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Withdrawal from the eurozone

Withdrawal from the Eurozone denotes the process whereby a Eurozone member-state, whether voluntarily or forcibly, stops using the euro as its national currency and leaves the Eurozone. As of May 2023, no country has withdrawn from the Eurozone.

Background edit

The possibility of a member state leaving the Eurozone was first raised after the onset of the Greek government-debt crisis. The term "Grexit" itself was reportedly[1] first used by Citigroup economists Willem Buiter and Ebrahim Rahbari in a 2012 report about the possibility of Greece leaving the Eurozone.[2] In the 2015 edition, the term "Grexit" entered the Oxford English Dictionary,[3] defined as "a term for the potential withdrawal of Greece from the Eurozone, the economic region formed by those countries in the European Union that use the euro as their national currency.[4]

Speculation followed about other countries, such as Italy, withdrawing from the Eurozone as well,[5] with economist Nouriel Roubini submitting in 2011 that "Italy may, like other periphery countries [of the Eurozone], need to exit the euro and go back to a national currency, thus triggering an effective break-up of the Eurozone."[5]

There are some European cases of a country having a common currency obtaining their own, when countries split apart. Czech koruna and Slovak koruna split from Czechoslovak koruna in 1993, both at exchange rate 1:1. Banknotes were stamped as a way of converting them to the new currency. Additionally, the Slovenian tolar and Croatian kuna were created by leaving the Yugoslav dinar, and the Estonian kroon, Latvian lats, and Lithuanian litas were created by leaving the Soviet ruble.

Legal environment edit

It has been argued[6][7] that there is no provision in any European Union treaty for an exit from the Eurozone. Moreover, it has been argued, the Treaties make it clear that the process of monetary union was intended to be "irreversible" and "irrevocable."[7] However, in 2009, a European Central Bank legal study argued that voluntary withdrawal is legally not possible but expulsion remains "conceivable."[8] Although an explicit provision for an exit option does not exist, many experts and politicians in Europe have suggested that an option to leave the Eurozone should be included in the relevant treaties.[9]

Other analysts[10] have submitted that there are basically three ways of exiting the Eurozone: by leaving and subsequently rejoining the EU, whereby a renewed membership in the European Union would be possible only when economic convergence had been achieved; through a Treaty amendment; or through a European Council decision. The amendment would involve an extension of Article 50[11] of the European Treaty that would set out the process for exiting the euro.

A decision by the European Council would "probably" have to be unanimous and "with the consent of the European Parliament." It would state that a Eurozone member-state "will no longer be part of the Eurozone" and will become a member-state "with a derogation", by withdrawing the Council's earlier decision for that state's entry into the Eurozone. Article 139[12] regulates the terms of this "derogation":

Member States in respect of which the Council has not decided that they fulfil the necessary conditions for the adoption of the euro shall hereinafter be referred to as 'Member States with a derogation'.

The competence of the Council to retract its earlier decision would "possibly" invoke the argument that a given competence to decide on a matter always includes the competence to retract that decision.[10] Additionally, this retractile power can be derived from the "flexibility clause" of article 352 TFEU, which grants the Council, on a proposal from the Commission and with the consent of the European Parliament, the ability to unanimously adopt the "appropriate measures" to attain one of the objectives set out in the Treaties as set out in Article 3 of the European Union – essentially ascertaining that staying in the Eurozone would be so "devastating" for the well-being of the people of the member-state, and/or the rest of the peoples of Europe, that an exit would be legitimate in light of the Treaties' objectives. Then, it would be ostensibly possible to take a decision retracting the previous decision that approved entry to the Eurozone.[10]

Acknowledging that the method of any departure from the Eurozone remains "unknown," legal analysts have pointed out that any potential withdrawal "includes the spectre that euro obligations owed by residents of departing member states might be redenominated into [the] newly established national currencies."[13]

On the issue of leaving the Eurozone, the European Commission has stated that "[t]he irrevocability of membership in the euro area is an integral part of the Treaty framework and the Commission, as a guardian of the EU Treaties, intends to fully respect [that irrevocability]."[14] The Commission added that it "does not intend to propose [any] amendment" to the relevant Treaties, the current status being "the best way going forward to increase the resilience of euro area Member States to potential economic and financial crises.[14] The European Central Bank, responding to a question by a Member of the European Parliament, has stated that an exit is not allowed under the Treaties.[15]

Withdrawal from the European Union edit

If a state leaves the European Union, Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union says that "Treaties shall cease to apply to the State in question". If the state has been using the euro as its currency then, rather than form a new domestic currency, it might continue to use the euro unilaterally – as Montenegro does – or by way of a monetary agreement with the EU – as Andorra does – without being a member of the EU.[citation needed]

Potential operational process edit

On 18 October 2011, Eurosceptic British businessman and Conservative life peer Simon Wolfson launched a contest that offered a £250,000 reward for "a plan for how the euro could be safely dismantled," and for "what a post-euro eurozone would look like, how transition could be achieved and how the interests of employment, savers, and debtors would be balanced."[16]

The winning entry, titled "Leaving the Euro: A Practical Guide,"[17] recommended that member-states who want to exit should introduce a new currency and default on a large part of their debts. The net effect, the proposal claimed, would be "positive for growth and prosperity". It called for keeping the euro for small transactions and for a short period of time after the exit from the Eurozone, along with a strict regime of inflation-targeting and tough fiscal rules monitored by "independent experts". The plan also suggested that "key officials" should meet "in secret" one month before the exit is publicly announced, and that Eurozone partners and international organisations should be informed "three days before".[18] The winning entry's team leader stated said, "if executed correctly, the pain of exit would relatively soon be replaced by a return to growth," something that would encourage other distressed states still in the currency zone to exit as well."[17]

In 2018, Columbia University economics professor and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, in the context of arguing that Italy faces "a choice [the country] shouldn’t have to make: between membership in the Eurozone and economic prosperity," remarked that "the challenge [of exit] will be to find a way to leave the Eurozone that minimizes the economic and political costs. A massive debt restructuring, carefully done, with special attention to the consequences for domestic financial institutions, will be essential. Without such a restructuring," Stiglitz argued, "the burden of euro denominated debt would soar, offsetting possibly a large part of the potential gains." He claimed that from "an economic perspective, the easiest thing to do would be for [the exiting country's] entities (governments, corporations and individuals) to simply redenominate debts from Euros into the new [national currency]" and then "enact a super-Chapter 11 bankruptcy law, providing expeditious recourse to debt restructuring to any entity for whom the new national currency presents severe economic problems."[19]

Economic considerations edit

At the American Economic Association's annual meeting of 2015, University of California, Berkeley economic historian Barry Eichengreen predicted that the withdrawal of a member state, such as Greece, from the Eurozone, would "set off [a] devastating turmoil in financial markets."[20] At the same event, Harvard professor of Public Policy and professor of Economics Kenneth Rogoff characterised the overall common-currency project in Europe a "historic disaster",[20] while Harvard professor of Economics and NBER president emeritus Martin Feldstein opined that "there may be no way to end to [the] euro crisis," and suggested that to avoid a break-up and "ensure the Euro's survival," the best way forward "would be for each individual Eurozone member-state to enact its own tax policies to spur demand, including cutting the value-added tax for the next five years to increase consumer spending."[20]

Specifically for Greece, a 2015 PwC study[21] expected the "new drachma" to depreciate "almost immediately" and inflation in the country to rise "sharply" to around 6% on average. The study predicted that "the [new currency's] depreciation would lead to a high inflationary environment with a medium-term inflation rate of around 4%, more than double the expected rate in the Eurozone."[21] German ordoliberal economist and president of the Ifo Institute for Economic Research Hans-Werner Sinn, on the other hand, argued for the economic benefits for Greece if the country were to withdraw from the Eurozone.[22]

In 2015, German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble reportedly[23] proposed that Greece "temporarily" exits the Eurozone for 5 years and re-introduces a national currency.[24][25][26] The "informal" proposal contained a provision whereby Athens would transfer state assets worth €50 billion into a trust fund located in Luxembourg and controlled by the European Stability Mechanism, in order for the assets to be sold off and the proceeds to pay off part of the Greek debt.[27] Analysts compared this "asset-stripping enterprise" to West Germany's privatisation of East German state-property after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.[27]

The German finance minister, subsequently, stated that the German side "only called attention to the possibility that Athens itself can decide on taking a timeout," explaining that "[d]ebt relief is not possible within the currency union. European treaties do not allow it."[28] Schäuble's informal proposal was reportedly withdrawn from the agenda by common agreement between the Greek government and the Eurozone leadership.[27]

Finland's parliament decided in late 2015 to debate within the next year whether to quit the Eurozone or not, in a move seen by analysts[29] as unlikely to end Finland's membership in the single-currency zone but would "highlight Finns' dissatisfaction with their country's economic performance."[29]

Popular sentiment edit

In the mid-2010s, polls conducted across Europe, showed that because of the general "disillusionment with the European Union,"[30][31] which has "more noticeably affected Greece, Belgium, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Italy," there is also a "significant erosion" in the support for a common currency.[32] In the majority of European countries surveyed in 2015 by Gallup International most respondents "oppose the Euro." In the two "key Eurozone members" Germany and France, as well as in Spain, majorities in favour of retaining the euro as common currency are present. Among Eurozone members the strongest anti-euro sentiments were registered in Italy and Greece.[32]

In 2015, the Greek parliament approved the government's proposal for a referendum that would ostensibly decide, through a decision between "Yes" or "No," the way forward in the ongoing negotiations of Greece with the creditors' institutions.[33] Despite the claims by analysts abroad and in Greece[34] that the referendum might open the way for Greece's withdrawal from the Eurozone, and despite polls showing that Greek citizens would prefer keeping the common currency "at all costs,"[35][36] the referendum, conducted on 5 July 2015, returned a result of 61.3% for "No" and 38.7% for "Yes."[37] On Monday, 13 July 2015, the government of Greece accepted the bailout package offered by the creditors' institutions.[38]

