Patience needed to resolve complex euro zone crisis
In the past, they assumed, without much inquiry as to why, that Greek
government bonds were no more risky than German government bonds, simply
because Germany and Greece had the same currency.
They took no interest in the internal politics, or relative
competitiveness, of Greece and Germany, a misunderstanding that often
also
encompassed economic commentators, especially in the English language
media, then and now, unduly influential in the mind of bond market
participants. In the wake of the Lehman collapse, everything changed.
The slightest political ripple now sends amplified shock waves
through bond markets, and the interest rates charged to different
countries within the euro zone vary greatly. Long ignored indices are
now scrutinised obsessively.Bond buyers and economists, having ignored
the EU political system for years, now crave complete and definitive
answers from it, and they want those answers yesterday! Of course, the
markets worry about the viability of the public finances of individual
states or their banks, but of even greater concern is whether a
particular state will stay in the euro in all circumstances. A country
leaving the euro could impose an immediate and shocking loss on lenders.
So the first priority for the markets is convincing them that, no
matter what, nobody is going to leave the euro.
That is a matter of political conviction, not macroeconomic analysis.
After that, everything else can be negotiated.
But the political leaders of the euro zone come at things from a very
different angle. While they understand the bond buyers’ craving for
certainty, they are engaged in a complex multidimensional political
negotiation, in which they have to balance the interests of 17 different
sets of national taxpayers, some of whom want to shift liabilities and
others of whom who want to take on as little liability as possible.
The political negotiation is further complicated by the fact that the
EU does not yet have the legal power to do some of the things it needs
to do.
And some of its members want to trade agreement on new powers for
national concessions. Britain is the most outstanding example, but more
recently Italy played that game. In Ireland, one political party wanted
to veto the ESM, though beneficial to Ireland, simply to get concessions
on something else. This sort of silly thing goes on often in EU
negotiations, because EU negotiations are conducted by humans, not by
angels.
While there is an EU, the people who make the final decisions for the
union are national politicians, elected by national electorates who
frequently do not understand one another very well. Or choose not to do
so. The cheap caricaturing of Germany in some other EU countries has
been matched by equally juvenile caricatures in parts of the German
press of countries, like Greece. Sometimes the critics have a point, as
when Germans complain about the possibility of extending their credit to
countries, like France, which are reducing their retirement age to 60,
while Germany feels it must raise its own to 70 to maintain German
creditworthiness.
As well as making decisions, leaders have to bring their parliaments,
which reflect these very diverse electorates, along. Sometimes they need
a two-thirds majority, as in Germany, or a referendum, as in Ireland.
To use a construction analogy, the markets want the EU to produce a
fully constructed and furnished building in time for next week’s bond
auction. But the politicians are trying to build the foundations without
having finalised the architectural drawings, while simultaneously
arguing about the height of the building.
That’s politics, and political negotiation. No one is going to show
their full hand until they are satisfied that everyone else is going to
do
likewise. But commentators criticise the outcome of individual
meetings as if it were an academic exercise, and the euro zone leaders,
“platonic guardians” unconstrained by anything except the requirement to
produce a theoretically symmetrical outcome. Take one notable
commentator (Wolfgang Munchau in the Financial Times) who announced
recently that the crisis will now last 20 years, just because German
chancellor Angela Merkel had not accepted that there would be joint euro
zone insurance of deposits in euro zone banks before she had seen what
level of central scrutiny of banks other countries would accept.
Yet, what did he expect? Dr Merkel will not show her hand until she
has to, any more than Taoiseach Enda Kenny. Likewise, it’s unrealistic
of people like Nouriel Roubini to demand that the size of the ESM fund
be doubled or trebled now, before anyone knows for sure whether the
intended beneficiaries will do all that is required of them to deserve
the money.
Uncertainty about the size of the fund is essential as an incentive
to get debtor governments to do the things they need to do.
The euro area summit statement of June 29th said it was “imperative
to break the vicious circle between banks and sovereigns”. But it also
said that, for EU funds to be directly invested in banks, an “effective
(European) supervisory mechanism” would first have to be established,
and that any injection of funds would have to be accompanied by
conditions that would be “institution specific, sector specific, and
economy wide”.
A deal will have to be negotiated in respect of each individual bank,
each national banking sector and each country.
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