Europe-Vision for an Organization with 60 Regions

Written by Regionen-Europas.work

Intro Graphic

Currencies


Intoduction
The words are a topic that affects every Bürger. There are two basic opinions on this issue
  • Large currencies are good. This makes currency strong and prices comparable.
  • Each nation should have its own currency. So that each nation can control the exchange rate according to its market power.
Currency systems of history
  • Bretton Woods, US dollar exchange rates set by central banks, 1944 - 1973
  • US dollar as world leader with flexible exchange rates, since 1973
  • Euro since 1999
Our proposal for the currencies of 50 to 80 Nations in a union
  • 8 to 10 local Currencies and thus 8 to 10 Currency Areas in the 50 - 80 Nations.
  • At least 1 Currency for international affairs
  • The exchange rate between the currencies described is set by the central bank.
  • Currency conversions between the currencies described should be carried out free of charge at the fixed conversion rate.
  • We see the European Peseta, the European Dinar, the European Franc, the European Lira and the European Crown as local currency names.
  • Each nation creates regular reports and sends them to the central organization.
Which currency is used for which purpose of payment should be regulated equally in all nations .
  • Local Currency: banking services, insurance, healthcare, real estate, housing rental, furniture, food, wages, taxes, charges, water, electricity, telecommunications
  • International Currency: travel, railways, cars, plane tickets, fuel, hotel
  • If no currency is specified for the purpose of payment, it can be freely selected.
  • Anything that can be paid for in cash within the national association should be affordable with local cash.
The Europe-Vision lives
"Make Europe great again", Abbreviation "MEGA".
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Europe-Vision Sixty Regions as PDF file   Download PDF
The original text is written in ∗ German. This is a translation.
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 Intro Graphic: We have edited a graphic from Landkartenindex.de.
Last update: April 23, 2024
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Regions of Europe
Euroregion
With 402,762 inhabitants (as of 31 December 2016)[5], the city of Zurich is the largest city in Switzerland and has a statistical population density of 4,384 inhabitants per square kilometre. The city of Zurich announces the number of residents as of May 2017 according to the concept of economic residence (also includes weekly residents, asylum seekers, refugees with temporary admission) with 419,920 persons.6] With 32.1 percent (31 December 2016)[7], Zurich has an above-average proportion of foreigners (registered population without Swiss citizenship law). The surrounding area is densely populated, with about 1.3 million people living in the conurbation of Zurich[8] and about 1.83 million in the metropolitan region of Zurich[9] The district of Zurich is identical to the urban area.
The city is located in the Swiss midlands, on the Limmat at the outflow of Lake Zurich. The city of Zurich, which emerged from the base Turicum, became a free imperial city in 1262 and a member of the Swiss Confederation in 1351. The city of the reformer Huldrych Zwingli experienced its rise to the present economic metropolis of Switzerland in the industrial age. In 2014, Zurich was awarded the honorary title "European City of Reformation" by the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe.
With its main station, the largest railway station in Switzerland, and the airport, the city of Zurich is a continental traffic junction. Thanks to the large local banks (including UBS and Credit Suisse) and insurance companies (Zurich Insurance Group and Swiss Re), it is an international financial centre and the largest financial centre in Switzerland, followed by Geneva and Lugano. The city is also home to Switzerland's two largest universities, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and the University of Zurich. Despite its comparatively small population, Zurich is therefore considered one of the world's cities. An above-average number of media companies, including Swiss Radio and Television, are based here. With its location on Lake Zurich, its well-preserved medieval old town and a wide range of cultural activities and nightlife, it is also a centre of tourism.
Zurich lies at 408 m above sea level at the lower (northern) end of Lake Zurich in the valley of the Limmat and in the lower valley of the Sihl, embedded between the hills of Uetliberg in the west and Zurichberg in the east. The Limmat rises from the lake, while the Sihl, which flows west of the lake, flows into the Limmat near old town of zurich at Platzspitz. The old town extends on both sides of the Limmat, which initially flows northwards and then gradually turns west in an arc. The former city did not reach as far as the Sihl, but had as a western boundary the Schanzengraben built in the 17th and 18th centuries. At that time, part of the water was drained from the lake and returned to the Limmat in a ditch outside the bastions and bastions.