Europe's debt crisis often seems like a giant snowball accelerating down a hill.
With each rotation, it picks up more destructive power.
Squabbling officials are tossed to the side, unable to agree on robust responses.
Citizens feel crushed.
Financial markets speculate on which country will be flattened next, and how that will affect the American economy.
And yet, Europe is not facing political or economic collapse.
The euro remains a resilient currency.
In fact, stepping back from the crisis provides quite a different view: lasting transformation that will – in the long run – strengthen the 27-member European Union as a whole, and the 17 nations that share the euro currency.
Reforms in the weaker euro economies on Europe's periphery – Greece, Portugal, Italy, and Spain for instance – are so dramatic, it's as if the Margaret Thatcher of the 1980s has hopped the English Channel.
These changes may not be sufficient to avert short-term problems, such as a further restructuring of Greek government debt or more instability reverberating from Italy’s notoriously dysfunctional political system. But in five critical ways, they will make the EU far better equipped to face long-term political and economic challenges.
This post originally appeared at The Christian Science Monitor.
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