
More than half the Dutch population is willing to abandon the euro and create a new monetary union according to a recent study.
The study conducted by the Consumer Research Office of the Dutch Telegraaf Media Groep was published on Tuesday and revealed that sixty percent of Dutch respondents did not want to stay in the Eurozone, nor did they want return to their former national currency.

BYPASS THE CENSORS
Sign up to get unfiltered news delivered straight to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe any time. By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Use
Sputnik News reports:
Instead the majority of those surveyed said they wanted to establish a new monetary union with countries like Germany, saying that it would have been better not to have introduced the euro at all.
Nearly 90 percent of survey respondents assume that the $20-billion loan that the Netherlands extended to Athens would be lost, even if Greece stayed in the Eurozone, as a result of a new debt agreement, the study showed.
According to the study, only one in 10 Dutch taxpayers is willing to continue providing financial assistance to Greece. The vast majority, however, spoke against the Netherlands becoming further involved in the $350-billion Greek debt crisis.
Since 2010, Greece has been receiving financial aid packages, primarily from the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and some Eurozone nations, in return for certain austerity measures, including cuts to social spending and increased taxes.
Niamh Harris
Latest posts by Niamh Harris (see all)
- California City Wants To Grant Illegal Immigrants The Right to Vote - October 1, 2023
- Blair, Macron & Starmer Have ‘Secret Plans To Reverse Brexit’ - October 1, 2023
- British Taxpayers Are Paying £8 Million A Day To House Migrants In Hotels - October 1, 2023