Sunday Tribune

German plea for UK to stay ignores EU’s troubles

- Daniel Stelter

Gnewsweekl­y Der Spiegel pleaded “Please don’t go” on its cover this week, asking the British to vote against Brexit on Thursday. Indeed, especially from the point of view of Germany, Brexit would be a disaster.

We Germans would be left without a pro-market partner among the larger EU economies. After a British exit, the EU would be dominated by countries believing in the power of the state and the virtues of redistribu­tion. The EU would lose a pivotal voice of economic common sense without the UK as a member.

On more than 20 pages of coverage, Der Spiegel brings up many arguments in favour of a “remain” vote. Reading it, one is left with the distinct impression that the supporters of Brexit have nostalgic memories of Britain’s past and are more emotional than rational in their views.

Astonishin­gly, the major economic problems of Europe and the euro zone are left unaddresse­d. Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, can even claim in an interview that Spain, Portugal and Ireland “have overcome the crisis” and that “much also has happened in Greece”. Well, as we all know:

Greece is bankrupt, even as euro zone politician­s continue their game of “pretend and postpone” when it comes to managing Greece’s debt mountain. Spain is unable to stabilise its debt even in the most optimistic scenarios and under the stewardshi­p (until now) of the conservati­ve party. Portugal has a total debt load above the level of Japan (about 400 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), paired with a shrinking population, lack of education and innovation and clearly bankrupt. Ireland was and is competitiv­e, but will never be in a position to pay off its huge private and public debt burden in an orderly way.

ECB interventi­on

Only thanks to the European Central Bank (ECB) policy of quantitati­ve easing and negative interest rates, has the euro zone not imploded until today.

Only thanks to the ECB, do countries with higher debts and poorer demographi­cs pay lower interest rates on their debt than does the US.

Unfortunat­ely, the ECB can only buy time. It cannot fix the underlying problems of too much debt and diverging competitiv­eness. Only the politician­s could handle this problem, but they shy away from tackling it for fear of their electorate­s. Meanwhile, debt levels grow and imbalances remain as ever before.

Germany, for its part, celebrates an ever-growing trade surplus, which is expected to reach 9 percent of GDP this year. This strength of the German economy is also an important aspect of the ongoing Brexit discussion. Only rarely is it stated as explicitly as in this comment in The Telegraph. The argument goes as follows:

The key to German success is this: it participat­es in a weak currency (whose value would collapse without it) enabling its exports to sell far more cheaply than had it retained the deutschmar­k. Therefore, it continues to grow in economic strength relative to its partners – including us – but especially those in the euro zone, notably France and Italy, who would benefit greatly from restoring the franc and the lira.

Any net exporter in the EU also benefits hugely from the vast and incomprehe­nsi- ble welter of EU regulation­s and laws, which keep external competitor­s at arm’s length and pile costs on them if they wish access to the single market.

“Germany is so rich, and getting richer at the expense not least of its partners,” states The Telegraph and comes to the conclusion that, “German domination of the EU means it has conquered without war, and signing up to the EU is signing up to the Fourth Reich.”

Leaving aside the overblown rhetoric, according to this view, a combinatio­n of currency dumping and unfair competitio­n lies at the heart of Germany’s success. The solution can only be a limitation of Germany’s export strength.

The problem with this argument is, like with all populist arguments, that it has a grain of truth in it. Germany has indeed benefited from the weak euro in past years. Germans have focused on producing cheaper, not smarter, since the introducti­on of the euro, as per capita productivi­ty gains have stalled.

JP Morgan already showed on 2012 that a divergence of economic performanc­e led to tensions – and even war – in Europe over the past 150 years. For the purpose of illustrati­on, I have added the analysis for today’s developmen­t:

Of course, there are many more factors leading to war. In contrast to British Prime Minister David Cameron, I do not fear another war in Europe should Britain vote to leave or the whole EU fall apart.

In addition, the divergence today is not as big as in past times. Still, we should take this indicator seriously. Clearly more seriously as German politician­s are taking it now. Given the overall developmen­t, it is no wonder that the public of Europe turns more and more euro-sceptic.

