Even if it is not Bitcoin its good to hear that a Former Finance minister is weighing options and is willing to look for alternatives perhaps only because its a crisis mode but most don't even bother considering other possible options.
It's a pity hes not in power but he likely still has some influence and a wide net to pass ideas that could work for them which led to a retroactive scandal ah Greece.
http://www.other-news.info/2015/07/something-is-rotten-with-the-eurozones-hideous-restrictions-on-sovereignty/Hmm interesting was the related article from FT sort of.
A paradox lurks in the foundations of the eurozone . Governments within the monetary union lack a central bank that has their back, while the central bank lacks a government to support it.
This paradox cannot be eliminated without fundamental institutional changes . But there are steps member states can take to ameliorate some of its negative effects. One we contemplated during my tenure at the Greek ministry of finance focused on the chronic liquidity shortage of a financially stressed public sector and its impact on the long-suffering private sector.