The euro zone
That sinking feeling (again)
If Germany , France
and Italy cannot find a way
to refloat Europe ’s economy, the euro may yet
be doomed
Aug 30th 2014 | From the print edition / http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21614137-if-germany-france-and-italy-cannot-find-way-refloat-europes-economy-euro-may-yet-be
JUST a few
months ago the euro zone’s leaders believed that, having weathered the storm,
they were set fair at last. Buoyed by the promise of Mario Draghi, the
president of the European Central Bank, to do “whatever it takes” to support
the currency, confidence had seeped back into the continent. Growth seemed to
be returning, albeit at a slow pace. Troubled peripheral countries were
recovering, after bail-outs and painful measures to cut budget deficits and
improve competitiveness. Unemployment, especially among the young, was still
desperately high, but at least in most countries it was falling. And bond
spreads had narrowed sharply, as financial markets stopped betting that the
euro would fall apart.
It was an
illusion. In recent weeks the countries of the euro zone have begun to take in
water once again. Their collective GDP stagnated in the second quarter: Italy fell back into outright recession, French
GDP was flat and even mighty Germany
saw an unexpectedly large fall in output (see article). The third quarter looks
pretty unhealthy, partly because the euro zone will suffer an extra drag from
Western sanctions on Russia .
Meanwhile, inflation has fallen perilously low, to around 0.4%, far below the
near-2% target of the European Central Bank, raising fears that the zone as a
whole could fall prey to entrenched deflation. German bond yields are hovering
below 1%, another harbinger of falling prices. The euro zone stands (or
wobbles) in stark contrast with America
and Britain ,
whose economies are enjoying sustained growth.
What started more than four years ago as a
banking and sovereign-debt crisis has decayed into a growth crisis that is now
enveloping the three biggest economies. Germany is teetering on the edge of
recession. France
is mired in stagnation. Italy ’s
GDP is barely above its level when the single currency came in 15 years ago.
Since these three countries account for two-thirds of euro-zone GDP, growth in
places like Spain and the Netherlands cannot make up for their torpor.
The underlying causes of Europe ’s
new ills are three very familiar and interrelated problems. First, there is a
shortage of political leaders with the courage and conviction to push through structural
reforms to improve competitiveness and, eventually, reignite growth: the big
countries have wasted the two years bought by Mr Draghi’s “whatever it takes”
commitment. Second, public opinion is not convinced of the urgent need for deep
and radical changes. And third, despite Mr Draghi’s efforts, the monetary and
fiscal framework is too tight, throttling growth—which makes structural reforms
harder.
Clouseaunomics
Different manifestations of these problems
can be seen across the euro zone. But the country that most dramatically
epitomises all three is France .
This week its embattled Socialist president, François Hollande, was forced to
reshuffle his government to eject Arnaud Montebourg who, despite being economy
minister, was his own side’s most persistent critic from the left (see
article). Mr Hollande, who came to office in 2012 promising a painless future,
is hardly a Thatcherite reformer. But since he appointed Manuel Valls as prime
minister in March, he has at least embraced the principle of public-spending
cuts, lower taxes and structural reforms.
In theory a new and more cohesive reforming
government could make progress, but public opinion is not remotely prepared for
that. Mr Hollande is not just deeply unpopular; unlike Italy’s Matteo Renzi,
who has bravely made the case for (as yet undelivered) tough reforms, the
French president has failed to convince voters that painful change, including a
reduction in the size of the state, is inevitable. Instead, Mr Montebourg and
his chums offer the beguiling notion that, if only the euro zone scraps its
rules and allows bigger budget deficits and generous enough public spending, no
more painful reforms will be needed, because the economy will miraculously lift
itself out of danger by its own bootstraps.
Mr Montebourg’s argument is all the more
seductive because he is right about Europe’s third problem: excessive
austerity, largely forced on the continent by Germany . Mr Draghi has just
implicitly conceded that fiscal and monetary policy in the euro zone is too
tight at the annual economics jamboree in Jackson Hole .
He hinted that he was in favour of quantitative easing, which both America and
Britain have used, and he called for fiscal policy to do more to encourage
growth—a message plainly aimed at Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel. She is
the leader who insists most firmly on sticking to the euro zone’s rules on
fiscal discipline, just as it is the German Bundesbank that is most strongly
against quantitative easing.
Angie, we can say you never tried
Despite the gloom, there should be scope
here for a bargain. If Mr Hollande and Mr Renzi can show they are sincere about
structural reforms, Mrs Merkel should be willing to tolerate an easier fiscal
stance (including higher public investment in Germany ) and a looser monetary
policy. Close your eyes, and you can imagine the three leaders working with the
European Commission to complete the single market and pushing through a trade
deal with the United States .
Sadly, in the real world, Mrs Merkel has little reason to trust either France or Italy : whenever external pressure
on them has eased, they have promptly backtracked on promises of reform. And
she has just installed Jean-Claude Juncker, the do-nothing candidate, as
president of the European Commission.
So it will be hard. But without a new push
from the continent’s leaders, growth will not revive and deflation could take
hold. Japan
suffered a decade of lost growth in the 1990s, and is still struggling. But,
unlike Japan , Europe is not a single cohesive country. If the currency
union brings nothing but stagnation, joblessness and deflation, then some
people will eventually vote to leave the euro. Thanks to Mr Draghi’s promise to
put a floor under government debt, the market risk that financial pressures
could trigger a break-up has receded. But the political risk that one or more
countries decide to storm out of the single currency is rising all the time.
The euro crisis has not gone away; it is just waiting over the horizon.
From the print edition: Leaders
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