By Philip Stephens
The other day I
heard someone say that Angela Merkel intends to fight next autumn’s German
election as the chancellor who saved Europe. Those still worried about the
future of the euro will be reassured by her confidence. The crowds of striking
workers who took to Europe’s streets this week to protest against austerity are
less likely to applaud.
Not too long ago,
Ms Merkel faced criticism for hesitancy and indecision. Radoslaw Sikorski,
Poland’s foreign minister, made a pilgrimage to Berlin to demand she pick up
the reins of leadership. It had been a long time since a Polish politician had
called for a more assertive Germany.
Ms Merkel is now
being nothing if not assertive. The individual ingredients in her recent speech
to the European Parliament – fiscal rectitude, improved competitiveness, deeper
financial integration and eurozone economic governance – were scarcely
groundbreaking. Together they represent Germany’s conditions for securing the
future of the single currency. Berlin has decided that, one way or another, it
cannot avoid picking up the bill. So it wants to set the terms. Austerity now
and shared decision-making later is the price others must pay for German
solidarity.
The euro is not
out of the woods. A spat between eurozone governments and the
International Monetary Fund has underlined the scale of the economic crisis still engulfing
Greece. The dispute itself – about whether Greece’s debt to GDP ratio should fall
to 120 per cent by 2020 or 2022 – was surreal. Everyone knows that Greece will
have to write off another hefty slab of its debt. The question is one of
timing.