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EU Currency a 'Mistake', Abandoning It 'No Sad Thing' - Nobel Prize Winner

© REUTERS / Claudio BrescianiOliver Hart, Nobel Prize laureate in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel holds his Nobel lecture at the Aula Magna lecture hall at the Stockholm University in Stockholm, Sweden, December 8, 2016.
Oliver Hart, Nobel Prize laureate in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel holds his Nobel lecture at the Aula Magna lecture hall at the Stockholm University in Stockholm, Sweden, December 8, 2016. - Sputnik International
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The European Union must start decentralizing operations and hand key decision-making powers back to member states if it is to survive, Nobel Prize-winning economist Oliver Hart has said.

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Speaking to European media platform Euractiv, Hart said the EU "gone too far in centralizing power" and if this tendency were abandoned, it would "survive and flourish". Failure to do so, the British-born citizen of the US believes, could conversely lead to the breakdown of the entire union. 

He was also unambiguous in his condemnation of the euro, having believed it a "mistake" ever since introduction, and believing it "wouldn't be a sad thing at all" if the project was abandoned. The UK was "very clever" to stay out of it, he said.

​Hart attributed many of the EU's problems to its 28 member states not being "sufficiently homogeneous" enough to be considered one single entity. Trying to unify them into a single entity was an "error", he believes. 

Nevertheless, Hart says the EU should retain a controlling function of some "important" areas such as free trade and freedom of movement, the latter of which he acknowledged provoked significant political concern.

Hart's similarly prize-winning colleague, professor Bengt Holmstrom, added it was imperative that the EU redefine its priorities, "limiting its activities" in the field of regulation, and instead focusing on making itself "clearer and simpler".

​Hart's comments echo sentiments uttered by Joseph Stiglitz in September this year. Stiglitz, likewise a Nobel Prize winning economist, said the euro may have to be dropped completely as it was founded on flawed assumptions. Europe was stagnating, he said, as a "direct result" of the "fundamental challenges" in having a diverse group of countries share a common currency, and economic integration outpacing political integration.

Stiglitz proposed three possible options for the EU: fundamental reforms in the structure of the Eurozone and the policies imposed on the member countries; a well-managed end to the single-currency euro experiment; or a bold, new system dubbed the flexible euro.

The euro has come under increasing attack in recent months, with new political party Alternative for Germany calling for its abolition.

 

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