from the ECB website:
The future of the euro: stability through change,
Contribution from Mario Draghi, President of the ECB, Published in "Die Zeit", 29 August 2012
"Across Europe, a fundamental debate is taking place about the future of the
euro. Many citizens are concerned about where Europe is heading. Yet the
solutions presented appear to them unsatisfactory. This is because
these solutions offer binary choices: either we must go back to the
past, or we must move to a United States of Europe.
My answer to the
question is: to have a stable euro we do not need to choose between
extremes.
The reason this debate is taking place is not the euro as a currency. The
objectives of the single currency remain as relevant today as they were
when the single currency was agreed. To spread price stability and
sustainable growth to all European citizens. To reap the gains of the
world’s largest single market and make the historic process of European
unification irreversible. To raise Europe’s standing – not only
economically but also politically – in a globalised world.
The debate is taking place because the euro area has not yet fully
succeeded as a polity. Currencies ultimately depend on the institutions
that stand behind them. When the euro was first proposed, there were
those who said it would have to be preceded by a long process of
political integration. This was because sharing a currency would imply a
high degree of joint decision-making. Member countries would be a
“Schicksalsgemeinschaft” and would need strong common democratic
underpinnings.
But a deliberate choice was made in the 1990s not to give the euro such
features. The euro was launched as a “currency without a state” to
preserve the sovereignty and diversity of member countries. This
informed the so-called “Maastricht setup”, which laid the euro’s
institutional foundations. But as recent events have shown, this
institutional framework left the euro area insufficiently equipped to
ensure sound economic policies and effectively manage crises.
For this reason, the way ahead cannot be a return to the status quo ante.
The challenges of having a single monetary policy but loosely
coordinated fiscal, economic and financial policies have been clearly
revealed by the crisis. As Jean Monnet said, coordination “is a method which promotes discussion, but it does not lead to a decision.” And strong decisions have to be made to manage the world’s second most important currency.
A new architecture for the euro area is desirable to create sustained
prosperity for all euro area countries, and especially for Germany.
The
root of Germany’s success is its deep integration into the European and
world economies. To continue to prosper, Germany needs to remain an
anchor of a strong currency, at the centre of a zone of monetary
stability and in a dynamic and competitive euro area economy. Only a
stronger economic and monetary union can provide this.
Yet this new architecture does not require a political union first.
It is clear that monetary union does entail a higher degree of joint decision-making. But economic integration and political integration can develop in parallel. Where necessary,
sovereignty in selected economic policy fields can and should be pooled
and democratic legitimation deepened.
How far should this go? We do not need a centralisation of all economic
policies. Instead, we can answer this question pragmatically: by calmly
asking ourselves which are the minimum requirements to complete economic
and monetary union. And in doing so, we will find that all the
necessary measures are firmly within our reach.
For fiscal policies, we need true oversight over national budgets. The
consequences of misguided fiscal policies in a monetary union are too
severe to remain self-policed. For broader economic policies, we need to
guarantee competitiveness. Countries must be able to generate
sustainable growth and high employment without excessive imbalances. The
euro area is not a nation-state where persistent cross-regional
subsidies have sufficient popular support. Therefore, we cannot afford a
situation where some regions run permanently large deficits vis-à-vis
others.
For financial policies, there need to be powers at the centre to limit
excessive risk-taking by banks and regulatory capture by supervisors.
This is the best way to protect euro area taxpayers. There also needs to
be a framework for bank resolution that safeguards public finances, as
we see in other federations. In the U.S., for example, on average about
90, mostly smaller, banks per year have been resolved since 2008 and
this had no impact on the solvency of the sovereign.
Political union can, and shall, develop hand-in-hand with fiscal, economic and
financial union. The sharing of powers and of accountability can move in
parallel. We should not forget that 60 years of European integration
have already created a significant degree of political union. Decisions
are made by an EU Council filled by national ministers and by a directly
elected European Parliament. The challenge is to further increase the
legitimacy of these bodies commensurate with increasing their
responsibilities and to seek ways to better anchor European processes at
the national level.
