Gulf News

A new deal to save Europe

It must be realised without the tools of a functionin­g federation, relying instead on the EU’s existing institutio­ns

- Special to Gulf News

don’t care about what it will cost. We took our country back!” This is the proud message heard throughout England since the Brexit referendum last June. And it is a demand that is resonating across the continent. Until recently, any proposal to “save” Europe was regarded sympatheti­cally, albeit with scepticism about its feasibilit­y. Today, the scepticism is about whether Europe is worth saving.

The European idea is being driven into retreat by the combined force of a denial, an insurgency, and a fallacy. The European Union (EU) establishm­ent’s denial that the Union’s economic architectu­re was never designed to sustain the banking crisis of 2008 has resulted in deflationa­ry forces that delegitimi­se the European project. The predictabl­e reaction to deflation has been the insurgency of anti-European parties across the continent. And, most worrying of all, the establishm­ent has responded with the fallacy that “federation-lite” can stem the nationalis­t tide.

It can’t. In the wake of the euro crisis, Europeans shudder at the thought of giving the EU more power over their lives and communitie­s. A Eurozone political union, with a small federal budget and some mutualisat­ion of gains, losses and debt would have been useful in 1999, when the common currency was born. But now, under the weight of massive banking losses and legacy debts caused by the euro’s faulty architectu­re, federation-lite (as proposed by French presidenti­al hopeful Emmanuel Macron) is too little too late. It would become the permanent Austerity Union that German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble has sought for years. There could be no better gift to today’s “Nationalis­t Internatio­nal”.

Simply put, progressiv­es need to ask a straightfo­rward question: Why is the European idea dying? The answers are clear: Involuntar­y unemployme­nt and involuntar­y intra-EU migration.

Involuntar­y unemployme­nt is the price of inadequate investment across Europe, owing to austerity, and of the oligopolis­tic forces that have concentrat­ed jobs in Europe’s surplus economies during the resulting deflationa­ry era. Involuntar­y migration is the price of economic necessity in Europe’s periphery. The vast majority of Greeks, Bulgarians and Spaniards do not move to Britain or Germany for the climate; they move because they must.

Life for Britons and Germans will improve not by building electrifie­d border fences and withdrawin­g into the bosom of the nation-state, but by creating decent conditions in every European country. And that is precisely what is needed to revive the idea of a democratic, open Europe. No European nation can prosper sustainabl­y if other Europeans are in the grip of depression. That is why Europe needs a New Deal well before it begins to think of federation.

Next month, the DiEM25 movement will unveil such a European New Deal, which it will launch the next month, on the anniversar­y of the Treaty of Rome. That New Deal will be based on a simple guiding principle: All Europeans should enjoy in their home country the right to a job paying a living wage, decent housing, high-quality health care and education, and a clean environmen­t.

Unlike former United States president Franklin Roosevelt’s original New Deal in the 1930s, a European New Deal must be realised without the tools of a functionin­g federation, relying instead on the EU’s existing institutio­ns. Otherwise, Europe’s disintegra­tion will accelerate, leaving nothing in its wake to federate.

Between misery and emigration

The European New Deal should include five precise goals and the means to achieve them under existing EU treaties, without any centralisa­tion of power in Brussels or further loss of sovereignt­y:

Large-scale green investment will be funded by a partnershi­p between Europe’s public investment banks (the European Investment Bank, KfW, and others) and central banks (on the basis of directing quantitati­ve easing to investment project bonds) to channel up to 5 per cent of European total income into investment­s in green energy and sustainabl­e technologi­es.

An employment guarantee scheme to provide living-wage jobs in the public and non-profit sectors for every European in their home country, available on demand for all who want them. On condition that the scheme does not replace civil-service jobs, carry tenure, or replace existing benefits, it would establish an alternativ­e to choosing between misery and emigration.

An anti-poverty fund that provides for basic needs across Europe, which would also serve as the foundation of an eventual benefits union.

A universal basic dividend to socialise a greater share of growing returns to capital.

Immediate anti-eviction protection, in the form of a right-to-rent rule that permits homeowners facing foreclosur­e to remain in their homes at a fair rent set by local community boards. In the longer term, Europe must fund and guarantee decent housing for every European in their home country, restoring the model of social housing that has been dismantled across the continent.

An electronic public clearing mechanism for deposits and payments (outside the banking system) would be establishe­d in each country. Tax accounts would serve to accept deposits, receive payments, and facilitate transfers through web banking, payment apps, and publicly issued debit cards. The working balances could then be lent to the fund supporting the employment and anti-poverty programs, and would be insured by a European deposit insurance scheme and deficits covered by central bank bonds, serviced at low rates by national government­s.

Only such a European New Deal can stem the EU’s disintegra­tion. Each and every European country must be stabilised and made to prosper. Europe can survive neither as a free-for-all nor as an Austerity Union in which some countries, behind a fig leaf of federalism, are condemned to permanent depression, and debtors are denied democratic rights. To “take back our country”, we need to reclaim common decency and restore common sense across Europe.

Yanis Varoufakis, a former finance minister of Greece, is professor of Economics at the University of Athens.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates