I have plenty of issues with USA macroeconomic policy, or more
properly its lack thereof. This recession lasted four unnecessary
years and the criminals who brought it on have not been charged with
treason. That is beef enough I think.
The Europeans have done worse. None yet understands that
macroeconomic policy must be distributed to be properly effective.
The best way is to distribute those powers downstream to smaller
political entities. This might well include the cities of Berlin,
Frankfurt, Paris, Chicago, etc. In the USA, we best have the States
themselves with a couple of obvious cities in the mix. Germany has
active States and similar arrangements will work all over Europe.
They, of course, centralized it instead.
Once we do this, both Europe and the USA will enter a growth driven
economy operating at four to eight percent per year every year. Our
problem is that no one in charge is slightly capable of either
figuring this out or even making it happen. The economics profession
is strangled for the lack of an effective theory of economics that
properly informs us.
In the meantime, China has expanded at a real rate of several
percent per year for thirty three years and no one can even explain
why. At the same time, they have also absorbed serious economic
wastage as a natural price to pay.
What is wrong with these people?
The U.S. and the
Euro Crisis: Lessons From a Comparison
By Mark Weisbrot June
11, 2013
The eurozone
recession is now the longest on record for the single currency area,
according to official statistics released last week, as the
economy shrank again in the first quarter of this year. A comparison
with the U.S. economy may shed some light on how such a profound
economic failure can occur in high-income, highly educated countries
in the 21st century.
While the U.S. economy
is still weak and vulnerable, the record 12.1 percent unemployment in
the eurozone is still a lot worse than our 7.5 percent here. The most
victimized countries like Spain and Greece have unemployment of about
27 percent.
The contrast between
the United States and Europe is all the more striking because Europe
has much stronger labor unions, social democratic parties, and a more
developed welfare state. Yet the eurozone has implemented policies
far to the right of the U.S. government, causing needless
suffering for millions more people. How does this happen?
The answers have
little to do with a debt crisis but everything to do with
macroeconomic policy, ideology, and—perhaps most
importantly—democracy. As such these questions are relevant not
only to the populations of both of these economic superpowers, but to
most of the world.
Democracy Factor
Let’s start with
democracy: most of the eurozone countries have little to no
control over the most important policies that the government can use
to increase employment and income, including monetary, exchange rate,
and increasingly, fiscal policy. They have ceded this control to
eurozone authorities—most importantly the European Central Bank
(ECB). The decision makers for the more victimized
countries—including Spain, Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Italy—are
now the Troika: the ECB, the European Commission, and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). They have their own agenda, and
their priority is not restoring employment or even bringing about a
speedy economic recovery.
Before returning to
that agenda, let’s contrast the economic decision makers of the
eurozone with those of the United States. Our central bank, the
Federal Reserve, is officially independent of the government. Like
the ECB, it has often acted against the interests of the majority,
favoring powerful financial interests—most recently in its enabling
of the $8 trillion housing bubble that caused the Great Recession.
But the Fed is still accountable in some ways. Fed Chair Ben Bernanke
has to report regularly to Congress, and the Fed has some fear that
Congress might reduce its autonomy if it were to ignore the public
interest too flagrantly. (They were not pleased about legislation
approved by the U.S. House last year that required, for the first
time, an audit of the Fed’s books; it remains blocked in the
Senate.)
The ECB, by contrast,
has no such constraints. In fact, for most of the last three
years, the Troika has actually used the recurrent financial crises in
the eurozone to pursue a political agenda: rolling back, as much
as possible in a European context, the welfare state. The ECB could
have avoided most and possibly all of these crises by simply
stabilizing interest rates on Spanish and Italian government bonds.
But as was evident in
numerous press reports, the ECB and its allies feared that to end the
threat of a full-blown financial crisis would “remove the pressure”
on governments to make the reforms that they wanted: cutting pensions
and unemployment insurance, weakening unions’ collective bargaining
rights (as in Spain), and shrinking government generally.
Finally in the fall of
last year, ECB President Mario Draghi made some statements indicating
that the ECB would stabilize Spanish and Italian bonds. He got tired
of near-death experiences, apparently and after more than a dozen
European governments (including Sarkozy’s in France) had fallen,
the ECB and its allies were running up against some political limits.
This change in policy,
which put an end to the most severe, recurring financial crises in
Europe, can be partly attributed to the very slow impact of a
severely limited form of democratic input. That included of course
massive street protests and electoral events such as the surge of the
Greek left party Syriza.
But this “democracy”
is far too restricted and slow-moving to save the millions of
unemployed whose lives are being wasted. Most importantly, it only
ended the acute crises and not the continuing recession caused by
the austerity measures enforced by the Troika. This has an important
lesson for any country: don’t give away your economic
sovereignty, on the most important macroeconomic policies that
most of your nation’s livelihood depends upon—unless it is
transferred to a set of institutions that you can really trust. Which
of course is the opposite of what was created with the eurozone, with
its built-in bias toward austerity in recession, and a central bank
that was religiously committed to not caring about employment.
Again, the contrast
with the United States is worth noting. Even if Mitt Romney had been
elected, he would not have dared to implement the kind of austerity
that would push the United States back into recession. He would want
to get re-elected. That is not to say that eurozone officials have a
monopoly on macroeconomic stupidity: the sequester in the United
States is currently slowing the U.S. economy and causing unnecessary
harm. But it was not as easy to get this result here, it is not as
severe, and it will be easier to reverse than in Europe.
Future Hope
What then is the hope
for Europe? Another political lesson, which most union leaders know,
is that it’s difficult to win any concessions without bargaining
power. So far, almost none of the political leaders in the most
victimized countries, including Spain and Greece, are willing to
simply refuse the Troika’s conditions, for fear that it would lead
to their exit from the euro.
So the Troika doesn’t
see much reason to let up on the austerity. In that sense the most
promising recent development has been the meteoric rise of the
populist Beppe Grillo and his Five Star Movement in Italy. He has
been willing to talk about a referendum on leaving the euro, and his
movement got the largest number of parliamentary seats of any single
political party in the February Italian elections.
The case needs to be
made, and explained to the public—as economist Paul Krugman
recently did for Cyprus—that years of mass unemployment are too
high a price to pay for keeping the euro. Politicians do not need
to propose leaving the euro, as that remains taboo. But a refusal to
accept recessionary conditions would shift the burden to the European
authorities as to whether they want to kick any country out of the
currency union.
Most likely they would
not. But without a willingness to simply refuse the Troika’s
recessionary conditions, it’s going to be a long, slow slog to
reverse the continued infliction of needless suffering in what used
to be one of the most democratic regions of the world.
Mark Weisbrot is
co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in
Washington, D.C. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.
Originally published in Al-Jazeera.
ReplyDeleteEurope is merely one step in the process of moving up the food chain. The lesser developed nations have already suffered the same economic exploitation by the WB and IMF that is now being felt by Europe. The next step will include the United States with the $16 trillion (fraudulent) debt to the same “financiers” behind the WB and IMF. Ref. http://www.scribd.com/doc/115919607/FUNDING-THE-NEW-WORLD-ORDER .
The entire operation appears to be funded with the $4 billion that is DAILY hidden by the FRBNY from their exclusive handling of funds from the auctions of Treasury securities. The profit from the Fed legally belongs to the government. Hiding money that belongs to the government is called embezzlement. Ref. http://www.scribd.com/doc/101937790/Federal-Reserve-Heist .
If Congress does not investigate the Fed and audit the Treasury accounts, the U.S. will go the way of Greece and Cyprus.