Fatefully for the future of the eurozone, the problem of fiscal control was cast by German politics already from the early 2000s as one of equity within a federal transfer union. Well before the Greek crisis broke, the most prosperous regions of West Germany had made clear their refusal to take responsibility for other people’s debts, German or otherwise. The argument that the debts “shouldered by the West” to pay for spending “in the East” had generated huge orders for West German business—in effect exports within Germany from West to East—cut no ice.