BY THEODORE DALRYMPLE
A Belgian
journalist who interviewed me recently about the European debt crisis asked me
whether I believed in the European Project. I replied that I would answer her
question—if she would tell me what the European Project actually was. By
revealing my doubts, I proved to her that I suffered from the strange kind of
mental debility known as Euroskepticism, a condition supposedly compounded of
low intelligence and aggressive xenophobia. The low intelligence manifests
itself in the patient’s view of European institutions as a gravy train for a
transnational nomenklatura, rather than as the beginning of a new,
generous, and free-spirited type of postnational identity. The xenophobia
manifests itself as a secret desire for conflict and war, the European Union
and its predecessors supposedly having been responsible for the avoidance of
war on the Continent over the last 65 years.
The journalist then asked whether I thought that nationalism was dangerous. The question implied that the choice before Europe was between the European Union and fascism: that all that stood between us and the ascension to power of new Mussolinis, Francos, and Hitlers were the free lunches of senior Eurocrats. I replied that dangerous forms of nationalism existed, of course, but that in the present circumstances, supranationalism represented by far the greater danger. Not only was such supranationalism undemocratic, for it reflected no widespread demand or sentiment among the population; it also risked provoking the very kind of nationalism against which it was to stand as the bulwark. Further, the breakup of supranational polities in Europe tends to be messy, as history demonstrates.
I was not entirely fair, however, in implying that no
one could say what the European Project was. José Manuel Barroso, a fiery
Portuguese Maoist student leader who became the preternaturally dull president
of the European Commission—perhaps not as great a change as one might suppose,
many a revolutionary being a frustrated bureaucrat—once let the cat out of the
bag. Asked the same question that the journalist asked me, Barroso responded,
“Sometimes I like to compare the European Union as a creation to the
organization of empires.” He hastened to add that the E.U. was not a
traditional empire. But it is surely the case that an empire in Europe, large,
rich, and powerful, would assuage the feelings of a political class frustrated
by having inherited a smaller role in world affairs than that of their
predecessors, who ruled real empires many times larger than their own countries.
Reflection on the
situation in tiny Belgium might introduce an element of doubt into the minds of
the most fervent believers in the European Project. Belgium has existed ever
since it was cobbled together in 1830; yet in all that time, it has not been able
to create a durable national identity. One of its many prime ministers, Yves
Leterme, once said that just three things held Belgium together: beer, soccer,
and the king. As I write, Belgium has not had a central government for more
than 500 days. While I must admit, as an occasional visitor to that country,
that the difference between Belgium with and Belgium without a central
government is not apparent on casual inspection, this interregnum may take the
theory of limited government too far.
The reason that Belgium has lacked a government for so
long is that the country is divided into two populations (actually three, but
the third is too small to count) with incompatible politics: French-speaking
Wallonia and Dutch-speaking Flanders. Belgium is officially bilingual, yet you
see not a word of Dutch in Wallonia and not a word of French in Flanders. The
division could not be starker if barbed wire separated the two provinces. Only
in the capital, Brussels, does one find any concession to bilingualism.
Historical and economic factors deepen the division
between the two regions. Wallonia, though it contained a minority of Belgium’s
population, long dominated its culture and economy. Even the Flemish upper
class spoke French at home, while Dutch was the language of the peasantry;
until recently, Belgian schools forbade children from speaking Dutch in class.
With the decline of Wallonia’s coal and steel industries and the economic rise
of Flanders, however, the pattern of dominance changed. Flanders went from being
the poor relation to being the rich one, albeit with something of an
inferiority complex. In the process, it started to make large transfer payments
to Wallonia, which suffered from comparatively high unemployment. Such payments
rarely promote goodwill between groups. Resentment is common among both the
donors, who harbor suspicions that the recipients are exploiting them, and the
recipients, who indulge in mental contortions to explain their dependency away.
It is no surprise, therefore, that the largest
political parties in Flanders are either nationalist or free-market; both
philosophies lead to reducing or stopping the transfer payments. It is equally
unsurprising that the largest political party in Wallonia is socialist and
wants the payments to continue or increase. The Wallonian socialist party’s
patronage powers in its territory are almost feudal in nature and extent; the
last thing that the party of social change wants is actual change. But neither
the Flemish parties nor the Wallonian socialists are strong enough to impose a
government on the whole country.
Belgium’s inability to form a central government would
not matter so much if the country did not need to reduce its public spending.
