Is the eurozone another fatal conceit?
 
 
  |  
  |  
  |  
  |  
RSS
  |  
  |  
  |  
22 May 2013 Wednesday
 
 
 
 
 
 
Columnists 28 June 2012, Thursday 1 0 0 0
ASIM ERDİLEK
a.erdilek@todayszaman.com

Is the eurozone another fatal conceit?

The two-and-a half-year-old eurozone crisis enters yet another critical phase, with Spain’s worsening banking crisis, the bailout cry of Greek Cyprus -- the fifth exhausted eurozone member to ask for emergency aid -- and the pathetic political picture in Greece following yet another inconclusive election, threatening the eurozone’s survival.

The eurozone leaders will hold yet another summit on June 28 and 29 to try to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. They have been pressured at the G-20 summit in Los Cabos, Mexico, and urged by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) -- in the 2012 Article IV Consultation with the Euro Area Concluding Statement of IMF Mission, as well as the IMF discussion note “Fostering Growth in Europe Now” -- to act decisively as the wobbly world economy confronts a major shock from a possible eurozone collapse.

The recent national and international economic data points to a global economic slowdown. According to the World Bank’s latest Global Economic Prospects, “The world economy is once again in a precarious situation, within months of the sharp deceleration in economic activity seen in the fourth quarter of 2011.” Global GDP growth is now projected to decelerate to 2.5 percent in 2012, from 2.7 percent in 2011 and 4.1 percent in 2010. High-income countries are expected to grow 1.4 percent, but the eurozone to contract 0.3 percent and developing countries to expand 5.3 percent. Moody’s Investors Service’s downgrading last week of the credit ratings of 15 major international banks, followed by its slashing of the ratings of 28 Spanish banks this week, highlighted the global financial system’s weaknesses.

To put the eurozone crisis in historical perspective and assess the hopes for its resolution, we can ask whether the eurozone is another “fatal conceit.” The great Austrian-born economist and political philosopher Friedrich Hayek, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1974, espoused classical liberalism and free enterprise against totalitarianism and socialism, the dominant ideologies of his time, during and for four subsequent to World War II. Hayek, best known for his 1944 book “The Road to Serfdom,” published his last book in 1991, “The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism.” He argued that socialism was a fatal conceit because its creators ignored the evolution of modern civilization and, rejecting private property and markets to allocate scarce resources, tried in vain to impose a planned unnatural order to solve the economic calculation problem centrally.

I see a strong parallel between Hayek’s depiction of failed socialism as a fatal conceit and the folly of the planned top-down creation of the eurozone, as a currency union without a fiscal union, which requires effectively a political union among 17 culturally, economically and socially disparate countries. It was argued by many economists at the time of and following its establishment in 1999 that the conception of the eurozone was deeply flawed and that its survival would ultimately be threatened by its severe birth defect. But the engineers of the eurozone, like the engineers of socialism, misled by their hubris, ignored the evolution of modern civilization and natural economic order to impose, without public support, a common currency on a bunch of nations far away from political unification, putting the cart before the horse.

The eurozone, wracked by the wrangling between Germany, its pay and task master, and most other eurozone countries -- in particular France, Italy and Spain -- about how much and how soon German taxpayers should pony up to salvage the eurozone, is now facing its moment of truth. Germany wants to move closer to political union through a fiscal union, which it expects to dominate as it has dominated the eurozone, before making an open-ended financial commitment. According to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, “The lesson of this crisis is more Europe, not less Europe, and more Europe means that we must give up more powers to Europe.” But much of the rest of the eurozone, which rejects the austerity prescribed by inflation-phobic Germany and refuses to yield more sovereignty to appease Germany, believes that it is in Germany’s interests to preserve the eurozone as it is, and is waiting for Berlin to cave in.

That is the crux of the matter. The rest is all highfalutin technical stuff that often obscures what is at stake. Many controversial issues continue to be discussed with no end in sight. There is the buying of troubled eurozone countries’ bonds by either the European Central Bank (ECB), via its Securities Markets Programme (SMP), or the EU bailout funds -- i.e., either the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the European Financial Stabilization Mechanism (EFSM), or the forthcoming European Stability Mechanism (ESM), which will replace EFSF and EFSM. There is the ECB’s funding of eurozone banks through longer-term refinancing operations (LTROs), and multiple other issues: the banking union; the Europe-wide federal deposit insurance program and unified system of bank supervision; pan-European financial transactions tax; debt mutualization through issuance of euro bonds, i.e., jointly backed eurozone government bonds to finance public budgets, etc. The eurozone summit, which will consider the proposal “Towards a Genuine Economic and Monetary Union,” a report by the President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy, will not bring closure to these issues.

Germany’s quixotic quest for political union in the eurozone is bound to fail. No other eurozone country wants to be shackled in a United States of Europe under German dominance. The eurozone as a currency union without a political union is a fatal conceit that will not survive in its current form.

