To listen to some conservative commentary in London on Friday, you
would think the British Prime Minister David Cameron just morphed into
Winston Churchill, valiantly upholding England’s ancient liberties
against German aggression. In fact, what happened in Europe this week was nothing so grandiose.
would think the British Prime Minister David Cameron just morphed into
Winston Churchill, valiantly upholding England’s ancient liberties
against German aggression. In fact, what happened in Europe this week was nothing so grandiose.
David Cameron’s refusal to back a Franco-German plan to revise the European Union treaty
was the culmination of a consistent Conservative policy, dating back to
Margaret Thatcher and continued under John Major. That policy has been
to resist any steps taken in the name of European integration that would
in practice lead to Britain’s becoming a member of a federal Europe.
Cameron is not—despite the
opprobrium that has been heaped on his head by everyone from the French
President Nicolas Sarkozy to the shadow foreign secretary Douglas
Alexander—a pathologically insular Little Englander. Like Margaret
Thatcher, he believes in the single European market. Like John Major, he
opposes British membership of the European monetary union.
As over the Schengen Agreements on passport-free travel, as over the
euro, Britain has once again reserved its right to retain sovereignty
over key areas of policy.
Nor is this an exclusively
Conservative policy tradition. Gordon Brown, too, resisted the siren
calls of the Europhiles in his own party to take Britain into the EMU. I
don’t think he did this out of high principle, mind you. I suspect it
was partly to spite Tony Blair, partly to maximize the economic power he
retained as chancellor of the Exchequer and partly to please his
friends in the City, many of whom were rather put off of monetary union
by the trauma of Britain’s brief membership of the Exchange Rate
Mechanism. Nevertheless, Brown’s preservation of the pound was his
single greatest achievement. Had he yielded, the British economy would
now be suffering a far more agonizing economic contraction, because we
would have lacked the monetary flexibility that was so successfully used
by Sir Mervyn King to mitigate the impact of the 2008-9 financial
crisis.
So it is not that British policy
has dramatically changed. The real historical turn is the one now being
taken by the 17 euro zone members and the six non-euro states that have
chosen to follow them. For there should be no doubt in anyone’s mind
that what they have just agreed to do is to create a federal fiscal
union. Moreover, it is a fundamentally flawed one. The only surprising
thing is that so few other non-euro countries—Sweden, maybe the Czechs
and Hungarians—have joined Britain in expressing reservations. I quite
see why countries with the euro are prepared to give up their fiscal
independence to avert a currency collapse. But what on earth is in this
for the others?
Nicolas Sarkozy, as usual,
bad-mouthed the British prime minister in the hope of maximizing his own
personal glory at the expense of la perfide Albion. “Very
simply,” declared the French president, “in order to accept the reform
of the treaty at 27, David Cameron asked for what we thought was
unacceptable: a protocol to exonerate the U.K. from financial-services
regulation. We could not accept this as at least part of the problems
[Europe is facing] came from this sector.” This is claptrap of the
lowest order.
To see why, you need to read the
“international agreement” announced in the early hours of Friday. The
stated aim of the agreement—which would have been the aim of EU treaty
revision had Cameron rolled over—is to establish and enforce “a new
fiscal compact and strengthened economic policy coordination” in the
euro area. The phrase “fiscal stability union” is explicitly used. It is
to be based on “common, ambitious rules” and “a new legal framework.”
How will this work? The answer is
that there will be a “new fiscal rule”: “General government budgets
shall be balanced or in surplus; this principle shall be deemed
respected if, as a rule, the annual structural deficit does not exceed
0.5 percent of nominal GDP.” This balanced budget rule is to be adopted
in the national constitutions of euro zone members. But there will also
be an “automatic correction mechanism,” enforceable by the core EU
institutions—the commission, the council, and the court—if member states
violate their own constitutions.
Moreover, the document states that
there will henceforth be “a procedure … to ensure that all major
economic policy reforms planned by euro area Member States will be
discussed and coordinated at the level of the euro area” with regular
euro zone summits to be held at least twice a year. The French and
Germans leaders have made it clear that they envisage harmonizing labor
law, taxation, and financial regulation on this basis.
This,
in sum, is the founding charter of the United States of Europe. Notice
two problems however. First, it is not clear how the European
Commission, Council, and Court can act in this way, policing a 23-member
fiscal union that is not covered by any treaty. Second, the
balanced-budget rule is nuts. As it stands, it’s a recipe for excessive
rigidity in fiscal policy—unless you think the rest of the Brussels
Agreement implies a significant centralization of fiscal policy. Because
you cannot have a balanced budget rule for member states if you don’t
also have a federal government with flexible fiscal rules (as in the
U.S.).
