Mario
Monti: we have a week to save the eurozone
Italian
prime minister warns that there is no room for failure in talks
between single currency's big four countries
26
April, 2012
Italy's
prime minister, Mario Monti, has warned of the apocalyptic
consequences of failure at next week's summit of EU leaders,
outlining a potential death spiral whose consequences would become
more political than economic.
The
Italian leader is to hold talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel of
Germany, the French president, François Hollande, and Spain's prime
minister, Mariano Rajoy, in the hope that the single currency's big
four countries can pave the way for a breakthrough at next week's
meeting.
Speaking
to the Guardian and a group of leading European newspapers, Monti
said that, without a successful outcome at the summit, "there
would be progressively greater speculative attacks on individual
countries, with harassment of the weaker countries". The attacks
would be focused not only on those who had failed to respect EU
guidelines, but also on those like Italy, which he said had abided by
the rules "but which carry with them from the past a high debt".
Monti
warned: "A large part of Europe would find itself having to
continue to put up with very high interest rates that would then
impact on the states and also indirectly on firms. This is the direct
opposite of what is needed for economic growth."
Outlining
the result of a failure at the talks, Monti said that, faced with
creeping economic paralysis, "the frustration of the public
towards Europe would grow", creating a vicious circle. "To
emerge in good shape from this crisis of the eurozone and the
European economy, ever more integration is needed," said Monti.
Yet, if the summit failed to resolve the problems quickly, "public
opinion, but also that of the governments and parliament… will turn
against that greater integration".
Monti
said he could see the beginnings of the process "even in the
Italian parliament, which has traditionally been pro-European and no
longer is".
He
made his remarks hours after his predecessor, Silvio Berlusconi,
acknowledged that his party had bled support because of its backing
for the Monti government's unpopular budgetary measures and spoke
openly for the first time of the electoral advantage it could derive
from torpedoing Monti's non-party cabinet of technocrats.
Monti
signalled that the key eurozone leaders were working on a plan
designed to halt the spread of debt contagion while satisfying
Germany's refusal to sanction financial irresponsibility. The plan,
he said, was one of the "absolutely necessary" outcomes of
next week's summit.
The
first outcome, he said, would be a clear sign of the eurozone's
willingness to integrate further "in such a way that Europeans
know where they're going… [and] the markets are convinced that,
having given birth to the euro, the will [of the member states] to
make it indissoluble and irrevocable is there and will be
strengthened by other steps towards integration".
He
warned: "There may not be – indeed, there will not be – a
fully-fledged, detailed blueprint, but there will some strong
elements and a short road – I hope short, a few months – to get
from there to the overall project."
Other
minimum requirements were "a fuller banking union, with advances
in terms of integrated, and if possible unified, supervision";
"a European deposit guarantee" system; and the plan that
will be on the table on Friday for "new market-friendly policy
mechanisms" to help out countries under attack – provided they
had complied with EU demands for fiscal discipline.
On
Thursday figures indicating that the eurozone is slipping into
recession heightened fears that Italy will follow Spain in asking
Brussels for rescue funds. Only a strong performance from Germany
stopped the currency union from contracting in the first quarter. But
separate data showed the German private sector suffered a severe
downturn in May, made worse by a slump in manufacturing.
The
German services sector continued to expand, but this solitary piece
of good news is unlikely to keep the eurozone from recession in the
second quarter, especially after both manufacturing and services
contracted in France.
Elsewhere,
the US suffered a slowdown in growth across the manufacturing sector
and China registered its eighth consecutive contraction in
production.
Without
recourse to strongly growing export markets, Italy can expect to see
its growth hit for another year, analysts said.
Monti
said the proposed new mechanism would kick in "when there is a
recognition by the European authorities of respect for the rules on
public finance and structural reforms". Making intervention
conditional on good behaviour could offer a way of providing relief
for countries like Italy and Spain, while meeting German demands for
fiscal discipline.
Monti
avoided giving details but said he was "very favourable" to
the purchase of the bonds of countries under attack. The present
system, of assistance to the banking sector by way of the state, led
to an increase in public debt that raised the yields – and cut the
value – of government bonds, which in turn weakened the finances of
the banks, creating "a disagreeable spiral… That is why
measures to de-couple this are being studied", he said.
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