Be it the United States or the European Union, most Western countries are so highly indebted today that the markets have a greater say in their policies than the people. Why are democratic countries so pathetic when it comes to managing their money sustainably?
By Cordt Schnibben
In the midst of this confusing crisis, which has already lasted more than five years, former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt addressed the question of who had "gotten almost the entire world into so much trouble." The longer the search for answers lasted, the more disconcerting the questions arising from the answers became. Is it possible that we are not experiencing a crisis, but rather a transformation of our economic system that feels like an unending crisis, and that waiting for it to end is hopeless? Is it possible that we are waiting for the world to conform to our worldview once again, but that it would be smarter to adjust our worldview to conform to the world? Is it possible that financial markets will never become servants of the markets for goods again? Is it possible that Western countries can no longer get rid of their debt, because democracies can't manage money? And is it possible that even Helmut Schmidt ought to be saying to himself: I too am responsible for getting the world into a fix?
In the midst of this confusing crisis, which has already lasted more than five years, former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt addressed the question of who had "gotten almost the entire world into so much trouble." The longer the search for answers lasted, the more disconcerting the questions arising from the answers became. Is it possible that we are not experiencing a crisis, but rather a transformation of our economic system that feels like an unending crisis, and that waiting for it to end is hopeless? Is it possible that we are waiting for the world to conform to our worldview once again, but that it would be smarter to adjust our worldview to conform to the world? Is it possible that financial markets will never become servants of the markets for goods again? Is it possible that Western countries can no longer get rid of their debt, because democracies can't manage money? And is it possible that even Helmut Schmidt ought to be saying to himself: I too am responsible for getting the world into a fix?
The most romantic
Hollywood movie about the financial crisis isn't "Wall Street" or
"Margin Call," but the 1995 film "Die Hard: With a
Vengeance." In the film, an officer with the East German intelligence
agency, the Stasi, steals the gold reserves of the Western world from the
basement of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and supposedly sinks them into
the Hudson River. Bruce Willis hunts down the culprit and rescues the 550,000
bars of gold, which, until the early 1970s, were essentially the foundation on
which confidence in all the currencies of the Western world was built.
Creating Money out
of Thin Air
Until 1971, gold
was the benchmark of the US dollar, with one ounce of pure gold corresponding
to $35, and the dollar was the fixed benchmark of all Western currencies. But
when the United States began to need more and more dollars for the Vietnam War,
and the global economy grew so quickly that using gold as a benchmark became a
constraint, countries abandoned the system of fixed exchange rates. A new phase
of the global economy began, and two processes were set in motion: the
liberation of the financial markets from limited money supplies, which was
mostly beneficial; and the liberation of countries from limited revenues, which
was mostly detrimental. This money bubble continued to inflate for four
decades, as central banks were able to create money out of thin air, banks were
able to provide seemingly unlimited credit, and consumers and governments were
able to go into debt without restraint.
This continued
until the biggest credit bubble in history began to burst: first in the United
States, because banks had bundled the mortgages of millions of Americans, whose
only asset was a house bought on credit, into worthless securities; then around
the globe, because banks had foisted these securities onto customers in many
countries; and, finally, when these banks began to totter, debt-ridden
countries turned private debt into public debt until they too began to totter,
and could only borrow money from banks at even higher interest rates than
before.
At the moment, the
world has only one approach to getting out of this labyrinth of debt: incurring
trillions in additional debt.
What does all of
this have to do with Bruce Willis and Helmut Schmidt? Willis rescued the
world's gold and, with it, the illusion of the good, old world. Schmidt, as
Germany's finance minister in the 1970s, set the debt spiral in motion and
fueled the illusion in Germany that countries could go into debt, and that this
was good for everyone.
When Schmidt's
predecessor, Karl Schiller, resigned from the government in protest over 4
billion deutsche marks in new debt, he said: "I am not willing to support
a policy that creates the impression that the government pursues the motto:
After us comes the deluge."