By late 2018, public sentiment in the eurozone had been strongly favourable towards the Euro, with 74% of respondents saying that it was "a good thing" for their country and 15% calling it "a bad thing". The highest support for the common currency was identified in Ireland (85%), Luxembourg (80%), and Austria (76%), while the lowest in Italy (57%), Cyprus (47%), and Lithuania (42%).[39][40] At the same time, 69% of respondents across the Eurozone area said that they saw the need for more coordination of economic policy, including budgetary policies, and 7% said they preferred less coordination.[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Grexit" by Kate Mackenzie and Joseph Cotterill, Financial Times Alphaville, 7 February 2012
  2. ^ "Rising Risks of Greek Euro Area Exit" by Willem Buiter & Ebrahim Rahbari, Citigroup, 6 February 2012
  3. ^ "Grexit, Brexit Added to Oxford English Dictionary; What's Next?" by Antonia Oprita, Real Money, 28 August 2015
  4. ^ : definition, Oxford Dictionaries website
  5. ^ a b "Debt crisis: as it happened", Daily Telegraph, 11 November 2011
  6. ^ "Brussels: No one can leave the euro" by Leigh Phillips, EUobserver, 8 September 2011
  7. ^ a b "The Eurozone crisis – the final stage?" by Charles Proctor, Locke Lord, 15 May 2012
  8. ^ "Withdrawal and Expulsion from the EU and EMU : Some reflections" by Phoebus Athanassiou, Principal Legal Counsel with the Directorate-General for Legal Service, ECB, 2009
  9. ^ "German advisory council calls for exit option in the eurozone" by Daniel Tost, EurActiv, 29 July 2015
  10. ^ a b c "How to exit the Eurozone?" by Marijn van der Sluis, 22 March 2013
  11. ^ Consolidated version of the Treaty on European Union/Title VI: Final Provisions
  12. ^ Consolidated version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union/Title VIII: Economic and Monetary Policy
  13. ^ "Eurozone crisis – the corporate perspective", Herbert Smith LLP report, January 2012
  14. ^ a b Text of response by Olli Rehn, European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs and the Euro, on behalf of the European Commission, to question submitted by Claudio Morganti, Member of the European Parliament, 22 June 2012
  15. ^ Text of message by Mario Draghi, ECB, to Claudio Morganti, Member of the European Parliament, 6 November 2012
  16. ^ , Daily Telegraph, 6 January 2012
  17. ^ a b "Wolfson prize for euro exit plan won by Roger Bootle", BBC News, 5 July 2012
  18. ^ "Leaving the Euro: A Practical Guide", summary of the submission by Capital Economics for the Wolfson Prize, 2012
  19. ^ Stiglitz, Joseph (14 August 2018). "How to exit the Eurozone: Italy is right to consider leaving the EU's common currency area". Politico. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  20. ^ a b c "Greek euro exit would be ‘Lehman Brothers squared’: economist" by Greg Robb, Market Watch, 5 January 2015
  21. ^ a b "What would a Greek exit mean for the Eurozone?", PricewaterhouseCoopers, March 2015
  22. ^ "Why Greece Should Leave the Eurozone" by Hans-Werner Sinn, The New York Times, 24 July 2015
  23. ^ "German Document Floats Five-Year Greek Exit From Eurozone" by Gabrielle Steinhauser, The Wall Street Journal, 11 July 2015
  24. ^ "Germany mulling five-year temporary Grexit plan", Yahoo News, 11 April 2015
  25. ^ "Germany floats Greek euro 'time-out' without more reforms" by Tom Körkemeier and Andreas Rinke, Reuters, 11 July 2015
  26. ^ "Schäuble’s Timeout Plan for Greece Was ‘Courageous,’ Says Slovak Minister" by Gabriele Steinhauser,The Wall Street Journal, 15 July 2015
  27. ^ a b c "Three days that saved the euro", The Guardian, 22 October 2015
  28. ^ "Wolfgang Schäuble: 'There Is No German Dominance' ", interview conducted by Klaus Brinkbäumer, Michael Sauga and Christian Reiermann, Der Spiegel, 17 July 2015
  29. ^ a b "Finnish parliament will debate next year leaving euro zone", Reuters, 16 November 2016
  30. ^ "Grind of euro Crisis Wears Down Support for Union, Poll Finds" by James Kanter, The New York Times, 13 May 2013
  31. ^ "Devastating MORI poll shows Europe's peoples share British rage over EU" by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Daily Telegraph, 10 May 2016
  32. ^ a b International Survey on EU Prospects, Gallup International, 2015
  33. ^ "Greece debt crisis: Tsipras announces bailout referendum", BBC, 27 June 2015
  34. ^ "Tsipras’s shock call for vote on Greek bailout sets day of destiny for Europe" by Ian Traynor, The Guardian, 27 June 2015
  35. ^ "Poll: 7 in 10 Greeks Want the Euro at Any Cost" by Philip Chrysopoulos, Greek Reporter, 16 June 2015
  36. ^ "Greeks want to stay in eurozone, two polls show", Kathimerini, 28 June 2015
  37. ^ July 2015 referendum results, Greek Ministry of the Interior website
  38. ^ "German-Led Eurozone Launching Coup Against Greek Government", The Huffington Post, 12 July 2015
  39. ^ a b "Support for the euro steady at all-time high levels". Eurobarometer. 20 November 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  40. ^ Wolf, Martin (15 January 2019). "Marking the euro at 20: the eurozone is doomed to succeed". Financial Times. Retrieved 5 February 2019.

