▲ | graemep 3 days ago | |
You are looking at this: https://europa.eu/eurobarometer/surveys/detail/3572 it seems to be using a different measure (numbers do not match the link I posted) and I cannot see any numbers from 20 years ago. There is graph from 2012 but that is from the low (if you look at my link). Have a missed a pre-crisis comparable number in skimming it? If not, then what I see is still a significant decline over the last 20 years in the net positive. IMO the Eurozone is very likely to have further crises. The architects of the Euro expected a greater degree of fiscal union but that never happened. A single currency without a large central budget is a mistake and makes it much harder to correct instability. | ||
▲ | delusional 2 days ago | parent [-] | |
I'm looking at the "standard barometer 103 - Spring 2025"[1] which lines up with the first graph in the "standard barometer 101" you linked. > A single currency without a large central budget is a mistake and makes it much harder to correct instability. That's an opinion. You're free to have that opinion, but trust/distrust of the European Union has little to do with that opinion. |