THE PLANK DECEMBER 3, 2008
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It’s important to remember that the financial crisis isn’t
just a U.S.
story--or even primarily one. True, the United States is the world’s
largest economy, but so far the downturn’s effects have been largely contained
within the economic sphere. Not so in Europe,
where observers are increasingly worried that financial exigencies could crack
the Eurozone, forcing at least a few members of the common currency pact to
leave. The guys at Baseline Scenario have been sounding the alarm for months,
pointing to widening
bond spreads between Greece
and Germany
as an indicator of diverging macroeconomic realities. Martin Feldstein likewise
points to calls by some European leaders, most notably Sarkozy, for
large-scale deficit spending to stimulate the economy, a move that could
violate the Eurozone’s fiscal deficit caps.
But that’s economics; the politics of the euro is another
thing. It’s quite an achievement that only 10 years after the Euro’s
introduction, one can hardly imagine Europe
without it. While it is still controversial in some parts of the continent, it is
an ingrained part of daily economic and cultural life in most of its major
economies. And, of course, political establishments from Rome
to Dublin have staked their very existence on the idea of a common currency. There is a security aspect as well--the euro gives countries on the
eastern periphery something to aim for, encouraging them to undertake stable,
liberal, capitalist government reforms. No matter how bad things get, euro governments may feel it necessary to keep a stiff upper lip in order to expand their sphere of influence eastward.
The risk, then, is not whether the Eurozone will need to
break apart, but that it will need to and won’t. It's a good bet that Brussels would rather make exceptions
for France’s deficit spending than try to rein it in, though it probably
wouldn’t be as accommodating for, say, Greece. And already its deficit limits
are being used by Angela Merkel of Germany as an excuse to avoid
stimulus spending, which most German economists think is vital to pull that
country out of recession. In short, the euro, rather than being an economic
tool toward political progress, could become a political shackles preventing
economic recovery.
--Clay Risen
3 comments
As recently as last summer and spring, when people here and in the newspapers were chortling about the Yankee dollar's weakness against the Euro, I said don't bet against the dollar. And asked which country's economy anyone would want to swap our economy for.
Europe can never make itself as united and as integrated as the United States. Too many languages. Too much disparity of history and economies. No central bank. Multiple governments,
We've got our problems. I'll take them over anyone else's. Including China's, certainly.
And, P.S. why would anyone want the United States to have Spanish or any other language -- Spanish is usually the one in question-- emerge as an alternate or parallel language in the U.S.. Who needs Canada's problems, let alone Europe's
- ChanRobt
December 3, 2008 at 6:37pm
Of course the Euro is still up 25% against the dollar since it was introduced a decade ago.
The comments Clay makes have been made before, in the last recession. In fact, I seem to recall a past occasion where France exceeded the deficit caps and Brussels looked the other way. My guess is that the Euro zone will pull through, and nobody that counts is going to bail on the Euro. The cost of transition alone will keep them in, and they really are reaping enormous benefits in trans-national commerce from the common currency.
- JEFF FREY
December 4, 2008 at 12:17am
Poland has damaged its economy significantly by doing everything it could to strengthen the zloty in anticipation of joining the euro--what was a thriving export economy and one that had much to benefit from in terms of trade with Russia and Ukraine, among others, has been restrained and saddled with rising unemployment as a result.
Sweden, Denmark, and Britain have held out against the euro because they see the disadvantages of being handcuffed to Greece et al rather than being able to chart their own monetary course. This is an essentially communist idea that will not, in the long term, benefit those foolish enough to go along with it.
I don't know if anyone will actually leave the euro behind just yet, but there will definately be a "go slow" attitude now among those not already in.
- Robert Powell
December 5, 2008 at 1:18pm