The euro zone
The world’s biggest economic problem
Deflation in the
euro zone is all too close and extremely dangerous
Oct 25th 2014 | From the print edition / http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21627620-deflation-euro-zone-all-too-close-and-extremely-dangerous-worlds-biggest-economic?fsrc=scn%2Ffb%2Fwl%2Fpe%2Fworldbig
THE world economy is not in good shape. The
news from America and Britain has been reasonably positive, but Japan ’s economy is struggling and China ’s growth
is now slower than at any time since 2009. Unpredictable dangers abound,
particularly from the Ebola epidemic, which has killed thousands in West Africa and jangled nerves far beyond. But the
biggest economic threat, by far, comes from continental Europe .
Now that German growth has stumbled, the
euro area is on the verge of tipping into its third recession in six years. Its
leaders have squandered two years of respite, granted by the pledge of Mario
Draghi, the European Central Bank’s president, to do “whatever it takes” to
save the single currency. The French and the Italians have dodged structural
reforms, while the Germans have insisted on too much austerity. Prices are
falling in eight European countries. The zone’s overall inflation rate has slipped
to 0.3% and may well go into outright decline next year. A region that makes up
almost a fifth of world output is marching towards stagnation and deflation.
Optimists, both inside and outside Europe,
often cite the example of Japan .
It fell into deflation in the late-1990s, with unpleasant but not apocalyptic
consequences for both itself and the world economy. But the euro zone poses far
greater risks. Unlike Japan ,
the euro zone is not an isolated case: from China
to America
inflation is worryingly low, and slipping. And, unlike Japan , which
has a homogenous, stoic society, the euro area cannot hang together through
years of economic sclerosis and falling prices. As debt burdens soar from Italy to Greece , investors will take fright,
populist politicians will gain ground, and—sooner rather than later—the euro
will collapse.
This parrot has ceased to be
Although many Europeans, especially the
Germans, have been brought up to fear inflation, deflation can be still more
savage (see article). If people and firms expect prices to fall, they stop
spending, and as demand sinks, loan defaults rise. That was what happened in
the Great Depression, with especially dire consequences in Germany in the
early 1930s.
So it is worrying that, of the 46 countries
whose central banks target inflation, 30 are below their target. Some price
falls are welcome. Tumbling oil prices, in particular, have given consumers’
incomes a boost (see article). But slowing prices and stagnant wages owe more
to weak demand in the economy and roughly 45m workers are jobless in the rich
OECD countries. Investors are starting to expect lower inflation even in
economies, such as America ’s,
that are growing at reasonable rates. Worse, short-term interest rates are
close to zero in many economies, so central banks cannot cut them to boost
spending. The only ammunition comes from quantitative easing and other forms of
printing money.
The global lowflation threat is a good
reason for most central banks to keep monetary policy loose. It is also, in the
longer term, a prompt to look at revising inflation targets a shade upwards.
But the immediate problem is the euro area.
Continental Europe’s economy has plenty of
big underlying weaknesses, from poor demography to heavy debt and sclerotic
labour markets. But it has also made enormous policy mistakes. France , Italy
and Germany
have all eschewed growth-enhancing structural reforms. The euro zone is particularly
vulnerable to deflation because of Germany ’s insistence on too much
fiscal austerity and the ECB’s timidity. Even now, with economies contracting,
Germany is still obsessed with deficit reduction for all governments, while its
opposition to monetary easing has meant that the ECB, to the obvious despair of
Mr Draghi, has done far less than other big central banks in terms of
quantitative easing (notwithstanding this week’s move to start buying “covered
bonds”).
If there was ever logic to this incrementalism,
it has run out. As budgets shrink and the ECB struggles to convince people that
it can stop prices slipping, a descent into deflation seems all too probable.
Signs of stress are beginning to appear in both the markets and politics. Bond
yields in Greece
have risen sharply, as support for the left-wing Syriza party has surged (see
article). France and Germany are trading rhetorical blows over a new
budget proposal coming out of Paris .
Joining the bleedin’ choir invisible
If Europe
is to stop its economy getting worse, it will have to stop its self-destructive
behaviour. The ECB needs to start buying sovereign bonds. Germany ’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, should
allow France and Italy to slow
the pace of their fiscal cuts; in return, those countries should accelerate
structural reforms. Germany ,
which can borrow money at negative real interest rates, could spend more
building infrastructure at home.
That would help, but not be enough. It is a
bit like the early years of the euro debacle, before Mr Draghi’s
whatever-it-takes pledge, when half-solutions only fed the crisis. Something
radical is needed. The hitch is that European law bans many textbook solutions,
such as ECB purchases of newly issued government bonds. The best legal option
is to couple a dramatic increase in infrastructure spending with bond-buying by
the ECB. Thus the European Investment Bank could launch a big (say €300
billion, or $383 billion) expansion in investments such as faster cross-border
rail links or more integrated electricity grids—and raise the money by issuing
bonds, which the ECB could buy in the secondary market. Another possibility
would be to redefine the EU’s deficit rules to exclude investment spending,
which would allow governments to run bigger deficits, again with the ECB
providing a backstop.
Behind all this sits a problem of political
will (see article). Mrs Merkel and the Germans seem prepared to take action only
when the single currency is on the verge of catastrophe. Throughout Europe
people are hurting—in Italy
and Spain
youth unemployment is above 40%. Voters vented their fury with the established
order in the EU’s parliamentary elections earlier this summer, and got very
little change. Another descent into the abyss will test their patience. And
once deflation has an economy in its jaws, it is very hard to shake off. Europe ’s leaders are running out of time.
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