Though Belgium is the largest per-capita exporter of goods and services in the
world and has healthy private savings, it also has a large and growing public
debt—nearly 100 percent of GDP—and an annual budget deficit of more than 5
percent. With growth negligible and government bond yields rising in a currency
(the euro) that the Belgians cannot inflate, retrenchment is essential, but the
Walloons and the Flemish cannot agree on how to do it. The Walloons want higher
taxes to maintain the current arrangements; the Flemish want lower taxes and
reduced spending to promote long-term growth. The result is a stalemate.
Wallonia and Flanders are like a married couple who no longer can live together
but find divorce impossible because of difficulties over the settlement.
It happens that the central offices of the E.U. are located
in Brussels. Yet the political difficulties of Belgium do not give the European
unionists pause for thought—or, if they do pause, they reach a peculiar
conclusion: that what has not worked in two centuries in a small area with only
two populations will work in a few years in a much larger area with a multitude
of populations. It does not occur to the unionists that different countries
really are different: not a little bit, but radically, in
culture, language, history, traditions, and economies. The term “European” is
not meaningless, but whatever content the term may have, it is not sufficient
for the formation of a viable polity.
The debt crisis has
revealed differences in national character of precisely the kind that make any
closer union both difficult and dangerous. Indeed, the very attempt to force a
union is at the root of the crisis, for if Greece and Ireland, to take two
countries at the geographical extremes of the continent, had not been able to
borrow in euros under the false supposition that eurozone membership
effectively guaranteed their sovereign debts, it is unlikely that they would
have wound up in their current straits. After all, lenders might have taken
more care if their debts were being paid in drachmas or Irish pounds, which the
Greeks and Irish could have inflated to their hearts’ content.
The Irish and the Greek situations are, however,
significantly different, and together they constitute a school for
Euroskeptics. Ireland was flourishing until about 2000; its impressive growth
rate was founded upon easy access to the largest market in the world, a low
rate of corporate taxation, colossal foreign investment, and a young, educated
population. In a few years, Ireland went from being a land of immemorial
poverty and hardship to being one of the richest countries in the world.
Then, in the 2000s, Ireland was seized with a madness
worthy of a chapter in Charles Mackay’s 1841 book Memoirs of
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. This derangement
took the form of a property bubble. Easy credit and low interest rates drove up
the price of existing property astronomically; one house in Dublin fetched
nearly $100 million. A construction boom employed a quarter of the labor force;
more houses went up in Ireland during this period than in Britain, whose
population was 15 times greater. Foreign banks lent to the Irish with
astonishing insouciance. The Royal Bank of Scotland lent $50 billion—about
$12,000 per person in Ireland. British, German, and Belgian banks together lent
about $100,000 per head, which would work out to about $300 trillion had they
lent in America in the same fashion.
Delighted, the Irish government taxed transactions and
watched its coffers fill up. Despite boosting public employment by 59 percent
between 1985 and 2002 and paying government workers more generously than almost
any country in the world, it enjoyed a budget surplus. For a time, everyone was
happy.
In the last analysis, however, the government was
paying its workers with borrowed money, even if it had first passed through
private hands. When the whole pyramidal edifice crumpled, the government
nationalized the private debt by guaranteeing the solvency of the Irish banks,
thus taking on obligations far larger than the entire Irish economy. The budget
deficit rose to 32 percent, and unemployment shot up from 4 percent to 14
percent in a matter of months. Construction came to a complete stop; the Irish
countryside was littered with unfinished, unoccupied, unsellable housing
developments, ghost towns before anyone had lived in them, unromantic ruins in
the making. Approximately 5 percent of the population resorted to emigration,
ever the Irish safety valve.
But the most interesting part of the story is that
Ireland experienced almost no social unrest after the economic collapse. People
were angry, of course; with reason, they blamed the government and the bankers;
but they did not give themselves license to misbehave. The Irish understood, as
no other people seems to have understood, that they were complicit in the
crisis. They had enjoyed the party while it lasted; they had elected and
retained in power the politicians who brought them unrestricted cheap credit;
they had crowed over their rapidly accumulating wealth as house prices rose
giddily; they had derided warning voices as unpatriotic; they had borrowed money
as if it grew on trees; and even taxi drivers and supermarket workers had
spoken gleefully of their Spanish holiday homes.
Yet when the crisis hit and the government had to cut
public-sector salaries drastically and pursue other austerity measures—friends
of mine who live in Ireland have lost a fifth to a quarter of their
wages—hardly a word of complaint ensued. Most people seemed to understand that
the seven fat—indeed, grossly obese—years simply had to be followed by the
seven lean. The relation of the previous excess to the present hardship was
obvious to everyone, and the population sought no scapegoats, even if,
correctly, it blamed the politicians and bankers more than it blamed itself.