So where is
the clause describing the new USE Treasury, with the right to issue
bonds as well as to transfer resources from the more productive to the
less productive member states? The answer is there isn’t one because the
German voter refuses to countenance such a thing. That means one of two
things. Either it’s going to be created by stealth—or this is a federal
union that will be dead on arrival. I think it’s supposed to be the
former, but I am not sure.
0Remember,
none of this would be happening if it wasn’t for a disastrous crisis of
the Eurocrats’ own making. Twelve years ago, I was one of a small band
of commentators who warned correctly that a monetary union without some
fiscal component would fall apart after about 10 years. Four years ago, I
was also one of a handful of people who pointed out that the German
banks were in worse shape than the American banks and needed urgent
attention. Europe’s leaders ignored these arguments. The result has been
an entirely predictable combination of fiscal crisis and banking
collapse.
There is now a depression on the other side of the English Channel, and it is the continent that is cutting itself off—from sane economic policies.
In the past
few months, incompetent leadership has brought the euro-zone economy,
and with it the world economy, to the edge of a precipice strongly
reminiscent of 1931. Then, as now, it proved impossible to arrive at
sane debt restructurings for overburdened sovereigns. Then, as now, bank
failures threatened to bring about a complete economic collapse. Then,
as now, an excessively rigid monetary system (then the gold standard,
now the euro) served to worsen the situation.
For some
time it has been quite obvious that the only way to save the monetary
union is to avoid the mistakes of the 1930s. That means, first, massive
quantitative easing (bond purchases) by the European Central Bank to
bring down the interest rates (yields) currently being paid by the
Mediterranean governments; second, restructuring to reduce the absolute
debt burdens of these governments; third, the creation of a new fiscal
mechanism that transfers resources on a regular basis from the core to
the periphery; and finally the recapitalization of the ailing banks of
the euro zone.
The problem
is that the Brussels Agreement only does these things in the most
half-hearted way. Aside from new borrowing, euro-area governments have
to repay more than €1.1 trillion euros of long- and short-term debt in
2012, with about €519 billion of Italian, French, and German debt
maturing in the first half alone. Meanwhile, the European banks need, we
are now told, €115 billion of new capital—of which €13 billion is
required by German banks.
Yet the
European Financial Stability Fund has been capped at €500 billion, of
which more than half has already been committed. The International
Monetary Fund is to be given (by whom?) just €200 billion to recycle
back (to whom?). And the ECB has committed itself to spend no more than
€20 billion a week on bond purchases in the secondary market.
It is all,
quite simply, too little. And the result is that the euro zone is about
to repeat history. In the absence of sufficient resources for the new
federal model, the new rules about budgets (and bank capital) are going
to lead to pro-cyclical fiscal and monetary policies, deepening rather
than alleviating the economic contraction we are witnessing.
“Eurozone Deal Leaves Britain Isolated” trumpets the Financial Times, for
many years an ardent proponent of monetary union. But if David Cameron
can succeed in isolating Britain from the disaster that is unfolding on
the continent, he deserves only our praise. For once the old joke—“Fog
in the Channel: Continent Cut Off”—seems applicable. There is now a
Depression on the other side of the channel, and it is indeed the
continent that is cutting itself off—from sane economic policies.
Last month I
warned that the disintegration of the European Union was more likely
than the death of the euro. You now see what I meant. The course on
which the continent has now embarked means not just the creation of a
federal Europe, but a chronically depressed federal Europe. The
Eurocrats have exchanged a Stability and Growth Pact—which was honored
only in the breach—for an Austerity and Contraction Pact they intend to
stick to. The United Kingdom has no option but to dissociate itself from
this collective suicide pact, even if it strongly increases the
probability that we shall end up outside the EU altogether.
Many more brickbats will rain down on David Cameron in the days to
come. But he has done the right thing. And he will swiftly be vindicated by events on the cut-off continent.
come. But he has done the right thing. And he will swiftly be vindicated by events on the cut-off continent.
A version of this column originally ran in the Dec. 10 edition of The Times of London.
Niall Ferguson is a professor of history at Harvard University. He is also a senior research fellow at Jesus College, Oxford University, and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. His Latest book, Civilization: The West and the Rest, has just been published by Penguin Press.
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