The Sovereign Debt Crisis and the Future of the Euro
The specter of sovereign defaults is back. The roots of a sovereign debt crisis are deep and concern all the industrialized countries. In 2010, those fears coagulated on Greece because Greece was the worst offender. Disgusted by the political economy of the Eurozone, investors concluded in the spring that the Eurozone and its currency had lost its attractiveness. But it would be completely premature to conclude that the Eurozone is condemned. What happened in the spring is breathtaking and very much in line with the European tradition to use every crisis as an opportunity: the paper offers a dissenting, unfashionable and optimistic view of the future of the Euro.
This crisis forced European governments to recognize the flaws in the design of the monetary union and they responded accordingly. In the short term, fiscal tightening in the Eurozone will not break growth down but restore fiscal credibility. An appropriate exchange rate for the Euro will boost activity as it is already visible. Fears of a Greek default are disproportionate. A default would not be in the interests of Greece, the Eurozone, and other OECD countries; there are huge incentives to find alternative solutions. In the medium term, the survival of the Euro is, contrary to a recent common wisdom, not a question: the debate on fiscal federalism has already taken place twenty years ago and its conclusion was pragmatic. The pressing reasons which pushed back all the principled objections to the creation of the common currency are exactly the same today.
The main result of the crisis has been to give a clear mandate to the European leaders to correct the flaws of this governance and major steps have already been made and will be completed in the coming months. The political difficulties which were witnessed in the spring in designing this new framework should certainly not be minimized, and they are not definitely overcome. However, they have clearly been exaggerated, probably in part due to a deadly mismanagement of communication by European authorities.
Anyway, the results are here and they open much brighter perspectives than before. Budgetary and monetary policies as well as the exchange rate are on a solid footing. The results of the stress tests applied to 91 European banks provide yet another contribution to the restoration of confidence. Nearly everyone praised the transparency under which the exercise was led, in particular in Spain, due to the publication of detailed sovereign debt exposure. There was also sort of a good news in the relatively low level of capital shortfalls.
Significant challenges are still looming. But do not underestimate the reality of a new political economy in the Eurozone: a new policy framework, the implementation of stricter fiscal stability rules under market scrutiny, crisis prevention and management mechanisms already exemplified by the European Financial Stability Facility are huge progresses made in the right direction. It is no surprise in this context that risk aversion is declining and that investors are back. “Invest in the Eurozone”? Now could prove to be good timing, don’t miss it.
(July 28th, 2010)
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The Sovereign Debt Crisis and the Future of the Euro
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