A more solid political foundation should allow for agreement on a basic
principle: that it is neither sustainable nor legitimate for countries
to pursue national policies that can cause economic harm for others.
This constraint has to be built into how countries design their economic
and social models. The only sustainable model is one that is consistent
with the terms of a common currency. Countries have to live within
their means. Competition and labour markets have to be reinvigorated.
Banks have to conform to the highest regulatory standards and focus on
serving the real economy. This is not the end, but the renewal of the
European social model.
From the ECB’s perspective, a strong economic union is an essential
complement to the single monetary policy. Building this will require a
structured process with correct sequencing. Yet citizens can be certain
that three elements will remain constant. The ECB will do what is
necessary to ensure price stability. It will remain independent. And it
will always act within the limits of its mandate.
Yet it should be understood that fulfilling our mandate sometimes requires
us to go beyond standard monetary policy tools. When markets are
fragmented or influenced by irrational fears, our monetary policy
signals do not reach citizens evenly across the euro area. We have to
fix such blockages to ensure a single monetary policy and therefore
price stability for all euro area citizens. This may at times require
exceptional measures. But this is our responsibility as the central bank
of the euro area as a whole.
The ECB is not a political institution. But it is committed to its
responsibilities as an institution of the European Union. As such, we
never lose sight of our mission to guarantee a strong and stable
currency. The banknotes that we issue bear the European flag and are a
powerful symbol of European identity.
Those who want to go back to the past misunderstand the significance of the
euro. Those who claim only a full federation can be sustainable set the
bar too high. What we need is a gradual and structured effort to
complete EMU. This would finally give the euro the stable foundations it
deserves. It would fully achieve the ultimate goals for which the Union
and the euro were founded: stability, prosperity and peace. We know
this is what the people in Europe, and in Germany, aspire to."
Reading this it is impossible to see a way forward for the United Kingdom within the European Union. The UK has virtually no say in EU monetary policy, nor has it any interest in the kind of European Union that is envisaged here. The attempt to "set the bar far too high" by demanding "a full federation" before stability can be assumed to be assured to the Euro has been determined and sustained, and it is still impossible to know whether it has been successful. But the yields are falling, the currency strengthening against the US dollar and the pound. Extant provisions within the treaties of the Union itself and, more particularly in the treaties setting up the European Central Bank, are being brought into operation (though many are surprised to find that they are there at all) covering the objectives Mario Draghi sets out as sufficient for a strong and stable currency; as well as for the further development of oversight, compatible fiscal policies, and an ethical stance on what may be adopted as policy by Member-State governments.
None of which is being constructed, or has been constructed, with the active participation and input of the UK.
If the Euro survives, the misfit will be ever more accentuated: monetarily, fiscally, ethically and, most of all, and the most felt at the moment, legally and constitutionally. We are looking, too, at the devastation of United Kingdom European policy of all the major UK Parties since at least the early 1970s.
Thursday, 30 August 2012
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5 comments:
I read that three times, but I still could not see the paragraph where he explains exactly how Greece, Spain Ireland etc are going to be able to repay their crippling debts. Or have I missed something?
No, Nomad; and even more worryingly, how will the USA and the UK pay off their crippling debts as well?
Yes they print the money and pay with that, and now the ECB is going to do much the same, but either these 'debts' that are calling forth all the 'austerity' budgets that result in social provision removal are real debts, or we are losing the civilizing social gains of the post-War settlement under a huge pretence.
At the moment I'm inclining to the latter.
Long speeches usually contain depth charges.
I don't feel very ethically challenged by reference to the dishonest euro-project, HG
"The euro area is not a nation-state where persistent cross-regional subsidies have sufficient popular support. Therefore, we cannot afford a situation where some regions run permanently large deficits vis-à-vis others."
This is an ethical problem within the nation state as well. At least in the EU it's being considered. I loathe cross regional subsidies on the scale practised in the UK. The UK federation is a dishonest project too, ND.
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