The European Union will not unravel — only its German-dominated governance will change
  • There is no constituency strong enough to wreck the European project.

  • Germany's euro partners can force Berlin to change its economic policies.

  • The euro-denominated assets are sound investment choices.

Euroskeptics have no chance – not even Brexiters, or Italy's ascendant Five Star Movement and League parties.

The idea of a united Europe is a centuries-old dream come true. It has survived massive butcheries perpetrated by Charlemagne, Napoleon and Hitler who — in their own different ways — thought they could unite and dominate the continent through fire, terror and untold crimes.

The United Kingdom joined the European common market — a fledgling free-trade area — in the early 1970s, because that's all they wanted. They voted to leave when, after decades of slippages toward an increasingly federal structure, they realized they did not want to board up the Palace of Westminster in rampant sovereignty transfers to the EU Commission.

But London is now fighting to remain part of the EU's genuine free-trade area (i.e., the single market) — without telling the British people about political implications of an arrangement guaranteeing the free movement of goods, services and factors of production.

Italy is a very different case. Rome's EU membership was enthusiastically enshrined in a treaty solemnly celebrated on the Capitoline Hill — hence the Treaty of Rome — in March 1957. Ever since, a country that formally reunited itself during a period of nearly 60 years in the 19th century, has been one of the staunchest supporters of the European project.

Italians mismanaged their economy

That is still the case. Correctly reading the mood of the Italians, the country's President Sergio Mattarella told a few weeks ago the leaders of the Five Star Movement and the League not to come back to him for approval of a government advocating Italy's exit from the EU and the euro area.

They did not listen, came up with the wrong people and Mattarella sent them packing. Ultimately, they had to present a new government to pass the president's EU screening test.

Mattarella knew that the idea of leaving the EU was one of those Italian political jokes that Germans take seriously. Indeed, anybody who knows anything about Italy also knows that the Italian people, and Italy's political establishment of all stripes, are not against the European Union. No, they are only emphatically against — what they apparently believe — is a union run by Germany on German terms.

That's an unfortunate — and fundamentally incorrect — view of how things really stand, and how they should be. It is a ploy to hide the sad truth that Italian politicians have gravely mismanaged their economy. Germany had relatively little to do with that.