Columnists Previous articles of the columnist
9 August 2012
Spillovers in interconnected global economy
2 August 2012
Benchmarking foreign direct investment in Turkey (2)
26 July 2012
Benchmarking foreign direct investment in Turkey (1)
19 July 2012
A cautionary economic survey of Turkey
12 July 2012
Emerging cities are creating new consuming class (2)
5 July 2012
Emerging cities are creating new consuming class (1)
28 June 2012
Is the eurozone another fatal conceit?
14 June 2012
Rising protectionism threatens world economic recovery
7 June 2012
Strategic policy approach to skills (2)
31 May 2012
Strategic policy approach to skills (1)
24 May 2012
Recovery of Turkey's foreign direct investment accelerates (2)
17 May 2012
Recovery of Turkey's FDI accelerates (1)
10 May 2012
Debunking myths about international trade
3 May 2012
European Union seers see rising Turkey in 2030
26 April 2012
Economic contraction and political upheaval in the eurozone
19 April 2012
Boosting economic growth and financial stability
12 April 2012
Today's and tomorrow's top global cities (2)
5 April 2012
Today’s and tomorrow’s top global cities (1)
29 March 2012
The global scourge of youth unemployment (2)
22 March 2012
Global scourge of youth unemployment (1)
15 March 2012
Turkey lags in structural reforms (2)
8 March 2012
Turkey lags in structural reforms (1)
1 March 2012
Let eurozone stew in its own juice
23 February 2012
Greece's second bailout is triumph of hope over experience
16 February 2012
Deleveraging is slow and painful (2)
9 February 2012
Deleveraging is slow and painful (1)
2 February 2012
IMF's latest Turkey report card
26 January 2012
Worsening growth prospects for the global and Turkish economies
19 January 2012
Measuring economic freedom around the world and in Turkey
12 January 2012
China continues to push for renminbi internationalization
5 January 2012
Prospects for Turkey's inward foreign direct investment resurgence
29 December 2011
Will debt eclipse equity by 2020?
22 December 2011
Turkey's financial development potential
15 December 2011
Growing unequal and standing divided (2)
8 December 2011
Growing unequal and standing divided (1)
1 December 2011
Social cohesion as a means and as an end (2)
24 November 2011
Social cohesion as a means and as an end (1)
17 November 2011
Looming eurozone recession threatens Turkish economy
10 November 2011
Who will save Italy from sovereign default and how?
3 November 2011
Making it easier to do business (2)
27 October 2011
Making it easier to do business (1)
20 October 2011
G-20 Cannes Summit clouded by eurozone crisis
13 October 2011
How to make globalization socially sustainable (2)
6 October 2011
How to make globalization socially sustainable? (1)
29 September 2011
Gender inequality around the world and in Turkey
22 September 2011
Worsening growth prospects and rising financial risks for the global economy
14 September 2011
İstanbul’s performance and potential as an int’l financial center
8 September 2011
Economic costs of 9/11 after a decade
1 September 2011
Hard times ahead for Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
25 August 2011
How imminent is China's global economic dominance?
18 August 2011
Non-equity modes of int’l production
11 August 2011
Worrisome global foreign direct investment policy trends
4 August 2011
Global recovery of foreign direct investment continues
28 July 2011
World trade and preferential trade agreements (2)
21 July 2011
World trade and preferential trade agreements (1)
14 July 2011
Is the IMF's research biased? (2)
7 July 2011
Is the IMF's research biased? (1)
30 June 2011
The IMF's controversial new managing director
23 June 2011
Worsening Greek debt crisis threatens global recovery
16 June 2011
Turkey's post-election economic challenges
9 June 2011
Inflation in Turkey rears its ugly head
2 June 2011
Emergence of a multipolar global economy (3)
29 May 2011
Emergence of a multipolar global economy (2)
22 May 2011
Emergence of a multipolar global economy (1)
15 May 2011
Trends in and causes of income inequality (2)
8 May 2011
Trends in and causes of income inequality (1)
1 May 2011
Reflections on AK Party and CHP economic platforms (2)
25 April 2011
Reflections on the AK Party and CHP economic platforms (1)
18 April 2011
Structural reforms for sustained growth in Turkey (2)
11 April 2011
Structural reforms for sustained growth in Turkey (1)
4 April 2011
Cities are economic growth poles (2)
28 March 2011
Cities are economic growth poles (1)
22 March 2011
The G-7 intervention to tame the surging yen (2)
21 March 2011
The G-7 intervention to tame the surging yen (1)
14 March 2011
Learning policy lessons from the global crisis
7 March 2011
The IMF’s quota and voice reforms
1 March 2011
Slow recovery of foreign direct investment (2)
28 February 2011
Slow recovery of foreign direct investment (1)
21 February 2011
The G-20 grapples with global imbalances
14 February 2011
The IMF’s surveillance stumble in the run-up to the global crisis
8 February 2011
The risky recovery of capital flows to emerging market economies (2)
7 February 2011
The risky recovery of capital flows to emerging market economies (1)
31 January 2011
The fiscal moment of truth for the United States
24 January 2011
What happened to real wages during the global crisis? (2)
17 January 2011
What happened to real wages during the global crisis? (1)
10 January 2011
The Turkish Central Bank aims to hit two birds with two stones (3)
3 January 2011
Turkish Central Bank aims to hit two birds with two stones (2)
31 December 2010
Turkish Central Bank aims to hit two birds with two stones (1)
20 December 2010
Say goodbye to the global saving glut (2)
13 December 2010
Say goodbye to global saving glut (1)
7 December 2010
With the Irish bailout comes the European Stability Mechanism (2)
6 December 2010
With the Irish bailout comes the European Stability Mechanism (1)
30 November 2010
The Irish bailout will not end the eurozone crisis (2)
29 November 2010
The Irish bailout will not end the eurozone crisis (1)
24 November 2010
G-20 can still avert a global currency war (3)
23 November 2010
G-20 can still avert a global currency war (2)
22 November 2010
G-20 can still avert a global currency war (1)
15 November 2010
Doing business around the world and in Turkey (2)
8 November 2010
Doing business around the world and in Turkey (1)
3 November 2010
Is Turkish disinflation ending? (2)
...