(updated version) The euro is playing the starring role this
week in a global loss of confidence in bonds issued by Governments, although
the average Government deficit and debt situation of euro area countries is
actually is no worse than that in the United States, the United Kingdom, and
Japan. The euro area is the target because it is easier for speculators to pick
off euro area countries one by one. But this is not the root problem. Even if
the euro was somehow broken up, the underlying problem of the credibility of
sovereign debt would still be there.
The real problem of almost all developed countries, except
Germany, is that we have used Government and/or private borrowing, to smother the
symptoms of a deeper loss of earning capacity.
The sovereign debt crisis is a symptom. The
disease is a profound loss of competitiveness.
Since about 2000, the developed world,
except Germany, has lost ground in the competition to produce goods and
services at prices the rest of the world is willing to pay. China, India, Brazil and others are now competing for markets
that the developed world previously monopolised. They are doing this with
technologies developed in the West, but at costs much less than those applying
in the West.
This loss of markets over the last ten
years should have meant a relative fall in relative living standards over the
same period. But almost all developed countries avoided this, and kept their
standards up by borrowing more, either directly as households, or indirectly through
their Governments. In Ireland
during the boom the number employed in the traded sector actually fell, while the
number employed in services ballooned. This was all too easy because the
countries, like China, who were winning markets, lent their profits back to us
at cheap interest rates.
In essence, the cause of today’s debt
problems is that developed
countries awarded themselves a living standard they had not earned. That could
not go on forever. Now we must tackle the disease as well as its symptoms.
Any short term fix for the euro area
finances must be accompanied by a long term plan to rebuild up our capacity to
produce goods and services that the rest of the world will want to buy on a
greater scale than they are doing today.
Europe must abandon its culture of entitlement.
For example, there must be reform of educational
systems. Third level education in
Europe must be changed from being an undemanding and free rite of passage for
young people , into an innovative and flexible system to help people of all
ages, who have lost their jobs, to
readapt themselves for a world which has changed utterly.
Getting our costs down will also require an
end to restrictive practices, and padded costs, in the
Government sector, in schools, in the labour market, and in the professions. However indirectly, all these reduce
Europe’s ability to reduce its export prices enough to win back markets abroad.
This is particularly necessary in countries like Italy and Greece, but also in
Ireland.
It will all mean postponing increases in
living standards, paying more tax, and getting less benefits from the Government.
Germany did this in the 1990s when it dealt with the huge cost of reunification.
Since 1990, living standards in Germany increased by only 20%, whereas they
increased by over 100% in Ireland.
Germany kept its costs down, shared the burden of adjustment by short
time working rather than unemployment, and focussed on exports.
Some will argue that what worked for
Germany will not work for Europe as a whole. They will say that if the rest of
Europe adopts an austerity and export
model, there will be no market for the exports because of the austerity. Their
preference would be for Germany to start inflating its economy, so as to buy
the exports of the rest of Europe.
That will not work for a number of reasons. If Germany did
inflate its demand, the imports would come from the rest of the world, not from
the rest of Europe (unless, of course,
the rest of Europe becomes competitive). Furthermore, Germany has an
ageing population and needs to save now to support its future retirees.
This is also a problem with proposals for
the issue of Eurobonds to meet the funding needs of euro area countries, like
Ireland, who are too weak to borrow commercially on their own account. Until the rest of Europe
becomes competitive, these bonds will essentially be issued against the credit
of Germany. Given its ageing
problem, even German credit has limits.
The ECB can give out more credit as a way
of getting through our present short term difficulties. That is what it is
doing by buying bonds of countries like Ireland, Italy and Spain. It could also
extend a credit line to the European Stability Fund to allow it to buy bonds
too. To the extent that such
activity increases money supply faster than present or future economic activity
justifies, it builds up future inflation.
And who does inflation hit hardest? Elderly people with fixed
incomes, and those with savings.
And what European country has the biggest number of people
who will soon be in that category? Germany.
Germany increased the money supply to pay for the cost of the
First World War, and that led to the inflation of the 1920’s, which wiped out
the German middle class. That is part of German folk memory and explains why
Germany insisted that the ECBs mandate be concerned solely with keeping
inflation in check.
What is needed now for Europe, as a whole, is
a convincing overall plan, a plan that links short term relief for those with
financial difficulties, with long term plans to permanently lift productive
capacity. Only in that way can Germany
be convinced that short term
relief now will not lead to more inflation later.
It is not reasonable to expect Chancellor
Merkel to produce such a plan on her own.
Every euro area Government must contribute. We have all got to start
thinking as Europeans, and devise a plan that is based on realism and modesty
in what we ask of our neighbours, and strict honesty in what we ask of ourselves. None of us can solve our problems on the back of someone else’s
sacrifice.
7 comments:
Over here i found really a brief note on the American and European organization how they can get debt relief and debt settlement ideas. In this blog post you have shared lot of things which are not published anywhere.
Structured Settlements
This is good information. Thank you for this article.
You mentioned paying more taxes. Dont you think people for the most part are already over-taxed. We pay all kinds of taxes. We pay them throughout the year on our paychecks. We pay them to property taxes. And some even pay city and local taxes at the end of the year. Not to mention sales taxes. So where does the taxing stop?
Very informative article......but paying more taxes we are taxed out at this point.
Very good information, thanks for posting.
If it is only a short term effect why even bother?
Great article but more taxes NO! We the down to earth people who live from paycheck to paycheck can not afford any new taxes, we are the hardworking backbone of this country and we are also the ones that are losing our homes and health insurance and just getting by,give us a break.
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