Angela Merkel has a red and a yellow button. One ends the crisis. Which does she push?
Yanis Varoufakis
Bankruptocracy is as much a European predicament as it is an American invention. The difference between the experience of the two continents is that at least Americans did not have to labour under the enormous design faults of the eurozone. Imagine their chagrin if the citizens of hard-hit states (eg Nevada or Ohio) had to worry about a death embrace between the debt of their state and the losses of the banks who happened to operate within the state.
Europe's architecture was not sound enough to sustain the shock waves from the death throes of neoliberal capitalism
Additionally, Americans were spared the need to contend with a central bank utterly shackled by inner divisions and the German central banks penchant for treating the worst-hit parts of the union (the eurozone, that is) as alien lands that had to be fiscally waterboarded until they ceased to obey the laws of macroeconomics.
In the past two years, the debate in Europe has focused exclusively on issues that sound technical and minor: will there be conditionality attached to the purchases of Italian and Spanish bonds by the European Central Bank? Will the ECB supervise all of Europes banks, or just the systemic ones?
These are questions that ought to be of no genuine interest to anyone other than those with a morbid interest in the interface between public finance and monetary policy. And yet these questions (and the manner in which they will be answered) will probably prove as important for the future of Europe as the treaties of Westphalia, Versailles or even Rome. For these are the issues that will determine whether Europe holds together or succumbs to the vicious centrifugal forces that were unleashed by the crash of 2008.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/06/yanis-varoufakis-angela-merkel-crisis-global-minotaur-capitalism-europe