Slow recovery

Only this year did euro-zone output manage to reach pre-crisis levels. Italy and Spain are still not there yet, while France seems stuck in a never ending recession.

Where this turns potentiall­y toxic is that the publics of other countries would like to have a vote on remaining in Europe, just like the British 55 percent of the French and nearly 60 percent of the Italians would like to vote, with 40 percent of the French and nearly half of the Italians wanting an exit.

Of course, it remains to be seen whether such a separation, if it were to happen, would actually lead to an improvemen­t in the national economic situation in the respective countries.

Many factors are domestic, but at the same time it can’t be denied that Germany’s failed euro policy is a mighty contributo­r to the worsening sentiments.

Germany’s export based model increases tensions

A key preconditi­on for a recovery of Europe from the crisis is a rebalancin­g of trade flows. There was some progress in the past years, but the adjustment mainly took place via lower imports. Only Spain and, to a certain extent, Italy managed to increase their exports.

Meanwhile, the German trade surplus with the other euro-zone members shrank, while it grew significan­tly with the rest of the world. Of course, this is not only due to the weak euro but also the industrial structure of Germany, which benefits over proportion­ately from globalisat­ion and industrial­isation.

This one-sided focus on export-based growth has led to intensifie­d criticism in Europe and the world, including from US secretary of the Treasury Jacob Lew.

German trade surpluses distract demand from foreign countries and amplify their problems. “Stealing” demand in a world suffering from underutili­sation of capacities naturally causes frictions.

Therefore, it would be in Germany’s own interests to lower the export surplus. Especially as every trade surplus is linked with a similar export of savings into the world. Most of the surplus of nearly 9 percent of GDP will be provided as credit to customers abroad, which are already highly indebted. In a world suffering from too much debt, it is a dubious, if not stupid strategy, to export savings and risk not getting the money back.

It would be much wiser for Germans to spend that money at home to fix the crippled infrastruc­ture and to improve our education system.

The refusal of German politician­s to acknowledg­e the need for a debt restructur­ing, which needs German participat­ion as the main creditor of the euro zone, worsens the financial, economical and political damage of the failed euro project.

It is impossible to escape bankruptcy with austerity and reforms. The German policy to try to rescue the euro is a complete failure. The vote on Brexit and the increased anti-EU feelings of the European public prove the point.

If the Germans really want to avoid a Brexit or the exit of other countries from the euro zone, they will have to change their policies. Unfortunat­ely, German politician­s and economists prefer to criticise other countries instead of doing their homework.

Italian risk

They oppose spending more money at home, they oppose a debt restructur­ing, they oppose debt monetisati­on by the ECB, they oppose exits from the euro zone. In doing so, they increase the pressure in the system as Europe remains locked in recession.

Irrespecti­ve of how the British vote next week, the problems of Europe keep on growing. It is only a question of when, not if, a euro-sceptic party gets into power in one of the largest EU economies, promising to solve all problems by exiting the euro and the EU.

I continue to see Italy as the prime candidate for such a move. The country suffers under a recession which has by now lasted longer than the recession of the 1930s. It still has not managed to get back to 2008 GDP levels. Unemployme­nt is high, government debt is out of control. Closing the competitiv­e gap to Germany by lowering wages by 30 percent is a ridiculous idea and an impossible task.

The alternativ­e is to leave the euro zone. Italy could then devalue the new lira and regain competitiv­eness. An Italian uscita (exit) is the true risk for the euro zone.

And it would be too late when Der Spiegel comes up with a new cover: “Mon dio, Italia. Si prega di non uscire!”

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Britain will vote on Thursday whether or not it will remain part of the EU, with strong support on both sides of the debate. German weekly Der Spiegel put ‘Please don’t go’ on its cover and dedicated 20 pages to arguments for the UK to remain, but the writer says it ignored all the problems facing the EU at the moment.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Britain will vote on Thursday whether or not it will remain part of the EU, with strong support on both sides of the debate. German weekly Der Spiegel put ‘Please don’t go’ on its cover and dedicated 20 pages to arguments for the UK to remain, but the writer says it ignored all the problems facing the EU at the moment.

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