For the benefit of American Spectator readers, I hereby
offer a handy list of Frequently Asked Questions about the Eurozone
crisis that can help bring the whole messy picture into focus. I
should first point out that many of these questions aren’t being
asked at all on the Continent, and when they are, they aren’t being
answered.
What Did the EU Actually Agree to at its Recent
Summit?
Good question. The actual results of the summit were
somewhat overshadowed by British Prime Minister David Cameron’s
refusal to join in the Eurozone’s suicide pact. Indeed, that’s what
was agreed — a suicide pact, not the advertised fiscal union. The
heads of government that joined in the pact agreed that they would
balance their budgets, which are to be policed by the unelected,
unaccountable European Commission. This does nothing to solve the
euro’s structural problems and rides roughshod over the entire
principle of democracy (as I have noted
elsewhere). The result will be a
devastating, long-term recession in the periphery of Europe, and
presumably popular revolt in several countries. Sadly, those
popular revolts are more likely to be of the socialist variety than
revolutions for liberty.
What Do They Mean by Fiscal
Union?
Much of the diplomatic effort involved in the summit was
supposedly directed at creating a fiscal union (they ended up with
what they called a “fiscal compact”). The rationale is supposedly
to make the euro currency union more like the stable U.S. dollar
currency union, which is also a fiscal union. Yet the U.S. fiscal
union is nothing like the EU fiscal compact. The United States has
no power over state budget deficits, and there is an implicit
understanding that a state in budget crisis will not be bailed out.
That has certainly been the historical case, as when
Arkansas defaulted in 1933. The state was
eventually forced to restructure its debt to its creditors’
satisfaction. Therefore, a fiscal union that gives central control
over national budgets and the promise of national bailouts, as in
the EU, is completely unlike the U.S. fiscal union.
What Did David Cameron Actually
Do?
David Cameron did not veto an EU treaty. There was no
treaty to veto. He did not so much veto as demur from further
integration. The problem is that his attempt to repatriate some
powers to London from Brussels was rejected outright. Any further
attempt is likely to be met with similar hostility. This means that
his election promise of repatriating powers will be impossible to
keep without British withdrawal from the EU. Thus, Cameron may
therefore be forced to offer the British people a referendum on EU
membership. If the EU is in the process of disorderly collapse, the
withdrawal option would probably win. Britain would then be free
once more to look to the western seas and the rest of the world for
its place in the world, a return to its historical norm.
What Caused This Problem in the First
Place?
The problem was one about which British Euroskeptics
warned from the start of the European monetary project. European
countries gave up a key weapon in combating recession — the
ability to revalue their currency. For example, when Italian and
Greek wage levels needed to fall as a result of suddenly decreased
demand, those countries could have devalued their currencies,
making their economies more competitive quickly. Instead,
governments have been forced into austerity, raising taxes and
cutting spending, and unable to pursue supply-side reforms because
those are forbidden by other pan-European legislation. The
inevitable result is deepening recession, requiring more austerity.
Their debt, also denominated in euros, is also worth more than they
can afford. Not only are they paying high yields because of the
probability of default, they cannot offer to pay new debt in a
devalued currency, either. That’s why they are demanding
bailouts.
Where Will the Money Come
from?
If the Eurozone is to survive, its member nations need to
recapitalize their banks so that they can continue to lend money to
the nations and avoid collapse themselves. The problem is that
government debt has become a toxic asset worse than any subprime
mortgage, because of the chronic weaknesses of those countries’
economies, caused by the problems discussed above. The trouble is
that the money for capitalization has to come from somewhere.
Where? Private savings are already at record levels. There is no
growth. The German people refuse to countenance the European
Central Bank printing money, and they certainly aren’t about to pay
off other nations’ debts. There is a gaping black hole at the
center of the Eurozone’s finances. Thankfully, the U.S. has no
current plans to fill that hole. And did I mention that
international financial regulations decree that government debt is
risk-free?
What Can the Eurozone Do to Save
Itself?
The answer to this is usually “fiscal union,” but unless
that is accompanied by a presently unacceptable political union,
the democratic deficit is too great for that. The only feasible
answer is significant supply-side reforms that will allow German
and Italian workers to compete using their own comparative
advantages. However, that is anathema to the idea of the Single
Market, which is what the euro was designed to facilitate in the
first place. Thus, we must face up to the idea that the Eurozone
will collapse, either in a structured fashion, with Germany
throwing members out of the club, or in a messy fashion, with
sovereign defaults, bank collapses, and socialist
revolts.
What Will the Eurozone Collapse Mean for
America?
In a word, pain. The United States will be badly affected
by the collapse, with a lot of value wiped off the markets, bank
failures, and a significant reduction in global trade. The worst
possible thing we could do is to throw American money at the
problem. The structural issues are just too great. We need to
prepare ourselves for the worst with genuine supply-side reform
here, deregulating our economy to make it more nimble in response
to a massive global recession not of our making. At least the price
of oil will probably tumble sharply.
