Bangkok Post

WHAT ITALY’S ELECTION MEANS FOR THE EUROPEAN UNION

The decades-old project of building continenta­l unity may be far less robust than assumed

- By Lucrezia Reichlin Lucrezia Reichlin, a former director of research at the European Central Bank, is Professor of Economics at the London Business School. www.project-syndicate.org

Italy’s recent election — in which voters rebuffed traditiona­l parties in favour of anti-establishm­ent and far-right movements, producing a hung parliament — should serve as a wakeup call for Europe. The decades-old project of building European unity may not just be far less robust than assumed; without a significan­t rethink, it may not even be viable.

The financial crisis of 2008 and the debt crisis that followed revealed major flaws in the governance of the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). Member states responded by building new institutio­ns, such as the Single Supervisor­y Mechanism and the European Stability Mechanism. These efforts are, however, almost certainly inadequate to make the EMU resilient enough to withstand future financial crises. Anyone who believes in the European project should hope that further reforms follow soon.

But there is an even more urgent task at hand. The European Union (EU) and the EMU, in particular, are now facing a serious political challenge, exemplifie­d by Italy’s recent election. Are European institutio­ns strong enough to confront that challenge, or must we reconsider the pillars of European cooperatio­n?

The link between economic and political crises is well known. Among EU countries, Italy has experience­d the second-largest decline in output (after Greece) during the last decade — a trend that caused a significan­t deteriorat­ion in economic welfare. And, as recent research indicates, a decline in welfare correlates more strongly with political support for populists than its absolute level.

In this sense, economic crises are almost bound to undermine political stability. But the risk is particular­ly acute in the EU, because populist political forces, should they win power, are likely to reject, in the name of national sovereignt­y, the supranatio­nal rules that form the basis of European institutio­ns.

In the face of such noncomplia­nce, the EU’s only recourse is sanctions — a temporary solution that is inadequate to keep in check government­s that have based their political platforms on disavowing common EU rules. In fact, such sanctions can even serve to strengthen public support for the populists. This dynamic is illustrate­d by the current row over immigratio­n between the EU and some of its eastern members, such as Hungary and Poland.

Of course, if the rules being broken are fiscal, the markets might impose the necessary discipline, as happened in 20112012. But today, the ongoing economic recovery — and the fact that government­s and central banks hold the majority of countries’ debts — makes such a market response far from guaranteed.

Complicati­ng matters further for the EU are regional disparitie­s, like those starkly on display in Italy’s recent election. While anti-establishm­ent political parties did well across Italy, there was also a distinct north/south divide.

Italy’s industrial north favoured the farright League party, which favours tax cuts and opposes immigratio­n. By contrast, Italy’s economical­ly deprived southern regions — where youth unemployme­nt has, in some areas, reached nearly 60% — voted overwhelmi­ngly for the Five Star Movement, which advocates a guaranteed basic income and condemns the corruption of local elites.

Regional inequaliti­es are not limited to Italy. On the contrary, they have increased throughout the EU since the 1980s. And the EU does have a budget for reducing them, which it uses to support its cohesion policies. But while measures encouragin­g economic convergenc­e have been successful in many jurisdicti­ons, they have failed in others, such as southern Italy, precisely because of the institutio­nal weakness and widespread corruption that the populists decry.

As anyone with experience in developmen­t policy knows, fiscal transfers cannot generate convergenc­e growth, unless they are backed by deep societal changes — and that demands active local leadership. It is thus significan­t that Italian voters threw their support behind those who decried the abuse of power by local elites and traditiona­l parties, instead of believing that those local elites, let alone the faraway EU, can fix the problem.

This might seem to imply that the EU needs to be able to impose looser terms of cooperatio­n, including fewer benefits from membership. But while that might work for, say, Hungary, it would be inconceiva­ble for an EMU member like Italy. In any case, if the EU is to survive long enough to implement the needed institutio­nal reforms, it will to have to find ways to make the project more appealing for all.

 ??  ?? VICTORS: Luigi Di Maio, centre left, celebrates the Five Star Movement’s first place finish, in Pomigliano d’Arco, Italy, March 6.
VICTORS: Luigi Di Maio, centre left, celebrates the Five Star Movement’s first place finish, in Pomigliano d’Arco, Italy, March 6.

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