by DETLEV SCHLICHTER
“Europe fights back against austerity”
was how The Daily Telegraph headlined its weekend election coverage.
“Anti-austerity movements are gathering pace across Europe following political
earthquakes in France and Greece. A total of 12 European governments have now
been dismissed in three years.”As the European welfare state is officially in its death-throes none of us should be surprised if political strife gets cranked up to eleven. I firmly expect that we will see much more of this in the future. While I can understand the anger of the electorate and sympathize with the sense of desperation and foreboding, I can, however, not consider the electoral choices of the weekend particularly enlightened, and I do not think that they reflect a coherent, let alone intelligent strategy as the Daily Telegraph headline seems to imply. If those who ‘won’ the election deliver on their promises, economic disintegration will only accelerate. What is being offered in terms of ‘solutions’ is a dangerous assortment of economic poisons, more suitable to describe the European disease than provide a recipe for stronger growth.
Recovery through early retirement and
infrastructure spending? – C’mon. Nobody can take that seriously.
But it seems that just because this heap of economic stupidity can neatly be swept under the wide tent of ‘anti-austerity’, the commentariat seems somehow willing to believe in the wisdom of the crowds and look for some deeper insights here.
I guess the reason for this is that the
economic ideologies that are now being strenuously interpreted into the
election results rhyme with the economic prejudices of most commentators. They,
too, believe that state bankruptcy is best to be ignored or not to be taken too
seriously so that we can spend our way out of this mess. For a long time media
pundits have treated us to the perceived wisdom that economic growth can only
come from the actions of the government. Only devaluation through euro-exit,
inflation through more money printing and more government deficit-spending,
preferably by the still credit-worthy Germans and then fiscally-transferred to
the maxed-out Greeks, can revive the economy because only this can lift
aggregate demand, the magic cure-all of economic problems.
What is lost on these commentators is
that the European mess is nothing but the inevitable result of
government-stipulated aggregate demand. Easy money funded the Spanish and
Irish real estate booms and bankrupted their banks and by extension their
governments. Easy money allowed Greece’s political class to go on a borrowing
binge that has now bankrupted the country and lured large parts of the
population into zero-productivity, soon-to-be-eliminated public sector jobs.
Do you still want the state to
‘stimulate’ the economy? – Be careful what you wish for.
The real culprit of high youth
unemployment in Spain and Italy is not ‘austerity’, which hasn’t even started
there, but a bizarrely overregulated and sclerotic labour market in which it is
almost impossible for firms of a certain size to fire people. The incentives are
thus stacked massively against hiring. Yet, in France one of Hollande’s
election promises is not to deregulate the labour market. If I were
unemployed in France I would not be counting my chances of getting a job over
the next five years.
In France the state runs more than half
the economy, yet Hollande promises not to privatize state-run industry. Where is the wisdom in that?
Yet, the statists and socialists are
delighted. Paul Krugman, who never saw a debt crisis you could not borrow and spend
your way out of, rejoices at such display of economic genius. We are all Keynesians now! Listening
to Krugman you would think Greek and French voters were not using the ballot to
cling desperately to some remnants of the welfare state but were in fact
positively advertising the wisdom of government stimulus and the mystical
‘multiplier’.
Some of the commentators tried to argue
that what happened over the weekend was also some kind of anti-establishment
vote, a verdict against centralisation and the dominance of the deservedly
despised bureaucratic elite in Brussels.
Nice try but I think that that is
rubbish.
This was not an anti-establishment vote
at all. It was not a vote for change but a desperate vote for the status quo.
Of course, the old elite deserved the sack but they were largely booted out not
because people got tired of the old policies but because the leadership now
finally admitted that they could no longer deliver on the old promises.
The established parties lost because
they could not continue upholding the false promise that had kept them in
office for years or decades, the promise to make the “European model” work.
They had to admit that the European welfare state was now bankrupt. Kicking the
can down the road is increasingly not an option as the end of the road is now
in sight.
And the election winners were
those who had the chutzpah to maintain that drastic belt-tightening and painful
reform were not required but that the people just had to ‘stick it to the man’,
who is Angela Merkel and sits in Berlin. The tactic is straightforward. Shoot
the messenger!
In France that meant voting for a charisma-free
Socialist bureaucrat who will revive France with higher taxes, early retirement
and a Hoover dam funded by Eurobonds and the ECB. In Greece, the big winner was
an ex-Communist firebrand who admires Hugo Chavez, and who has raged against
austerity measures and structural reform.
I guess we now know what the electorate
is against. “Say no to cuts!” But what is it for? Over in Ireland, the deputy
leader of Sinn Fein, Mary
Lou MacDonald, had the answer: “A No
vote (to the ‘Austerity Treaty’) in Ireland will strengthen those arguing for
jobs and growth.”
Well, who could not love a politician
who promises jobs and growth? But the relationship between politics and jobs
and growth is a tenuous one. Politicians are not savers who fund the creation
of a capital stock through saving, and they are not entrepreneurs who put that
capital to productive use. Politicians are people who spend other people’s
money. In Ireland the budget deficit runs at 13 percent of GDP per annum, which
according to Krugman’s logic must be a fantastic recipe for jobs and growth.
Let’s just sit back and watch how that economic miracle is going to unfold.
My guess is that many people in Europe
still know, or at least instinctively sense, that the promises of jobs and
growth through state spending and money printing are hollow. They know that the
state is bust and cannot keep spending money it doesn’t have. The policy
options are much more limited than the campaign rhetoric indicates. On trend,
fiscal consolidation and structural reform will continue, and Germany’s
negotiating position will remain strong.
Yet, on the margin this was an
indication that Europe, and in particular France, remain in many areas
unreformable, and that the pressure on the ECB to sustain the unsustainable
with sizable money injections will, if anything, intensify.
In the meantime, the debasement of paper
money continues.
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