Schmidt incurred
10 billion deutsche marks in new debt. Inspired by crisis economist John
Maynard Keynes, the German government believed that economic stimulus programs
would stimulate growth, but only under the condition that the debt was to be
brought down again in better times.
This economic
policy was known in Germany as "global regulation." As finance
minister, and later as chancellor, Schmidt took advantage of the oil crisis to
drive up the government deficit with economic stimulus programs. By the time
Schmidt stepped down in 1982, annual government spending had tripled relative
to 1970 spending, reaching the equivalent of €126 billion ($161 billion), and
public debt had increased fivefold, to €313 billion. Today, the combined debt
of federal, state and local governments has climbed to more than €2 trillion.
A Human Debt Gene?
From today's
perspective -- leaving aside all the effusive rhetoric about Europe -- the
introduction of the euro is nothing but the continuation of debt mania with
more audacious methods. The euro countries took advantage of the favorable
interest rates offered by the common currency to get into even more debt.
Can all of this be
blamed on some sort of human debt gene? Is it wastefulness, stupidity or an
error in the system? There are two views on how the government should use its
budgets to influence the economy: the theory of demand, established by Keynes,
advocates creating debt-financed government demand, which in turn generates
private demand and produces government revenues. In other words, building a
road provides construction workers with wages. They pay taxes, and they also
use their wages to buy furniture, which in turn provides furniture makers with
income, and so on.
The other view,
supply-side economics, is based on the assumption that economic growth is
determined by the underlying conditions for companies, whose investment
activity depends on high earnings, low wages and low taxes. According to this
theory, the government encourages growth through lower tax rates. In the last
few decades, the frequent transitions of power in Western countries between
politicians who support supply-side economics (conservatives, libertarians and
now some center-left social democrats) and those who advocate Keynesian
economics (social democrats) has driven up government debt. When some
politicians came into power, they reduced government revenues, and when they
were replaced by those of the opposite persuasion, spending went up. Some did
both.
When the debts of
companies and private households are added to the public debt, the sum of all
debt has grown at twice the rate of economic output since 1985, and it is now
three times the size of the gross world product. Economies in the developed
world would appear to require credit-financed demand in order to continue
growing -- they need consumers, companies and governments to go into debt and
to put off paying for their demand until some unspecified point in the future.
Of its own accord, this economic system produces the compulsion to drive up the
debt of public and private households.
Governments
delegate power and creative force to the markets, in the hope of reaping growth
and employment, thereby expanding the financial latitude of policymakers.
Government budgets that were built on debt continued to create the illusion of
power, until the markets exerted their power through interest.
Interest spending
is now the third-largest item in Germany's federal budget, and one in three
German municipalities is no longer able to amortize its debt on its own. In the
United States, the national debt has grown in the last four years from $10
trillion to more than $16 trillion, as more and more municipalities file for
bankruptcy. In Greece, Spain and Italy, the bond markets now indirectly affect
pensions, positions provided for in budgets and wages.
A country isn't a
business, even though there are politicians who like to treat their voters as
if they were employees. Politics is the art of mediating between the political
and economic markets, convincing parliaments and citizens that economic policy
promotes their prosperity and the common good, and convincing markets and
investors that nations cannot be managed in the same profit-oriented way as
companies.
After four years
of financial crisis, this balance between democracy and the market has been
destroyed. On the one hand, governments' massive intervention to rescue the
banks and markets has only exacerbated the fundamental problem of
legitimization that haunts governments in a democracy. The usual accusation is
that the rich are protected while the poor are bled dry. Rarely has it been as
roundly confirmed as during the first phase of the financial crisis, when
homeowners deeply in debt lost the roof over their heads, while banks, which
had gambled with their mortgages, remained in business thanks to taxpayer
money.
