam Triggs
Updated April 6 2022 - 1:33pm, first published October 26 2021 - 5:25am
If the next crisis is in a big country - like Italy or Spain - the odds of the euro surviving, at least in its current form, are slim. Picture: Getty Images
If the next crisis is in a big country - like Italy or Spain - the odds of the euro surviving, at least in its current form, are slim. Picture: Getty Images

People don't talk about the Greek debt crisis much these days. But we should. Unemployment went up to 27 per cent. GDP contracted by 30 per cent. Most tragically, suicides increased from 3.6 per 100,000 people to 5.3.

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Adam Triggs

Adam Triggs

Columnist

Adam Triggs is a partner at the economics advisory firm, Mandala, a visiting fellow at the ANU Crawford School and a non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution.

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