It’s not just Bayrou’s France that is struggling. The whole of Europe is going through a systemic crisis that the ECB’s printing press can no longer solve. Despite years of massive injections, the eurozone is sinking into a vicious circle of stagnation and unsustainable debt. It seems that this time, unlike 2008, the ECB can no longer save Europe from the crash.
Statistics from the European Central Bank reveal the magnitude of the disaster in Europe . In June 2025, the M2 money supply of the eurozone reached 15 trillion euros, up 2.7% from the previous year.
This massive money creation, however, generates no significant economic growth. This catastrophic performance contrasts with U.S. results, where 4.5% monetary growth produces at least 2.5% growth.
Consequently, Europe demonstrates the total inefficiency of expansionary monetary policies. Each euro created by the ECB produces less real wealth than in any other developed economy.
Europe becomes the global laboratory of monetary failure.
Europe perfectly illustrates the absence of a multiplier effect between monetary creation and economic growth. Liquidity injected by the ECB no longer stimulates investment. On the contrary, it feeds an increasingly parasitic European bureaucratic system.
This situation creates a crowding-out mechanism . European states, financed by ECB bond purchases, absorb most of the new liquidity. Consequently, the European private sector is deprived of access to the credit it needs for development.
Moreover, this phenomenon causes the progressive zombification of European economies. The least productive companies survive thanks to artificially low ECB rates.
At the same time, innovative companies struggle to obtain financing. Thus, Europe artificially maintains obsolete economic structures at the expense of innovation.
The European Central Bank has betrayed its fundamental mission of price stability. It now prioritizes the financing of European sovereign debt over the fight against inflation. This drift turns the ECB into a disguised fiscal policy instrument for the entire continent.
Recent economic history shows the failure of this interventionist approach. Between 1970 and 2011, despite the global dominance of central banks, 147 banking crises shook the global economy. These data prove that central banks do not prevent financial crises. They often delay and amplify them.
The ECB exactly reproduces this dangerous pattern on the European scale. By artificially maintaining the solvency of member states through massive bond purchases, it delays necessary structural adjustments. This policy encourages generalized fiscal irresponsibility and worsens the structural imbalances of European economies.
Europe has trapped itself in a monetary dependency trap from which it can no longer escape. European economies, with their massive public debts, depend entirely on ECB refinancing to avoid collapse.
This dependency creates a vicious circle. The more the ECB finances European debts, the more states can afford unproductive spending. Consequently, European economies gradually lose their capacity to generate growth. They become chronic patients on permanent monetary drip.
The record global public debt of 102 trillion dollars in 2024 illustrates this widespread drift. However, Europe is among the most worrisome cases in the world.
Indeed, the continent no longer generates enough wealth to justify its astronomical levels of debt. Only the continuous monetary creation by the ECB maintains the illusion of its solvency.
Europe demonstrates the definitive failure of large-scale quantitative easing. The continental bankruptcy disguised by the ECB can no longer indefinitely mask the collapse of European economies. Sooner or later, the continent will have to face an uncompromising reality: only drastic structural reforms, and not perpetual monetary injections, can restore its competitiveness and prosperity in an increasingly demanding economic world. In this context, bitcoin could represent a monetary alternative that governments cannot manipulate.