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18 March 2020

Financial Times: Eurozone stability is under threat again


Without a co-ordinated response, national stimulus policies will end up increasing imbalances, warns Wolfgang Münchau.

The future of the eurozone has indeed become more uncertain.

The risks are different from those in the last crisis. The eurozone will not fail because of a collapsing bank. Since then, eurozone member states have set up the single supervisory mechanism and started a banking union. Last Thursday, the ECB supported the banking system with ultra-cheap credit.

But the eurozone is now at greater risk of failing politically than it was then. Mr Draghi’s famous backstop removed a key motivation for countries to consider leaving the eurozone. Without that backstop, the argument for Italy to stay in the single currency will become more finely balanced.

Ms Lagarde’s statement was not your average rookie mistake. A former managing director of the IMF, she is an experienced crisis manager. Instead her comments last week confirmed a suspicion that many observers, myself included, had from the moment she was nominated. She looks at monetary policy through the eyes of a lawyer — very much the way most Germans do.

Legally, she is correct, of course, when she says that it is not the job of a central bank to stabilise bond yields. The European Court of Justice supported Mr Draghi’s asset purchase programme as a monetary policy tool, but it also set limits. The former ECB president’s intervention saved the eurozone, but also raised deep questions about governance. He may have inadvertently given EU leaders an excuse to do nothing about fiscal union.

We should perhaps also recall that Mr Draghi’s 2012 pledge started off as a personal commitment. It worked because it was credible. That is precisely why Ms Lagarde’s statement that other actors should be responsible for bond spreads, using other instruments, is so troubling. Coming from her, we actually believe it. She tried later to walk back her statement, saying she was “fully committed to avoid any fragmentation” of the eurozone, but it lacked credibility.

Whatever the merits of Ms Lagarde’s view of the ECB’s role, the timing is awful. We are in the middle of a pandemic. The other actors she referred to, EU leaders, are not doing any better. In a midweek telephone conference they characteristically failed to come up with a co-ordinated fiscal response.

This does not mean that they will do nothing. It means each country will act, for itself. The German government said on Friday that it will offer financial aid to companies affected by the crisis. But the combined response will have an asymmetric impact.

Taken together, the national policies will constitute a stimulus of sort, but they will end up increasing the eurozone’s internal imbalances. The fiscal deficits of Italy, Spain and France will increase a lot. Those of Germany, the Netherlands and Finland may go up too, but by a lot less. The fiscal gap between the north and the south will widen.

A eurozone-wide response would have been far better. The ECB should have committed itself to supporting this without limit. This would have been a good moment to create a eurozone-wide financial instrument that could be used to provide emergency funding.

Instead, we are back to arguing about Italy’s solvency, which depends on low bond yields. And that, as we saw last week, requires the ECB’s unwavering support. Italy cannot generate enough growth to service a growing debt burden otherwise. Without ECB support, more Italians, not just on the extreme right, will ask whether they should leave the eurozone and regain control over their exchange and inflation rate. [...]

Full article on Financial Times (subscription required)



© Financial Times


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