External links edit

  • "", winning submission by Capital Economics in the Wolfson Prize competition, 2012 (full text)
  • Williamson, Adrian. "The case for Brexit: lessons from the 1960s and 1970s", History and Policy website, 2015

withdrawal, from, eurozone, confused, with, withdrawal, from, european, union, withdrawal, from, eurozone, denotes, process, whereby, eurozone, member, state, whether, voluntarily, forcibly, stops, using, euro, national, currency, leaves, eurozone, 2023, updat. Not to be confused with Withdrawal from the European Union Withdrawal from the Eurozone denotes the process whereby a Eurozone member state whether voluntarily or forcibly stops using the euro as its national currency and leaves the Eurozone As of May 2023 update no country has withdrawn from the Eurozone Contents 1 Background 2 Legal environment 2 1 Withdrawal from the European Union 3 Potential operational process 4 Economic considerations 5 Popular sentiment 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editThe possibility of a member state leaving the Eurozone was first raised after the onset of the Greek government debt crisis The term Grexit itself was reportedly 1 first used by Citigroup economists Willem Buiter and Ebrahim Rahbari in a 2012 report about the possibility of Greece leaving the Eurozone 2 In the 2015 edition the term Grexit entered the Oxford English Dictionary 3 defined as a term for the potential withdrawal of Greece from the Eurozone the economic region formed by those countries in the European Union that use the euro as their national currency 4 Speculation followed about other countries such as Italy withdrawing from the Eurozone as well 5 with economist Nouriel Roubini submitting in 2011 that Italy may like other periphery countries of the Eurozone need to exit the euro and go back to a national currency thus triggering an effective break up of the Eurozone 5 There are some European cases of a country having a common currency obtaining their own when countries split apart Czech koruna and Slovak koruna split from Czechoslovak koruna in 1993 both at exchange rate 1 1 Banknotes were stamped as a way of converting them to the new currency Additionally the Slovenian tolar and Croatian kuna were created by leaving the Yugoslav dinar and the Estonian kroon Latvian lats and Lithuanian litas were created by leaving the Soviet ruble Legal environment editIt has been argued 6 7 that there is no provision in any European Union treaty for an exit from the Eurozone Moreover it has been argued the Treaties make it clear that the process of monetary union was intended to be irreversible and irrevocable 7 However in 2009 a European Central Bank legal study argued that voluntary withdrawal is legally not possible but expulsion remains conceivable 8 Although an explicit provision for an exit option does not exist many experts and politicians in Europe have suggested that an option to leave the Eurozone should be included in the relevant treaties 9 Other analysts 10 have submitted that there are basically three ways of exiting the Eurozone by leaving and subsequently rejoining the EU whereby a renewed membership in the European Union would be possible only when economic convergence had been achieved through a Treaty amendment or through a European Council decision The amendment would involve an extension of Article 50 11 of the European Treaty that would set out the process for exiting the euro A decision by the European Council would probably have to be unanimous and with the consent of the European Parliament It would state that a Eurozone member state will no longer be part of the Eurozone and will become a member state with a derogation by withdrawing the Council s earlier decision for that state s entry into the Eurozone Article 139 12 regulates the terms of this derogation Member States in respect of which the Council has not decided that they fulfil the necessary conditions for the adoption of the euro shall hereinafter be referred to as Member States with a derogation The competence of the Council to retract its earlier decision would possibly invoke the argument that a given competence to decide on a matter always includes the competence to retract that decision 10 Additionally this retractile power can be derived from the flexibility clause of article 352 TFEU which grants the Council on a proposal from the Commission and with the consent of the European Parliament the ability to unanimously adopt the appropriate measures to attain one of the objectives set out in the Treaties as set out in Article 3 of the European Union essentially ascertaining that staying