Crisis of the Eurocrats
MAY 22,
2014 / Paul Krugman / New York Times / http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/23/opinion/krugman-crisis-of-the-eurocrats.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0
A century
ago, Europe tore itself apart in what was, for
a time, known as the Great War — four years of death and destruction on an
unprecedented scale. Later, of course, the conflict was renamed World War I —
because a quarter-century later Europe did it
all over again.
But that
was a long time ago. It’s hard to imagine war in today’s Europe ,
which has coalesced around democratic values and even taken its first steps
toward political union. Indeed, as I write this, elections are being held all
across Europe , not to choose national
governments, but to select members of the European Parliament. To be sure, the
Parliament has very limited powers, but its mere existence is a triumph for the
European idea.
But here’s
the thing: An alarmingly high fraction of the vote is expected to go to
right-wing extremists hostile to the very values that made the election
possible. Put it this way: Some of the biggest winners in Europe’s election
will probably be people taking Vladimir Putin’s side in the Ukraine crisis.
The truth
is that the European project — peace guaranteed by democracy and prosperity —
is in deep trouble; the Continent still has peace, but it’s falling short on
prosperity and, in a subtler way, democracy. And, if Europe stumbles, it will
be a very bad thing not just for Europe itself
but for the world as a whole.
Why is Europe in trouble?
The
immediate problem is poor economic performance. The euro, Europe ’s
common currency, was supposed to be the culminating step in the Continent’s
economic integration. Instead, it turned into a trap. First, it created a
dangerous complacency, as investors funneled huge amounts of cash into southern
Europe , heedless of risk. Then, when the boom
turned to bust, debtor countries found themselves shackled, unable to regain
lost competitiveness without years of Depression-level unemployment.
The
inherent problems of the euro have been aggravated by bad policy. European
leaders insisted and continue to insist, in the teeth of the evidence, that the
crisis is all about fiscal irresponsibility, and have imposed savage austerity
that makes a terrible situation worse.
The good
news, sort of, is that despite all these missteps the euro is still holding
together, surprising many analysts — myself included — who thought it might
well fall apart. Why this resilience? Part of the answer is that the European
Central Bank has calmed markets by promising to do “whatever it takes” to save
the euro, up to and including buying government bonds to keep interest rates
from rising too far. Beyond that, however, the European elite remains deeply
committed to the project, and, so far, no government has been willing to break
ranks.
But the
cost of this elite cohesion is a growing distance between governments and the
governed. By closing ranks, the elite has in effect ensured that there are no
moderate voices dissenting from policy orthodoxy. And this lack of moderate
dissent has empowered groups like the National Front in France , whose
top candidate for the European Parliament denounces a “technocratic elite
serving the American and European financial oligarchy.”
The bitter
irony here is that Europe ’s elite isn’t
actually technocratic. The creation of the euro was about politics and
ideology, not a response to careful economic analysis (which suggested from the
beginning that Europe wasn’t ready for a
single currency). The same can be said of the turn to austerity: All the
economic research supposedly justifying that turn has been discredited, but the
policies haven’t changed.
And the
European elite’s habit of disguising ideology as expertise, of pretending that
what it wants to do is what must be done, has created a deficit of legitimacy.
The elite’s influence rests on the presumption of superior expertise; when
those claims of expertise are proved hollow, it has nothing to fall back on.
So far, as
I said, the elite has been able to hold things together. But we don’t know how
long this can last, and there are some very scary people waiting in the wings.
If we’re
lucky — and if officials at the European Central Bank, who are closer to being
genuine technocrats than the rest of the elite, act boldly enough against the
growing threat of deflation — we may see some real economic recovery over the
next few years. This could, in turn, offer a breathing space, a chance to get
the European project as a whole back on track.
But
economic recovery by itself won’t be enough; Europe ’s
elite needs to recall what the project is really about. It’s terrifying to see
so many Europeans rejecting democratic values, but at least part of the blame
rests with officials who seem more interested in price stability and fiscal
probity than in democracy. Modern Europe is
built on a noble idea, but that idea needs more defenders.
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