Europe can’t get its stories straight about economics
The European Union can act in unison at times — for example, on Russia sanctions or, at least so far, on Brexit. But as French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel try for a closer union in the next few years, they will need to be mindful that there is no single narrative among the publics in different European countries on matters of economic importance.
A recent paper for Bruegel, a Brusselsbased think tank, vividly shows this by analysing coverage of Europe’s recent financial crisis by four important centrist newspapers: Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung, France’s Le Monde, Italy’s La Stampa and Spain’s El Pais. The total data set encompassed 51,714 news stories. The researchers — Henrik Mueller and Gerret von Nordheim from Dortmund University and Bruegel’s Giuseppe Porcaro — fed them to a content analysis algorithm and then analyzed the results to construct generalised narratives. Their focus was on how blame for the crisis was attributed.
They found that only El Pais consistently attributed blame to Spain itself for its financial troubles during the euro crisis. “In Spain, the connection between the global financial crisis, the local housing bubble and the mismanagement of a previous period of impressive growth was more visible,” Mr Porcaro explained to me.
As one might expect, Sueddeutsche Zeitung blames the crisis on a departure from the traditional German social market economic model. Everyone except Germany seems to have contributed, according to the Munich paper — from greedy financial market players to financially imprudent Greeks to the European Central Bank with its loose monetary policy.
Le Monde, too, blamed the banks and speculators, but also German intransigence in handling the indebted southern Europeans. And La Stampa focused on Italy’s role as a victim of circumstance, namely globalisation and German-imposed austerity. Banks and financiers didn’t get much attention as culprits from the Italian newspaper, but the Italian political system and government did get some blame, as in Spain. Le Monde and La Stampa, according to the Bruegel paper, both “embrace a sense of desperation that goes far beyond purely economic considerations but calls into question the entire political system and social fabric”. It’s as if the euro area’s four biggest economies didn’t share a reality. The four quality dailies resemble the blind men in the Indian parable, feeling different parts of an elephant’s body, declaring the whole animal should look like a tree or a snake, then coming to blows when they can’t agree. I asked Mr Porcaro if he thought the differences were due to the papers’ bias in favor of the official lines laid down by their respective governments. He replied that this could be part of it, but the difference in narratives were more likely to be driven by the relationship between the papers and their readers — that is, in the final analysis, by public opinion.
The euro zone is the only currency union in which there is no single constituent public. Instead, there are a number of national filter bubbles. Would-be reformers — whether Ms Merkel, Mr Macron or European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker — must sell increased unity and new common institutions, such as a European Monetary Fund and perhaps common borrowing mechanisms, to each of these different audiences.
There are good reasons why Europe isn’t a single information space: Its language diversity can be an asset as well as a hindrance. But Mr Porcaro said to me that “europeanising the public debate” was still possible if only different countries’ media were more interested in crossing national barriers and showing their readers alternative perspectives. Then perhaps understanding of the issues could be more multifaceted. If forging a common European identity on top of the national ones is a utopia, trying to understand one’s neighbours better could help the search for common solutions. ©2018 BLOOMBERG VIEW