in the Eurozone would be so devastating for the well being of the people of the member state and or the rest of the peoples of Europe that an exit would be legitimate in light of the Treaties objectives Then it would be ostensibly possible to take a decision retracting the previous decision that approved entry to the Eurozone 10 Acknowledging that the method of any departure from the Eurozone remains unknown legal analysts have pointed out that any potential withdrawal includes the spectre that euro obligations owed by residents of departing member states might be redenominated into the newly established national currencies 13 On the issue of leaving the Eurozone the European Commission has stated that t he irrevocability of membership in the euro area is an integral part of the Treaty framework and the Commission as a guardian of the EU Treaties intends to fully respect that irrevocability 14 The Commission added that it does not intend to propose any amendment to the relevant Treaties the current status being the best way going forward to increase the resilience of euro area Member States to potential economic and financial crises 14 The European Central Bank responding to a question by a Member of the European Parliament has stated that an exit is not allowed under the Treaties 15 Withdrawal from the European Union edit If a state leaves the European Union Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union says that Treaties shall cease to apply to the State in question If the state has been using the euro as its currency then rather than form a new domestic currency it might continue to use the euro unilaterally as Montenegro does or by way of a monetary agreement with the EU as Andorra does without being a member of the EU citation needed Potential operational process editOn 18 October 2011 Eurosceptic British businessman and Conservative life peer Simon Wolfson launched a contest that offered a 250 000 reward for a plan for how the euro could be safely dismantled and for what a post euro eurozone would look like how transition could be achieved and how the interests of employment savers and debtors would be balanced 16 The winning entry titled Leaving the Euro A Practical Guide 17 recommended that member states who want to exit should introduce a new currency and default on a large part of their debts The net effect the proposal claimed would be positive for growth and prosperity It called for keeping the euro for small transactions and for a short period of time after the exit from the Eurozone along with a strict regime of inflation targeting and tough fiscal rules monitored by independent experts The plan also suggested that key officials should meet in secret one month before the exit is publicly announced and that Eurozone partners and international organisations should be informed three days before 18 The winning entry s team leader stated said if executed correctly the pain of exit would relatively soon be replaced by a return to growth something that would encourage other distressed states still in the currency zone to exit as well 17 In 2018 Columbia University economics professor and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz in the context of arguing that Italy faces a choice the country shouldn t have to make between membership in the Eurozone and economic prosperity remarked that the challenge of exit will be to find a way to leave the Eurozone that minimizes the economic and political costs A massive debt restructuring carefully done with special attention to the consequences for domestic financial institutions will be essential Without such a restructuring Stiglitz argued the burden of euro denominated debt would soar offsetting possibly a large part of the potential gains He claimed that from an economic perspective the easiest thing to do would be for the exiting country s entities governments corporations and individuals to simply redenominate debts from Euros into the new national currency and then enact a super Chapter 11 bankruptcy law providing expeditious recourse to debt restructuring to any entity for whom the new national currency presents severe economic problems 19 Economic considerations editAt the American Economic Association s annual meeting of 2015 University of California Berkeley economic historian Barry Eichengreen predicted that the withdrawal of a member state such as Greece from the Eurozone would set off a devastating turmoil in financial markets 20 At the same event Harvard professor of Public Policy and professor of Economics Kenneth Rogoff characterised the overall common currency project in Europe a historic