When you have what appears to be
a committee of politicians attempting to understand a financial panic, it is
hard to remain optimistic. It really
looks like we will need to have an actual apparent collapse in order to shake
sense into everyone’s head. Not least
the grossly overextended borrowers who happily bought into a magic merry go
round and are left shirtless. Greece must
decide to tax properly and must collect. Does it have to be a salt tax? This is never a joke if you want any credit
support. Otherwise we have a soviet
economy in which everyone pretends to work while the real economy disappears
underground and the state ceases to pay anyone except with worthless paper.
It appears that it will take a
major banking collapse to drag everyone to the table and to admit what they can
do and do it. Again the problem can be
resolved by printing one’s way out of it but this panic is making the price
high enough to prevent a reoccurrence.
So it is going to be unpleasant
but liquidity is easily restored and largely in place by way of the huge US
float over there if it comes to that.
However, the price paid for restoration will be a stronger partnership
with other national banks who will never allow you to take the same risks
again.
In the meantime, mega banking
needs to end and retail banking needs to be hugely expanded to provide real
product out there.
Is this really the end?
Unless Germany
and the ECB move quickly, the single currency’s collapse is looming
Nov 26th 2011 | from the print edition
EVEN as the euro zone hurtles towards a crash, most people are assuming
that, in the end, European leaders will do whatever it takes to save the single
currency. That is because the consequences of the euro’s destruction are so
catastrophic that no sensible policymaker could stand by and let it happen.
A euro break-up would cause a global bust worse even than the one in
2008-09. The world’s most financially integrated region would be ripped apart
by defaults, bank failures and the imposition of capital controls (see article). The
euro zone could shatter into different pieces, or a large block in the north
and a fragmented south. Amid the recriminations and broken treaties after the
failure of the European Union’s biggest economic project, wild currency swings
between those in the core and those in the periphery would almost certainly
bring the single market to a shuddering halt. The survival of the EU itself
would be in doubt.
Yet the threat of a disaster does not always stop it from happening.
The chances of the euro zone being smashed apart have risen alarmingly, thanks
to financial panic, a rapidly weakening economic outlook and pigheaded
brinkmanship. The odds of a safe landing are dwindling fast.
Markets, manias and panics
Investors’ growing fears of a euro break-up have fed a run from the
assets of weaker economies, a stampede that even strong actions by their
governments cannot seem to stop. The latest example is Spain . Despite
a sweeping election victory on November 20th for the People’s Party, committed
to reform and austerity, the country’s borrowing costs have surged again. The
government has just had to pay a 5.1% yield on three-month paper, more than
twice as much as a month ago. Yields on ten-year bonds are above 6.5%. Italy ’s new
technocratic government under Mario Monti has not seen any relief either:
ten-year yields remain well above 6%. Belgian and French borrowing costs are
rising. And this week, an auction of German government Bunds flopped.
The panic engulfing Europe ’s banks is
no less alarming. Their access to wholesale funding markets has dried up, and
the interbank market is increasingly stressed, as banks refuse to lend to each
other. Firms are pulling deposits from peripheral countries’ banks. This
backdoor run is forcing banks to sell assets and squeeze lending; the credit
crunch could be deeper than the one Europe
suffered after Lehman Brothers collapsed.
Add the ever greater fiscal austerity being imposed across Europe and a collapse in business and consumer
confidence, and there is little doubt that the euro zone will see a deep
recession in 2012—with a fall in output of perhaps as much as 2%. That will
lead to a vicious feedback loop in which recession widens budget deficits,
swells government debts and feeds popular opposition to austerity and reform.
Fear of the consequences will then drive investors even faster towards the
exits.
Past financial crises show that this downward spiral can be arrested
only by bold policies to regain market confidence. But Europe ’s
policymakers seem unable or unwilling to be bold enough. The much-ballyhooed
leveraging of the euro-zone rescue fund agreed on in October is going nowhere.
Euro-zone leaders have become adept at talking up grand long-term plans to
safeguard their currency—more intrusive fiscal supervision, new treaties to
advance political integration. But they offer almost no ideas for containing
today’s conflagration.
Germany’s cautious chancellor, Angela Merkel, can be ruthlessly
efficient in politics: witness the way she helped to pull the rug from under
Silvio Berlusconi. A credit crunch is harder to manipulate. Along with leaders
of other creditor countries, she refuses to acknowledge the extent of the
markets’ panic (see article). The European Central Bank (ECB) rejects the idea
of acting as a lender of last resort to embattled, but solvent, governments.
The fear of creating moral hazard, under which the offer of help eases the
pressure on debtor countries to embrace reform, is seemingly enough to stop all
rescue plans in their tracks. Yet that only reinforces investors’ nervousness
about all euro-zone bonds, even Germany ’s,
and makes an eventual collapse of the currency more likely.
This cannot go on for much longer. Without a dramatic change of heart
by the ECB and by European leaders, the single currency could break up within
weeks. Any number of events, from the failure of a big bank to the collapse of
a government to more dud bond auctions, could cause its demise. In the last
week of January, Italy
must refinance more than €30 billion ($40 billion) of bonds. If the markets
balk, and the ECB refuses to blink, the world’s third-biggest sovereign
borrower could be pushed into default.
The perils of brinkmanship
Can anything be done to avert disaster? The answer is still yes, but
the scale of action needed is growing even as the time to act is running out.
The only institution that can provide immediate relief is the ECB. As the
lender of last resort, it must do more to save the banks by offering unlimited
liquidity for longer duration against a broader range of collateral. Even if
the ECB rejects this logic for governments—wrongly, in our view—large-scale
bond-buying is surely now justified by the ECB’s own narrow interpretation of
prudent central banking. That is because much looser monetary policy is
necessary to stave off recession and deflation in the euro zone. If the ECB is
to fulfil its mandate of price stability, it must prevent prices falling. That
means cutting short-term rates and embarking on “quantitative easing” (buying
government bonds) on a large scale. And since conditions are tightest in the
peripheral economies, the ECB will have to buy their bonds disproportionately.
Vast monetary loosening should cushion the recession and buy time. Yet
reviving confidence and luring investors back into sovereign bonds now needs
more than ECB support, restructuring Greece ’s
debt and reforming Italy and
Spain —ambitious
though all this is. It also means creating a debt instrument that investors can
believe in. And that requires a political bargain: financial support that
peripheral countries need in exchange for rule changes that Germany and others demand.
This instrument must involve some joint liability for government debts.
Unlimited Eurobonds have been ruled out by Mrs Merkel; they would probably fall
foul of Germany ’s
constitutional court. But compromises exist, as suggested this week by the
European Commission (see Charlemagne). One promising idea, from Germany ’s
Council of Economic Experts, is to mutualise all euro-zone debt above 60% of
each country’s GDP, and to set aside a tranche of tax revenue to pay it off
over the next 25 years. Yet Germany ,
still fretful about turning a currency union into a transfer union in which it
forever supports the weaker members, has dismissed the idea.
This attitude has to change, or the euro will break up. Fears of moral
hazard mean less now that all peripheral-country governments are committed to
austerity and reform. Debt mutualisation can be devised to stop short of a
permanent transfer union. Mrs Merkel and the ECB cannot continue to threaten
feckless economies with exclusion from the euro in one breath and reassure
markets by promising the euro’s salvation with the next. Unless she chooses
soon, Germany ’s
chancellor will find that the choice has been made for her.
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