In the second
phase of the crisis, after countries were forced to borrow additional trillions
to stabilize the financial markets, the governments' dependency on the
financial markets grew to such an extent that the conflict between the market
and democracy is now being fought in the open: on the streets of Athens and
Madrid, on German TV talk shows, at summit meetings and in election campaigns.
The floodlights of democracy are now directed at the financial markets, which
are really nothing but a silent web of billions of transactions a day. Every
twitch is analyzed, feared, cheered or condemned, and the actions of
politicians are judged by whether they benefit or harm the markets.
The attempt by
countries to bolster the faltering financial system has in fact increased their
dependency on the financial markets to such an extent that their policies are
now shaped by two sovereigns: the people and creditors. Creditors and investors
demand debt reduction and the prospect of growth, while the people, who want
work and prosperity, are noticing that their politicians are now paying more
attention to creditors. The power of the street is no match for the power of
interest. As a result, the financial crisis has turned into a crisis of
democracy, one that can become much more existential than any financial crisis.
An Unequal Battle
The one sovereign
stalks the other, while the pressure of the markets contends with the pressure
of the street. In Europe, in particular, this has become an unequal battle.
Since Jan. 14, 2009, when Standard & Poor's downgraded Greek government
bonds, the markets have determined the direction and pace of European
integration. They want bigger and bigger bailout funds, they want to safeguard
their claims, they want a European Central Bank that buys up government bonds
indefinitely, they want slashed government budgets, they want labor market
reforms like the ones in Germany, they want wage cuts such as those in Germany
and, at the same time, they want these incapacitated countries mired in
recession to offer the prospect of healthy growth.
And this is
happening in a Europe in which the sovereign nations don't truly know how much
Europe they really want. The people who govern Europe don't know either, which
puts them at the mercy of the markets. They have no common model for Europe,
and they suspend the most basic democratic ground rules to remain capable of
acting. They have to use tricks and bend agreements to prevent the euro from
breaking apart.
The gulf between
those who govern and those who are governed, a problem in any democracy, is
complicated in Europe by the mistrust between Europeans and bodies that seek to
tame the crisis in their name.
Mistrust among
European governments also determines the courses they chart. The German
government, in particular, has more confidence in the markets than it does in
the governments of Europe's crisis-ridden countries, and it finds the power of
interest rates more convincing than promises of reform. Mistrust also stems
from the relationship between governments and their voters, so much so that
it's become common to delay important decisions until after elections and to
keep them out of campaigns. There isn't much confidence in the economic
judgment of the people. If lawmakers can hardly understand which bailout funds
they are voting for, how many billions they are pushing in which direction, how
great the risk of inflation is, what terms like target, derivative, leverage
and securitization mean, how much can citizens be expected to comprehend? A
citizen who hopes to understand the underlying problems of the euro crisis
would, at the very least, have to read the business sections of major German
newspapers like the Süddeutsche Zeitung or the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung every day. Watching one talk show a week isn't
enough.
Even Good Debt
Needs to Be Serviced
The democratic
decision-making process reaches its limits in this fundamental crisis, but even
in the decades when debt was being accumulated, it was clear that democracies
have a troubled relationship with money.
There was always
justification for new debt. The catchphrases included things like more jobs,
better education and social equality, and the next election was always around
the corner. Debt was justified at the communal level to expand bus service or
build playgrounds, at the state level to hire more teachers or build bypasses
and, at the federal level, to buy tanks and fund economic stimulus programs.
There is good debt
and bad debt, but even good debt needs to be serviced constantly. A closer look
at which countries acquire and pay off debt, and to what degree, reveals
unsettling correlations: The more often governments change and the more
pluralistic they are, the faster the debt increases and the more difficult it
becomes to pay if off. The more democracy, the looser the money. The only place
money gets even looser is in dictatorships.