disaster 20 while Harvard professor of Economics and NBER president emeritus Martin Feldstein opined that there may be no way to end to the euro crisis and suggested that to avoid a break up and ensure the Euro s survival the best way forward would be for each individual Eurozone member state to enact its own tax policies to spur demand including cutting the value added tax for the next five years to increase consumer spending 20 Specifically for Greece a 2015 PwC study 21 expected the new drachma to depreciate almost immediately and inflation in the country to rise sharply to around 6 on average The study predicted that the new currency s depreciation would lead to a high inflationary environment with a medium term inflation rate of around 4 more than double the expected rate in the Eurozone 21 German ordoliberal economist and president of the Ifo Institute for Economic Research Hans Werner Sinn on the other hand argued for the economic benefits for Greece if the country were to withdraw from the Eurozone 22 In 2015 German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble reportedly 23 proposed that Greece temporarily exits the Eurozone for 5 years and re introduces a national currency 24 25 26 The informal proposal contained a provision whereby Athens would transfer state assets worth 50 billion into a trust fund located in Luxembourg and controlled by the European Stability Mechanism in order for the assets to be sold off and the proceeds to pay off part of the Greek debt 27 Analysts compared this asset stripping enterprise to West Germany s privatisation of East German state property after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 27 The German finance minister subsequently stated that the German side only called attention to the possibility that Athens itself can decide on taking a timeout explaining that d ebt relief is not possible within the currency union European treaties do not allow it 28 Schauble s informal proposal was reportedly withdrawn from the agenda by common agreement between the Greek government and the Eurozone leadership 27 Finland s parliament decided in late 2015 to debate within the next year whether to quit the Eurozone or not in a move seen by analysts 29 as unlikely to end Finland s membership in the single currency zone but would highlight Finns dissatisfaction with their country s economic performance 29 Popular sentiment editIn the mid 2010s polls conducted across Europe showed that because of the general disillusionment with the European Union 30 31 which has more noticeably affected Greece Belgium the United Kingdom the Netherlands and Italy there is also a significant erosion in the support for a common currency 32 In the majority of European countries surveyed in 2015 by Gallup International most respondents oppose the Euro In the two key Eurozone members Germany and France as well as in Spain majorities in favour of retaining the euro as common currency are present Among Eurozone members the strongest anti euro sentiments were registered in Italy and Greece 32 In 2015 the Greek parliament approved the government s proposal for a referendum that would ostensibly decide through a decision between Yes or No the way forward in the ongoing negotiations of Greece with the creditors institutions 33 Despite the claims by analysts abroad and in Greece 34 that the referendum might open the way for Greece s withdrawal from the Eurozone and despite polls showing that Greek citizens would prefer keeping the common currency at all costs 35 36 the referendum conducted on 5 July 2015 returned a result of 61 3 for No and 38 7 for Yes 37 On Monday 13 July 2015 the government of Greece accepted the bailout package offered by the creditors institutions 38 By late 2018 public sentiment in the eurozone had been strongly favourable towards the Euro with 74 of respondents saying that it was a good thing for their country and 15 calling it a bad thing The highest support for the common currency was identified in Ireland 85 Luxembourg 80 and Austria 76 while the lowest in Italy 57 Cyprus 47 and Lithuania 42 39 40 At the same time 69 of respondents across the Eurozone area said that they saw the need for more coordination of economic policy including budgetary policies and 7 said they preferred less coordination 39 See also editEnlargement of the eurozone Overview of Eurozone enlargement and of exchange rate regimes Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union European debt crisis Causes of the European debt crisis Proposed long term solutions for the Eurozone crisis Controversies surrounding the Eurozone crisis 2000s European