The
initial enthusiasm of the financial markets over the
last European summit was short lived as the new ''kick
down the can, grand plan'' to solve the crisis was
agreed upon.
To bolster the market, the remnants of the famous
EFSF 440 billions Euros - which, never forget, was
also provided by the periphery countries it was supposed
''to save'' - should be used to leverage new instruments
aimed at forming a potential of, say, 1 trillion euros.
The idea is to insure 20% of the newly issued sovereign
debt of risk countries and to create special purpose
vehicles (SPVs) - a term that conjures up flashbacks
of the infamous toxic assets. These SPVs would be
composed mainly of risky sovereign debt with a dash
of EFSF money and a touch of IMF funds (so to get
an AAA rating). They would then be sold off to emerging
countries.
This is all wishful thinking. The most cynical commentators
(here,
here
and here)
have already pointed this out. Greek debt will be
somewhat reduced, but its competitiveness will not
be restored. Markets will not be assured by the insurance
plan and emerging countries will not buy Europe’s
toxic assets.
Many authorities (e.g. here
and here),
along with the U.S. administration, have stated that
only a firm ECB unlimited offer to guarantee European
sovereign debt can stabilise and solve the present
situation. This is without having to buy a single
bond. It would not solve the long-run European imbalances
generated by the irresponsible structural elements
of the creation of the European Monetary Union (EMU),
but it would help.
For room to manoeuvre on carrying fiscal deficits,
for the benefit of kick-starting growth, a two-pronged
initiative is needed from the ECB. First, to force
interest rates on all European sovereign debt, aiming
to return roughly to the German level. Second, for
core European nations such as Spain and Italy to focus
on stabilising their sovereign debt to GDP (no reduction)
ratio.
This would be the start of a more comprehensive solution
that would require, inter alia, a stronger wage and
price dynamics in core countries and pro-active public
industrial policies in the periphery.
We may wonder why Germany is against the ECB intervention.
The ECB inherited the Bundesbank’s role of watchdog
on wage moderation at the inception of the German
''economic miracle''. Pursuing wage and price moderation
has been a consistent element of German post-WW2 policy,
taking advantage of the various fixed exchange systems
prevailing in this period - Bretton Woods, the EMS
and currently the EMU (Cesaratto
& Stirati 2011). Letting the ECB act as a
genuine European central bank, that is as the lender
of last resort for all European governments - as the
FED, the BoE or the BoJ do - would undermine Germany’s
mercantilistic, i.e. extremely export oriented, growth
model.
However, either Germany acknowledges a reshaping of
this growth model, beginning to act as the European
locomotive and not as a separate entity or it will
have to accept a transfer-union. Otherwise the Euro
will rancorously collapse.
As many authorities have pointed out, too many German
policy makers still do not to understand the meaning
of a currency union. They are perpetuating a point
of view characterised by a certain degree of ignorance
(here).
As in a classical gold standard, the countries with
current account deficits cannot make the adjustments
alone. On the contrary, it must mostly be achieved
through the contribution of surplus countries if avoiding
disastrous debt-deflation troubles in deficit countries
is a shared aim (e.g. Unctad
2011, VI/D).
Mario Draghi (as well as Bini-Smaghi) knows all this
very well, and this is the reason why the world
is looking at him with hope of having a genuine
central banker in place. But there is a political
limit to what super-Mario can do.
Last Sunday the Merkel-Sarkozy tag-team humiliated
Italy in order to find a culprit to conceal their
inability to find a definitive solution to the crisis.
Instead of accepting the blame, the burlesque Italian
prime minister should have pointed out that in no
sense is Italy responsible for the current crisis
(the Italian debt has been there for decades without
much trouble). The point is rather that German and
French banks are liable for the present situation;
mostly resulting from the Germany’s lack of what Charles
Kindleberger would have called economic leadership
(here).
Italy and the rest of the periphery, as well as France,
should refuse the imposed deflationary measures as
useless. A new consensus is emerging, supported even
by the IMF
and, it seems, by the troika supervising Greece (here
and here),
that an ''expansionary fiscal retrenchment'' only
exists in the mind of neoliberal columnists like Alberto
Alesina. It is just a tragedy that the surrounding
European nations don’t unite to bring Germany back
to reason and reality, once again.
* This article was originally
published in the Social Europe Journal and is available
at: http://www.social-europe.eu/2011/11/from-the-failure-of-europe-to-a-possible-growth-in-the-real-economy/
November
8, 2011.
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