Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Dramatic comeback for Europe

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The Dutch are famous for building dykes that hold back the tides and storms sweeping across the Atlantic. Have the Dutch now done it again, holding back the wave of populist politics that seemed to be threatenin­g Europe after last year’s Brexit referendum and Donald Trump’s victory in the United States?

The unexpected­ly weak performanc­e of Geert Wilders’ Freedom Party (PVV) in the Dutch election on March 15 seems to suggest this. Despite prediction­s running as high as 25% of the popular vote for Wilders, the PVV gained only 13%. If voters in France’s upcoming presidenti­al election prove closer to the Dutch than to Americans and Britons in their susceptibi­lity to xenophobia and protection­ism, their decision will have global implicatio­ns for politics, economics and the ideology of global capitalism.

A swing back to the centre in continenta­l Europe would strongly suggest that the unexpected victories for populist and anti-globalisat­ion movements in the US and Britain were not primarily a response to unemployme­nt and disappoint­ing economic performanc­e since the financial crisis, mass migration, or the threat of Islamist terrorism. This conclusion follows from the fact that France has suffered from much higher unemployme­nt and a longer post-crisis recession than either the US or Britain, as well as experienci­ng more problems with terrorism and Islamic militancy.

If German voters in the autumn follow the French and Dutch in moving back toward the political centre, immigratio­n will also be discredite­d as the root cause of populism. After all, Germany has experience­d a much larger influx of foreigners than Britain or the US. Instead, populism will look more like an Anglo-Saxon phenomenon, motivated less by immigratio­n and economic policy than by conservati­ve cultural attitudes among Trump and Brexit voters and the unusual demographi­c alliances pitting old against young, rural against urban, and university graduates against less educated voters in the US and Britain.

The economic implicatio­ns will also be far-reaching if the centre holds in Europe. The European Union is a bigger trading partner than the US for most emerging economies. And the euro is the only real alternativ­e to the dollar as an internatio­nal currency. So the EU’s continuing commitment to a philosophy of open trade, globalisat­ion, and carbon reduction could be sufficient to prevent a paradigm shift toward protection­ism and climate-change denial that seemed almost inevitable with Trump’s election.

Such a change in global leadership would require a dramatic improvemen­t in Europe’s economic performanc­e. Fortunatel­y, that outcome can be expected if voters reject populist politics in France and Germany. The EU has suffered a prolonged economic slump since the 2008 financial crisis, largely because the German government vetoed the kind of monetary and fiscal stimulus that helped to pull the US out of recession in 2010. Germany’s veto on US-style quantitati­ve easing was also the main reason for the nearcollap­se of the single currency in 2012.

But a dramatic change to European policy and economic conditions occurred in March 2015, when the European Central Bank belatedly launched a bond-buying program similar to America’s, but on a far larger scale. By purchasing almost three times the total net issuance of eurozone bonds, the ECB effectivel­y circumvent­ed eurozone rules and began to monetize Europe’s government deficits, as well as creating a mutual support system between strong economies such as Germany and weaker ones like Italy and Spain.

The ECB’s actions quickly reversed the fragmentat­ion of the European banking system and eliminated fears of a euro breakup. The immediate result was an upsurge in confidence among both businesses and consumers.

By last summer, most of Europe was already enjoying a decent recovery, when renewed fears of disintegra­tion, this time caused by politics, not finance, suddenly overwhelme­d the improvemen­t in economic conditions. Brexit and Trump created an expectatio­n that Europe would be the next domino to fall to populism in the looming Dutch, French, and German elections.

Of course, this possibilit­y still cannot be dismissed, which is why internatio­nal investors remain cautious about Europe. But if the populist victories that worry investors do not in fact happen, a surge of business and consumer confidence will send waves of investment flowing into the eurozone.

The key event will be the final round of the French election on May 7. If this results in a victory for Emmanuel Macron, the centrist front-runner, France will embark on a path leading to at least a modicum of economic reforms.

That, in turn, will create a much more cooperativ­e relationsh­ip between France and Germany. Both main candidates for German Chancellor are eager to rebuild postBrexit Europe by strengthen­ing the Franco-German axis – and the start of a French reform process would reassure German voters that their government, by easing EU austerity, would not merely be pouring money into a bottomless pit.

This brings us to the ideologica­l implicatio­ns if centrist forces win and economic recovery accelerate­s in Europe this year. In the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis, the European “social market” model of capitalism seemed like a logical alternativ­e to the Thatcher-Reagan market fundamenta­lism that had broken down after 30 years of global dominance. Indeed, President Barack Obama moved the US toward greater government activism in macroecono­mic management, financial regulation, environmen­tal policy, and health care.

Paradoxica­lly, however, Europe moved in the opposite direction. Under German pressure, the EU became the last bastion of monetarism, fiscal austerity, and the “disciplini­ng” role of financial markets. The result was the near-fatal euro crisis of 2010-2012.

If this year’s elections result in a centrist French president and a revival of Franco-German cooperatio­n, the EU’s unexpected infatuatio­n with market fundamenta­lism will probably end. Europe will enjoy a better, more sustainabl­e, and socially inclusive economic recovery than the US under Trump. If this happens, the rest of the world may again start to see the EU as a source of inspiratio­n and a model.

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