sovereign debt crisis timeline List of acronyms associated with the Eurozone crisis European integration Euroscepticism Withdrawal from the European UnionReferences edit Grexit by Kate Mackenzie and Joseph Cotterill Financial Times Alphaville 7 February 2012 Rising Risks of Greek Euro Area Exit by Willem Buiter amp Ebrahim Rahbari Citigroup 6 February 2012 Grexit Brexit Added to Oxford English Dictionary What s Next by Antonia Oprita Real Money 28 August 2015 Grexit definition Oxford Dictionaries website a b Debt crisis as it happened Daily Telegraph 11 November 2011 Brussels No one can leave the euro by Leigh Phillips EUobserver 8 September 2011 a b The Eurozone crisis the final stage by Charles Proctor Locke Lord 15 May 2012 Withdrawal and Expulsion from the EU and EMU Some reflections by Phoebus Athanassiou Principal Legal Counsel with the Directorate General for Legal Service ECB 2009 German advisory council calls for exit option in the eurozone by Daniel Tost EurActiv 29 July 2015 a b c How to exit the Eurozone by Marijn van der Sluis 22 March 2013 Consolidated version of the Treaty on European Union Title VI Final Provisions Consolidated version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union Title VIII Economic and Monetary Policy Eurozone crisis the corporate perspective Herbert Smith LLP report January 2012 a b Text of response by Olli Rehn European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs and the Euro on behalf of the European Commission to question submitted by Claudio Morganti Member of the European Parliament 22 June 2012 Text of message by Mario Draghi ECB to Claudio Morganti Member of the European Parliament 6 November 2012 I m claiming the 250 000 Wolfson prize for how to break up the euro Daily Telegraph 6 January 2012 a b Wolfson prize for euro exit plan won by Roger Bootle BBC News 5 July 2012 Leaving the Euro A Practical Guide summary of the submission by Capital Economics for the Wolfson Prize 2012 Stiglitz Joseph 14 August 2018 How to exit the Eurozone Italy is right to consider leaving the EU s common currency area Politico Retrieved 8 February 2019 a b c Greek euro exit would be Lehman Brothers squared economist by Greg Robb Market Watch 5 January 2015 a b What would a Greek exit mean for the Eurozone PricewaterhouseCoopers March 2015 Why Greece Should Leave the Eurozone by Hans Werner Sinn The New York Times 24 July 2015 German Document Floats Five Year Greek Exit From Eurozone by Gabrielle Steinhauser The Wall Street Journal 11 July 2015 Germany mulling five year temporary Grexit plan Yahoo News 11 April 2015 Germany floats Greek euro time out without more reforms by Tom Korkemeier and Andreas Rinke Reuters 11 July 2015 Schauble s Timeout Plan for Greece Was Courageous Says Slovak Minister by Gabriele Steinhauser The Wall Street Journal 15 July 2015 a b c Three days that saved the euro The Guardian 22 October 2015 Wolfgang Schauble There Is No German Dominance interview conducted by Klaus Brinkbaumer Michael Sauga and Christian Reiermann Der Spiegel 17 July 2015 a b Finnish parliament will debate next year leaving euro zone Reuters 16 November 2016 Grind of euro Crisis Wears Down Support for Union Poll Finds by James Kanter The New York Times 13 May 2013 Devastating MORI poll shows Europe s peoples share British rage over EU by Ambrose Evans Pritchard The Daily Telegraph 10 May 2016 a b International Survey on EU Prospects Gallup International 2015 Greece debt crisis Tsipras announces bailout referendum BBC 27 June 2015 Tsipras s shock call for vote on Greek bailout sets day of destiny for Europe by Ian Traynor The Guardian 27 June 2015 Poll 7 in 10 Greeks Want the Euro at Any Cost by Philip Chrysopoulos Greek Reporter 16 June 2015 Greeks want to stay in eurozone two polls show Kathimerini 28 June 2015 July 2015 referendum results Greek Ministry of the Interior website German Led Eurozone Launching Coup Against Greek Government The Huffington Post 12 July 2015 a b Support for the euro steady at all time high levels Eurobarometer 20 November 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2019 Wolf Martin 15 January 2019 Marking the euro at 20 the eurozone is doomed to succeed Financial Times Retrieved 5 February 2019 External links edit Leaving the euro A practical guide winning submission by Capital Economics in the Wolfson Prize competition 2012 full text Williamson Adrian The case for Brexit lessons from the 1960s and 1970s History and Policy website 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Withdrawal from the eurozone amp oldid 1158030302, wikipedia, wiki, 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