Now, that may not necessarily be a bad thing for Greece to do.
With control of your own currency, governments can, and do, use monetary policy to ease the deficit problem - re: UK - but without that control, there are very limited things that a government can do.
In addition there is the issue of what is the natural balance for a country.
It seems that the natural balance for Dollar/Sterling is between 1.45 and 1.65. Apart from a few blips, this range appears to be the norm as far as Forex is concerned.
Indeed, one of the major issues for the UK when it was in the ERM was that its peg to the Deutschmark was too high and the economy paid the price.
Some in the insurance industry have just come back from a
For years, Spain, Greece and Portugal were the destinations of choice, in part because of their relative cheapness after currency conversion. However, following the Euro, many noticed how much prices had gone up. Now, there was a sleight-of-hand mark-up in prices but also the currency was linked with that powerhouse Germany so prices went up after conversion.
If Greece does return to the Drachma, not only will it return to having a degree of control over its economy but in addition, prices will fall and tourists will return in their droves.
Is that necessarily a bad thing?
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