Economists Can't Solve Europe's Crisis
Often the most difficult thing to do in life is to see something for what it really is. The imbroglio in Europe today offers a crystal clear case
CNBC,
27 May, 2012
To
call the continent’s current predicament a “debt crisis,” as
virtually everyone does, is to obscure its true nature.
It
is only a debt crisis in the sense that high government debt levels
catalyzed the reconsideration—and repricing—of risk across the
region. (Recall the October 2009 post-election confession from
Greece’s then-incoming PASOK party that the nation was running an
annual deficit much higher than what the previous administration had
reported.)
But
the situation could just as easily, and perhaps more accurately, be
called a “growth crisis.” In fact, the correlation between weak
growth and high borrowing costs may even be higher than that of high
debt levels and high borrowing costs.
Spain,
for example, at the end of 2011 had a relatively manageable 68.5%
level of government debt to gross domestic product (Germany’s
amounted to 81.5%; America’s was 103%).
Its
total public and private debt levels were far higher, of course, as
were Ireland’s, thanks in part to real-estate bubbles and
over-large banking sectors.
That,
however, is a different kind of problem than the strictly government
debt crisis which most who use the term have in mind—and one that
might seem to argue for a different kind of “solution,” by the
way, than strict fiscal austerity measures.
Even
that only describes the symptoms of Europe's, or in fact the euro
zone's, true predicament, which is this: that it has tried to operate
as a single economic body—namely, a 17-member fixed exchange-rate
and monetary policy zone—without being a single political one.
As
it turns out, you can do that for a certain length of time while
underlying economic performance is reasonably aligned. The euro
zone’s time, however, is up.
The
disparities between Greece and Germany have become too great. And so
two things have become clear; first, that the euro zone cannot
continue to exist as an economic body in its current form without
true political union.
Second,
that the logic of trying to do so in the first place now looks
extremely unsound— unless, and this is an extremely important
point; unless it was never about the economics in the first place.
Which it wasn’t.
Take
this characterization, from a 1998 speech by then-Bank of England
monetary policy committee member Willem Buiter: “the [European
Monetary Union] is a major step on the road to ‘ever closer union’
in Europe. It represents the opening of a new chapter in the European
federalists’ agenda, a significant transfer of national sovereignty
to a supra-national institution.”
Indeed.
The euro was quite plainly used to commit Europe to political union.
And so from that point of view, the region’s current “debt
crisis” in fact presents itself as an opportunity for policy makers
and politicians to take another major step—or to perhaps go all the
way—in transferring national power to Brussels (which is all that
today’s various bailout funds or proposed euro-bond schemes
ultimately amount to).
In
so doing, they clearly have the backing of financial markets, which
threaten to seize up entirely if the euro is scrapped.
Nevertheless,
that should not be confused with having the backing of European
citizens to make what is ultimately a political decision—and
perhaps the most critical one the region has yet faced.
The
questions which each and every European ought now to be considering
at the moment are these: Are you willing to diminish your national
power within Europe in order to maintain, if not enhance, your
regional power in the world? Are you ready to become a European
first, and a German, or a Spaniard, or a Greek, second?
This
is not a rhetorical exercise; writing in the London Evening Standard,
Goldman Sachs Asset Management Chairman Jim O’Neill said one of
the “three
easy steps”by
which Europe could solve its crisis would be to declare that “from
now on, no euro country will individually participate in G7, G8, or
G30 meetings. They would all be represented by the eurozone,” as
one entity.
But
while nationalistic fervor has certainly intensified of late, support
for the euro remains strong, and fear of the consequences of a euro
zone break-up may yet carry more weight. Which isn’t to say that is
the “right” outcome here, either.
If
anything, it recalls a popular phrase from the founding time of
America’s union: “Those who would give up essential liberty to
purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor
safety.”
The
key question for Europeans today is whether or not sacrificing some
of their national identity for the sake of supra-national, regional
identity amounts to a sacrifice of their “essential liberty.”
That
is a fundamentally political, historical, even philosophical
question; it is not one that economics or its
practitioners—particularly those who aren’t themselves
Europeans—can or should decide.
To
reiterate: economics itself needs to be “ring-fenced” here, to
borrow a phrase that is currently being overused—and, one could
argue, misused—in the context of Europe’s crisis.
If
anything, the crisis, which has hastened the shift of political
decision-making onto the laps of economists, underscores the urgent
need for economics to be ring-fenced in matters of public policy in
Europe and beyond.
Polls
may tell you what seems popular. They can show you the political
obstacles to reform. But they cannot tell you what is the right thing
to do.
They
are not a reliable guide to good economic policy, particularly in a
crisis, when all the options seem terrible to any sensible person.”
That,
in fact, was U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in a
commencement address to the Johns Hopkins University’s School of
Advanced International Studies over the weekend.
The
trouble, however, is that it isn’t just the fickle nature of
popular attitudes that has let politicians give themselves—and
their responsibilities—over to economists, or to the seemingly
impartial “verdicts” delivered by the up-and-down gyrations of
financial markets.
It
is the fickle nature of popular opinion combined with a lack of
guile, vision, or direction from politicians themselves.
Politicians
today appear to have absconded their own role in the admittedly
difficult democratic process.
Public
opinion may not always be the most reliable gauge of what the right
thing is at any given time to do, but certainly neither are financial
markets or economics.
To
quote Deirdre McCloskey, herself an economist, modern economics “is
the science of Prudence-Only, setting the other virtues [like
justice, temperance, and fortitude] aside.” Prudence, in other
words, is useful—but to a point.
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