To hold an
administration responsible for the debts of its predecessors, there are debt
limits in democracies. In Helmut Schmidt's day, for example, there was a
provision in the German constitution stipulating that total debt could not
exceed total investment. In Europe, the provisions of the Maastricht Treaty,
which is aimed at ensuring the stability of the common currency, limit the
amount of debt a government can accumulate to no more than 60 percent of gross
domestic product.
Debt Limits Have
Never Worked
So far, such debt
limits have never worked in any country. Under new laws in Germany, the federal
government, starting in 2016, will only be allowed to incur new debt amounting
to 0.35 percent of GDP. Euro-zone member states have agreed to a similar rule,
but it can only take effect if all national parliaments agree.
In some countries,
there are already sparks of resistance against the limitation of new debt. The
Italian government refuses to implement austerity measures demanded by the ECB
and to approve a clause stipulating automatic spending cuts. After mass
protests, the Portuguese government reversed cuts that had already been
announced. Spain will fall short of an agreed deficit target of 6.3 percent,
with its deficit actually predicted to come in at 7.4 percent. Euro-zone
countries are in fact not allowed to incur new debt of more than 3 percent of GDP.
What makes those
hoping to clean up budgets in the crisis-ridden countries skeptical is the
downward spiral triggered by such drastic budget cuts, structural reforms and
wage reductions. Private and public demand is sinking while the economy
shrinks, leading to higher unemployment, less government revenue and higher
debt. In Spain, after four austerity packages, the unemployment rate has
increased from 8 percent in early 2007 to 25.8 percent today, while the
country's debt ratio has doubled. In Portugal, unemployment has gone up by
close to 100 percent in four years, with the debt ratio increasing from 72 to
114 percent. In Greece, after budget cuts amounting to more than 10 percent of
the country's total economic output, unemployment has almost tripled and the
debt ratio has risen from 113 to 160 percent.
These horrific
numbers are not just driving people into the streets, but are also creating
conflicts between politicians and economists. There it is again, the old
dispute between the supporters of supply-side and Keynesian economics. Only
when budgets have been balanced, taxes are low and wages are brought down can
growth return, says the one side; those who cut public and private demand so
radically are driving countries into recession and driving debts up instead of
down, says the other. Average growth in Europe has declined continuously and
was only 1.4 percent in 2011, while the economy is expected to shrink this
year.
For many
debt-ridden countries, growth is one of four possibilities to reduce debt. Balancing
budgets through cuts and tax increases is another. The third option is a debt
haircut, which means declaring bankruptcy and no longer servicing at least a
portion of debts. The fourth path is inflation, that is, allowing the debt to
melt away on the quiet at the expense of savers and consumers. But three to
four percent inflation can hardly be justified politically in Germany, although
the prospects are better in the United States and other countries. For this
reason, and in response to German pressure, European countries are now trying
out tough austerity programs.
A European
Depression and a Pending Japanese Disaster
Because
governments are in disagreement, bodies are taking their place that are turning
into ersatz governments: the central banks.
The ECB's decision
to buy up unlimited amounts
of the sovereign debt of European countries is a replacement for
political solutions for which there are currently no majorities in the
governments and parliaments of euro-zone countries. The decision by the
American Federal Reserve Bank to inject hundreds of billions of dollars into
the markets again to stimulate economic growth results for the inability of
Democrats and Republicans to agree on a compromise between limiting debt and
economic stimulus programs. Printing money -- or betting hundreds of billions
once again -- is the last desperate response on both sides of the Atlantic.
What began four
years ago with the bursting of a credit bubble in the mortgage market is being
combated with trillions of new debt, thereby inflating the next, even bigger credit
bubble.
The fresh
trillions circle the world in the search for yield, but only a small part of
the money flows into the real economy, where investments in new production
plants produce lower returns. Instead, the trillions slosh back and forth, from
one financial market to another, from the foreign currency market to the
commodities market, and from the gold market to the stock market and back
again.