The Irish did take the first opportunity to vote the
government out of office; Fianna Fáil, the dominant political party since Irish
independence in 1921, found itself humiliated at the polls. But in recognizing
the painful fact that the guilt of others does not constitute one’s own
innocence, the Irish set the world an example. Since the crash, successive
Irish governments have had the determination to fight to retain their low
corporate tax, called “predatory” by the other Europeans. (It is symptomatic of
Europe’s sickness that refraining from government seizure of
money is now deemed by its political class to be predation.) The Irish economy
may thus be poised for a quicker recovery.
Greece was another
matter. The government, also relying on euro-based good credit, borrowed simply
to bolster its public sector. When this differently constructed pyramid
collapsed, the population’s chief object became warding off change—ensuring,
that is, that it continued to receive more than it earned and consume more than
it produced. Yes, the government was corrupt; yes, foreign bankers lent
irresponsibly. But did Greeks really not know that tax evasion was standard
practice in their country, and by no means only among the elite; that much of
the employment in the public sector was bogus make-work; that retirement
conditions superior to those in Germany were unearned and unsustainable; and
that their political and administrative class was composed of liars and cheats?
Blaming the Germans—the Nazi stereotype emerged quickly, once European
subsidies were reduced—became a convenient way to avoid self-examination.
Of course, the Germans, or at least those of the
German political class, were not blameless. They joined the other leaders of
Europe in thinking that they could override economic reality in creating a common
currency, just as they thought that they could override social reality in
forging a political union. It seemed not to matter to them that the German
population, like many European populations, had wanted nothing to do with the
euro—and that it might be dangerous to present it with the bill once the
inevitable trouble resulted.
For a time, the euro did seem to serve German
interests, allowing countries to buy German goods that they might not otherwise
have been able to buy. Meanwhile, Germany, with a determination not shown by
other European countries, reduced payroll taxes and barely increased wages,
having previously established a powerful manufacturing base. Savings rose, and
Germany became the China of Europe. Now it has the problem of what to do with
its trade surplus, larger than the trade deficits of France, Italy, and Spain
combined.
Europeans have
painted themselves into a corner. If the debts of European countries are
mutualized, there can be only one country that lays down the rules of mutualization,
and it won’t be France, struggling with a large deficit, large debts, and a
large trade imbalance. The historian John Robert Seeley famously wrote that the
British Empire had been formed “in a fit of absence of mind”; so could it be
with German hegemony in Europe.
But it is doubtful that Germany’s understandable
demands for fiscal rectitude would produce joy elsewhere in Europe, where the
economic and social consequences would be painful. Even in Ireland, one hears
mutterings about how independence has been ceded to “the Germans,” as all
European technocrats now tend to be called. In Germany itself, the solution of
trying to inflate the debt away by issuing more euros is not likely to prove
popular, since leaders had promised their skeptical population, back when the
common currency was under debate, that adopting it would never mean having to
pay other countries’ debts. And for obvious historical reasons, a discontented
German population is not reassuring to the rest of Europe.
The alternative to sharing the debts seems to be the
breakup of the euro. This might turn recession into prolonged slump, with the
countries expelled from the eurozone forced into a default catastrophic for the
banking system. I get dizzy just thinking about the bank account in which I
hold euros: in the event of a breakup, will it be denominated in drachmas or
deutschmarks, and who will decide? Like everyone else, I would prefer
deutschmarks, a preference that will drive up the price of the currency to the
point that German exports, no matter how high their quality, will be too
expensive to buy.
No wonder German chancellor Angela Merkel appears
indecisive: like every politician, she wants a painless solution to a problem.
She does not want to throw Germany’s weight about, demanding every country’s Papieren,
bitte. Yet she does not want to be responsible for rampant inflation or for
the breakup of the euro, either. Whatever she decides, love of Germany in
Europe will not grow.
In short, the incontinent spending of many European governments,
which awarded whole populations unearned benefits at the expense of generations
to come, has—along with a megalomaniacal currency union—produced a crisis not
merely economic but social, political, and even civilizational. The European
Union that was supposed to put an end to war on the continent has resuscitated
antagonisms that might end in bellicosity, if not in outright war. And the
European Project stands revealed as what any sensible person could have seen it
always was: something akin to the construction of a massive, post-Tito
Yugoslavia.
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