Britain was right to keep the Pound.....
Germans Would Ditch Euro, Return to Mark
December 21, 2006
Angus-Reid
(ARGM) - Many adults in Germany would rather go back to their previous currency, according to a poll by Forsa released by Stern and RTL. 58 per cent of respondents would prefer to use the German Mark instead of the Euro.
The Euro has been used in 12 of 15 European Union (EU) countries since January 2002. At the time, Sweden, Denmark and Britain were the only EU members that did not adopt the currency. The European Central Bank has set a fiscal deficit limit of 3.0 per cent to allow other member nations to adopt the Euro.
According to the German Federal Bank (DB), about $19 billion U.S. worth of German Marks remain in circulation throughout the European country. The DB allows any person to change their German Marks into Euros indefinitely, and some stores have participated in promotions were customers are allowed to pay in German Marks.
Polling Data
Would you prefer to use the German Mark instead of the Euro?
Yes: 58%
No: 40%
Not sure: 2%
Source: Forsa / Stern / RTL
Methodology: Interviews with 1,000 German adults, conducted on Dec. 14 and Dec. 15, 2006. Margin of error is 2.5 per cent.
http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/index.cfm/fuseaction/viewItem/itemID/14167
Germans Would Ditch Euro, Return to Mark
December 21, 2006
Angus-Reid
(ARGM) - Many adults in Germany would rather go back to their previous currency, according to a poll by Forsa released by Stern and RTL. 58 per cent of respondents would prefer to use the German Mark instead of the Euro.
The Euro has been used in 12 of 15 European Union (EU) countries since January 2002. At the time, Sweden, Denmark and Britain were the only EU members that did not adopt the currency. The European Central Bank has set a fiscal deficit limit of 3.0 per cent to allow other member nations to adopt the Euro.
According to the German Federal Bank (DB), about $19 billion U.S. worth of German Marks remain in circulation throughout the European country. The DB allows any person to change their German Marks into Euros indefinitely, and some stores have participated in promotions were customers are allowed to pay in German Marks.
Polling Data
Would you prefer to use the German Mark instead of the Euro?
Yes: 58%
No: 40%
Not sure: 2%
Source: Forsa / Stern / RTL
Methodology: Interviews with 1,000 German adults, conducted on Dec. 14 and Dec. 15, 2006. Margin of error is 2.5 per cent.
http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/index.cfm/fuseaction/viewItem/itemID/14167