Nemo| 12.16.11 @ 7:07AM
Let us hope David Cameron enjoyed the experience of being a man enough to want repeat it. But so far, it is not a victory but a Dunkirk - a retreat from the cliff-edge of total disaster.
Kevin| 12.16.11 @ 6:51PM
Well, put. Though they haven't done the Dunkirk yet. That'll be when Cameron's own backbenchers force him into a vote to leave the EU altogether.
donserge| 12.16.11 @ 7:51AM
The collapse of the Eurozone is not getting enough press here because, I suspect, we have many of the same underlying problems as Europe does. This has the potential to be much worse than the Great Depression and policies implemented like FDR did will only make things worse. We can guess what Obama would do but what would president "anybody but Obama" do?
D. Singh| 12.16.11 @ 9:26AM
Sir
Thank you for Mr Murray’s article. Its range and depth of explanatory power is outstanding.
I am of the view that the Federal Reserve is likely to hand over dollars to the EU; Obama would like to get re-elected – and a recession within the European Union is likely to lead to a recession in the US.
And what do we the people want?
Secession!
Secession!
SECESSION NOW FROM THE EUROPEAN UNION OF SOVIET SOCILAIST STATES!
Truth to Power| 12.16.11 @ 9:38AM
We don't hear much of Europe because it is the example that American Progressives have always pointed to. Social programs administered by a huge government, endless green boondoggles, little military ability to defend themselves, and an unwillingness to have children. In the mind of our progressives, Europe is living the dream. The economic and demographic collapse of Europe should lead to a re-thinking on the part of the American left. Sadly they are nothing more than a bunch of reactionaries and are hardly capable of thought. As with the trolls that have visited this web site over the last years they only hope to win another election by trick or theft and have absolutely no plan other than even more of the same. When you consider progressivism it has all looks of a debilitating disease.
Radioman777| 12.16.11 @ 9:53AM
The EU was doomed from its inception, but like all socialist systems, it reached critical mass because the wealthier and more industrious countries of Europe kept having to prop up the slackers. Britain showed uncommonly good sense by never joining the single currency, and now shows yet even more by not being party to the latest incarnation of a failed idea. Bad ideas die hard, mainly because of the pridefule inability to admit failure. Well, fail they did, but how long the corpse stays on life support is anyone's guess.
Bob S| 12.16.11 @ 9:56AM
If "The worst possible thing we could do is to throw American money at the problem", any word from the White House on how soon we can get started and how much money will we use?
JAH666| 12.16.11 @ 10:37AM
"we must face up to the idea that the Eurozone will collapse, either in a structured fashion, with Germany throwing members out of the club, or in a messy fashion, with sovereign defaults, bank collapses, and socialist revolts."
The messy outcome is the more likely, due to the stubborn nature of eurocrats, central bankers, socialists and the other assorted fools that don't want to see this 'European Experiment' for the failure that it is. Add to that the generally clueless nature of the citizenry in the worst affected countries and the situation is ripe for disaster. The other commenters to this fine summing-up from Mr. Murray also see this situation for what it is. The US needs to be ready for this but we're not. The majority of Americans are just as clueless as Europeans, and when the spaghetti hits the fan will be taken by complete surprise.
The ultimate downfall of Europe was sealed decades ago, however, when the demographic time-bomb of population collapse set-in. Many European nations are past the point of no return in that regard and will not see a bright future.
ABNCP| 12.16.11 @ 2:58PM
Somewhere perhaps in Hell, the German Kaiser and the Hitler must be smacking their foreheads and mutttering, " so that's the way we should have done it". That the Germans will soon control the E.U. is a foregone conclusion. The only way that will not happen is if fiscal commen sense suddenly appears. Probably not gonna happen because the powerful non-elected Pols in Brussels will not give up their big Euro paychecks, privileges, power positions and influence without a fight.
Kevin| 12.16.11 @ 6:47PM
Very insightful, and spot on the Euro!
POST American| 12.16.11 @ 10:45PM
----Nicholas CZAR--COZY
-------Angela MURK--KILL
----------David 'counted the tribes' CAMERA--ON
The 'in your face' wordplay REALLY is
their downfall.
-------------------------REALLY---------------------------
Robert| 12.19.11 @ 6:25AM
Fiscal Union has a prophetic acronym - F.U.! And that's exactly what the EUrocrats are fixing to do to Europe.
Our impostor president will draw on his well of Cloward Pivens and Alinsky strategy and say "F.U." to the American people as another trillion or two of his 'Hope' and our 'Change' is headed to EU. Bet on it!
POST American| 12.19.11 @ 11:36PM
--EVEN as we learn, 'David Camera-on's'
family comes out of the filthy old Hong Kong
and Shanghai opium cabal banking
and USURY ---sin-dick--ITs.
The Globalist-RED China sellout and world
TREASON OP ----remains absolutely
KEY and central to ALLL that now is!
While NUREMBERG 2012 remains
E--sent--y'all to the swiftly coming tomorrow.