Because these
trillions are not reaching the real economy, the risk of inflation is currently
smaller than Germany's central bank, the Bundesbank, and its president would have
us believe. But every saver and everyone with a life insurance
policy pays for the central bank's low interest-rate policy with low interest
rates. When central banks keep interest rates close to zero for long periods of
time, which they have done for years, they disadvantage ordinary savers and
favor major investors, gamblers and banks, which can borrow at low rates and
invest the money elsewhere at a profit.
Blaming the Banks
Who and what has
gotten the world into such trouble, and how can it extricate itself again? Not
surprisingly, former Chancellor Schmidt blames investment bankers, the managers
and bankers who flooded the world with worthless securities and long speculated
on the sovereign debt of crisis-ridden countries, and who hedged their risks,
which were much too high, with far too little capital and therefore had to be
rescued with taxpayer money. Banks are still the focus of all problems in the
financial markets. They still have to be supplied with money, and they still
pose a threat to the system.
And those who
allowed them to become so powerful are all those politicians and governments
that gave the financial markets so much freedom, often socialized the risks,
incurred too much government debt, and allowed the municipalities, states and
countries to become so irresponsible. "The market" is not some group
of experts, nor is it the last resort of collective reason. It is an orgy of
irrationality, arbitrariness, waste and egoism. "Democracy" is not
some event involving citizens, or some celebration of altruism and
far-sightedness, but rather the attempt to bundle diverging interests into
decisions in a way that's as peaceful as possible.
Together, the
market and democracy are what we like to call "the system." The
system has driven and enticed bankers and politicians to get the world into
trouble, or least one could argue that if they too weren't part of the system.
And we could sweep it away if we had a better one.
Instead, we are
left with an undisguised view of the system. One of the side effects of the
crisis is that all ideological shells have been incinerated. Truths about the
rationality of markets and the symbiosis of market and democracy have gone up
in flames.
The Problems of
Modern Capitalism
The European
depression is only prelude, with the Japanese disaster waiting in the wings.
The country's debt-to-GDP ratio is 230 percent, and the government is dependent
on the opposition approving the issue of new government bonds. Lurking behind
it all is the American abyss, the debt drama of the next few months, the
showdown and duel between Democrats and Republicans over which party can blame
the other one for a national bankruptcy.
And then, finally,
we have a clear view of the three biggest problems in finance-driven,
democratically constituted capitalism: First, how can a debt-ridden economy
grow if a large part of demand in the past was based on debt, which is now to
be reduced?
The second major
problem of modern capitalism is this: How can the unleashed financial markets
be reined in again, and how should the G-20 countries come up with joint rules
for major banks, which are their financiers and creditors, and for markets,
which punish and reward these countries through interest? How much freedom do
financial markets need to serve the global economy as a lubricant, and what
limits do they need so that banks, shadow banks and hedge funds do not become a
threat to the system?
Third, how do
governments mediate between the power of the two sovereigns, how do they
reestablish the primacy of citizens over creditors, and how does democracy
function in debt-ridden countries? How can politicians react without burdening
countries with more debt, and how can they reduce that debt? In fact, how can
they even govern anymore in this prison of debt? In the past, future revenues
were mortgaged, in municipalities, states and the federal government. This now
makes it difficult to structure the present and the future. Today only about 20
percent of the federal budget is truly politically available, as compared with
40 percent when Schmidt was still in office.
It is always only
at first glance that the world is stuck in a debt crisis, a financial crisis
and a euro crisis. In fact, it is in the midst of a massive transformation
process, a deep-seated change to our critical and debt-ridden system, which is
suited to making us poor and destroying our prosperity, social security and
democracy, and in the midst of an upheaval taking place behind the backs of
those in charge.
A great bet is
underway, a poker game with stakes in the trillions, between those who are
buying time with central bank money and believe that they can continue as
before, and the others, who are afraid of the biggest credit bubble in history
and are searching for ways out of capitalism based on borrowed money.
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