Over on Telegraph blogs, we argue:
Stemming the crisis through cheap central bank money sounds so easy.
The logic goes: Italy and Spain have economic problems which cause
markets to push up their borrowing costs, which now have reached
"irrational" levels as fear has taken hold. If left unchecked, this
could threaten the Eurozone and Europe’s economy. The European Central
Bank, it is said, has "unlimited" ability to create credit or cash and
act quickly. Hence, it must “stand behind the currency” and save the
euro – and Europe.
So when the ECB today announces that it will intervene further in the
crisis, probably by buying up short term government debt, many bankers
and politicians will love it. Bankers because it avoids losses (at least
for a bit), politicians – including British ones – because it might
just save their skins at the polls.
But for Europe’s long-term economic future, this is also why
large-scale ECB intervention is so risky. Europe has for decades lived
beyond its means and needs to adjust if it wants to thrive in this
century and the next. Faced with economic reality, there’s still hope that over a number of years (if domestic politics allows it – a big if admittedly)
countries like Spain and Italy will finally push through much-needed
reforms and achieve the 20-30 per cent internal devaluation needed to
become reasonably competitive with Germany inside a currency union. And
Europe as a whole would be better off.
But bailouts – whether by government or the ECB – can, at best, buy time.
At worst, however, they act as an outright disincentive for necessary
reforms. This risk was eloquently highlighted by Professor Leszek
Balcerowicz – former Polish Finance Minister (and central bank head),
famous for implementing the Polish structural reform plan following the
fall of communism – at an Open Europe event last week. All bailouts, he said, come with "moral hazard". But if mishandled, ECB bond-buying could actually turn out to be the worst form of Eurozone bailout,
as it completely de-links the bailout cash from reforms needed,
creating a moral hazard problem of massive proportions (in addition to
creating a number of other problems such as undermining the rule of law
and making ECB susceptible to political influences). We’ve seen the
signs already. As ECB board member Jörg Asmussen noted recently, "There
cannot be a repeat of the mistakes with Italy in the summer of last
year, when the ECB bought Italian sovereign bonds and the time was
unfortunately not used for necessary adjustment measures".
And ECB money doesn’t come from a magic tree. From June 2011 to April 2012 its exposure to weaker Eurozone economies increased by 106 per cent,
from €444 billion to €918 billion, and has only continued to rise since
then. If ECB head Mario Draghi acts on his promises of unlimited
intervention, this exposure could increase exponentially. At the end of
the day, someone has to pay for this.
Whether taxpayers (who ultimately back central banks) through write
downs and losses (and resulting recapitalisation of the ECB) or savers
through higher inflation in the stronger parts of the eurozone economy (bound to happen sooner or later).
As the ECB itself knows, it’s very difficult to counter these risks.
Once the ECB taps are opened, it’s incredibly hard to turn them off
without causing huge market distortions and creating an even graver
crisis than the one that the original intervention was meant to stave
off. That is why the ECB is right to insist on countries committing to
reforms (through an intergovernmental decision) before it bails them
out. Perhaps that mix could work for struggling Eurozone countries. But
there's also a huge risk that Europe, in the long-term, will pay a very
high price for what is only (at best) a short-term fix.
6 comments:
Thank you acknowledging that in the end the taxpayers of the EU will have to pay for all of this generosity. So any promises made by UK politicians that they will not support more bailouts is pie in the sky.
@Bugsy
Just to be clear, in terms of the ECB we were referring to eurozone taxpayers since any ECB losses will be confined to eurozone countries.
Cheap money caused the crisis. Cheap money is the crisis.
The crisis goes on.
More smoke and mirrors because there is no new money from anyone.
The Germans and the 'sound finance Northern block' voters will not pay indefinitely to keep the Euro show on the road. As soon as the politicians in Germany etc., see that their employers are not prepared to pay indefinitely for Spain, Italy, etc., then not even the Euro enthusiasts will be able to kick the can down the road any further.
A Euro optimist might claim that the Governments in the South will be forced to change their profligate ways so that the bail out will be acceptable to Germany because it will be a once only event. However, I am not convinced that the Germans and their pals have enough money to do the job and in any event, the austerity required in the South to accomplish this feat would bring a voter backlash. Isn't it 50% youth unemployment in Spain already? Terrible. A generation's opportunities sacrificed for vanity.
This whole ludicrous money-printing exercise is not designed to cure the crisis - it is designed to buy time to enable Barroso, Rompuy, Draghi, and Junker to construct an escape-proof EU that is a single federal state where nations cease to any power or independence. This project to be presented in December, has general support - in Spain, Germany, Poland so far.
This after all is for them a heaven sent opportunity to slam the door, lock it and throw away the key. Mission accomplished
Bankers because it avoids losses (at least for a bit), politicians – including British ones – because it might just save their skins at the polls. title loans
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