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The Euro – Past, Present and Future. Kurt Huebner Institute for European Studies at the University of British Columbia. What Kind of Crisis Are W e Talking About?. Layers of crises Crisis of financial capitalism Financial crisis the mother of all crises
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The Euro – Past, Present and Future Kurt Huebner Institute for European Studies at the University of British Columbia
What Kind of Crisis Are We Talking About? • Layers of crises • Crisis of financial capitalism • Financial crisis the mother of all crises • Peripheral debt crises as result of failed regimes of accumulation • Eurozone architecture crisis • Political crisis
Melange • History shows that financial crises can generate sovereign debt crises • Sovereign debt crisis of eurozone economies kick-started by Greece… • and replicated in Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy • …contagion fers abound
Endgame Phase: Refinancing Challenges Ahead • Banks are international in life but national in death: Banking crisis ahead? • Eurozone entered recession: reduction in GDP growth results in rise of debt ratio and thus aggravation of crisis • Disconnect between political crisis management and financial market expectations • Procrastination as crisis management mode • Refinancing needs as test dates • No private liquidity problem…. • But trust problem • Loss of access to financial markets/unsustainable yield
Due Dates for Greek government bonds in billion Euro Source: Der Spiegel (2011)
What do such figures tell us? • Not very much in ‘normal times’ as government bonds are seen as secure/boring • Very much in troubled times: Risk evaluation changes and financial markets tend to overshoot • Public debt ratio depends from nominal annual GDP growth rate, nominal interest rate and the primary public budget change. If an economy, like Italy, has a debt ratio of 120% and let us say a growth rate of GDP of 1 % and a nominal refinancing rate of 5%, then the primary budget just show a surplus of 4% in order to keep the debt ratio constant • So, what is the crisis all about?
Challenges • Avoiding insolvency and thus avoiding banking crisis • Dealing with self-fulfilling prophecies • Keeping access to financial markets… • ..to reasonable conditions • Stimulating economic growth • Reshaping the political architecture of the Euro • Creating reasonable convergence/divergence
‘Euro: Failed Project?’ • Majority of North American economists warned early on, even though with varying and mostly falsified reasons • Markets seemed convinced of the Euro and promoted it to the second international reserve currency • Strong appreciation against shaken US-Dollar • …and then things changed dramatically
Construction Flaws of the Euro • Narrow mandate of the ECB • Full-fledged liberalization project without EU-wide mode of regulation • National regulatory bodies and EU-wide financial markets • Flawed SGP • Missing exit rules • Missing bankruptcy rules • Missing fiscal union with taxation power • Reliance on monetary convergence indicators.. • Missing competitiveness issues
Incentive Misalignment • Average rates Germany Spain Greece 1999-2007 • Nominal i-rate 3.8% 3.9% 4.4% • Inflation rate 1.8% 3.3% 3.5% • Real i-rate 2.o% 0.6% 0.9% • Savings incentive in Germany; savings surplus generate capital outflow: S > I, thus CA surplus • Easy and cheap funding of public budget deficits. • Inflation gap also made private credits relatively cheap
Original Sin • Governments issue bonds in a currency which they have no control over • Control sits with the ECB: loss of exchange rate tool and autonomous interest rate policy • In case of problems governments are running into bad equilibria: Debt ratio unsustainable increase of risk premium austerity reduction of growth rate debt unsustainability self-fulfilling prophecy
Fundamentals and Financial Market Responses • UK –Spain comparison: Not all crises are equal… • Bank of England a different institution than ECB • Bank exposure
Policy Implications • ΔS =(r – g)D , where S is the primary budget surplus, r is the nominal interest rate on the government debt, g is the nominal growth rate of the economy and D is the government debt to GDP ratio • Spain needs a much higher primary budget surplus! • Spain pays the price for original sin
Crises • Not all crises are equal • Financialization crises in Ireland, UK, and US • Soft budget constraint crises in Greece, Italy, Portugal • Competitiveness crises in Greece, Spain, Portugal, and partially in Italy, France and Belgium • Clientelist states in Greece and Italy
Divergence Reigns Surplus current account economies: Germany, Scandinavia, (Netherlands, Luxembourg) Relatively strong fiscal positions Relatively good labor market performance • Deficit current account economies: • Greece, Portugal, Spain, Italy • Weak fiscal positions • Weak labor market performance • Weak competitiveness
Crisis Management • Treating the crisis as purely a public debt crisis....is not meeting the challenges: • ‘Instead, it (EU crisis management) focuses on what we consider to be a one-sided approach by emphasizing fiscal austerity without a strong and consistent program to raise the growth potential of the economies of the eurozone’….
…. • We also believe that the agreement (EU December accord) is predicated on only partial recognition of the source of the crisis: that the current financial turmoil stems primarily from fiscal profligacy at the periphery…In our view, however, the financial problems facing the eurozone are as much a consequence of rising external imbalances and divergences in competitiveness…’
Paradox of Thrift • Austerity meets the paradox of thrift (Greece, Ireland, UK…) • EFSF + ESM : Big enough? • The implications of losing triple A rating: France and Austria out…loss in trust may play out badly in case expectations turn sour again
Small Bazookas billion Euro August 2011: Euro-Rescue-Mechanism up to 750 bn. Euro (ends 2013) 2013: European Stability Mechanism (ESM): capital/securities around 620 bn. Euro EU Member states increased the Funds’volume to 440 bn Euro
Political Constraints • Eurobonds of some form would add an alternative to US Treasury and potentially attract funds • Yet, German government opposes, and so does the German Supreme Court • Alternatives are designed but currently politically not feasible
ECB as Stealth Saviour • ECB a unique central bank due to its foundation treaty • Highly contested institution • Stealth actor in regards to quantitative easing • Lender of last resort in a emergency kind of way
Scenarios • Eurozone stays intact and gets austerity injections: Weak growth, high unemployment, retrench of the welfare state; loss of reserve currency status… • Greece leaves: Strong depreciation of new/old Greek currency; exclusion from international capital markets; insolvency; bank runs; contagion speculation; pressure on ‘weak candidates’… • Germany and likeminded economies leave: Strong appreciation of the currency; negative effects on price competitiveness; factual split of EU; market size shrinks…