Posted July 16, 2015
Brasas: ...It's to be expected that the unwillingness to lead and assert itself will disappear - not just is it being demanded by others to do something, but the cultural memory of the results of past German "Will" is obviously losing power ever so slowly. The question obviously is: What will Germany do with this power? I don't see a willingness to accept it is exceptional (taboo!) and lead morally / ideologically (taboo!) into deeper political integration. It will continue to think and act economically and industrially, until it doesn't... but far from me to actually guess which way the pendulum will swing. To have some forecasting fun, I anticipate Poland will become an interesting player in this topic. Poland joining the Euro or not, Poland accepting deeper integration with Germany or not would be very powerful symbols. Of course Russia and the US will interfere as well. The former being the more relevant one.
Very interesting read. Thanks for answering. I readily admit, I'm a bit of an idealist, so I would tend to underestimate the problems with nationalistic sentiments, greed, egoism, incompatible cultures within the EU and would rather see the chances: unified social system but not with unlimited liabilities, unified financial systems (truly european banks for example), a more democratic european parliament. A kind of slow transformation of a union of politically independent states to a single kind of country but with strong autonomies in many points. And this is actually achievable. For example you can imagine completely separated budgets for Spain and France (just examples) or a single budgets or any part in between where there is any level of solidarity. I would most like a nice balance of solidarity and competition - that kind of guarantees a minimal properity and above all a chance, but also doesn't drain the power house (as you say it). I think it could be done. This is what the blue flag with the yellow stars really could be about.
But then there is also reality and realpolitics, so I don't know if we can achieve that within the next 10 years or so.
For sure it will be in Germanies interest that all member countries commit to strict fiscal discipline. Balanced budgets is the main (only) goal currently. For everything else here the agreement or disagreement with anything is as high as elsewhere.