WASHINGTON, DC – Over the last five years, the eurozone has, without explicit popular consent, maintained a strict policy focus on fiscal austerity and structural reforms – despite serious social repercussions, not only in the Mediterranean periphery and Ireland, but even in a “core" European Union country like France. Unless eurozone leaders rethink their approach, the radical Syriza party's success in Greece's recent general election could turn out to be just one more step toward a future of social fragmentation and political instability in Europe. Or it could mark the beginning of a realistic and beneficial re-orientation of Europe's economic strategy.
Of course, fiscal sustainability is vital to prevent a disruptive debt refinancing and inspire confidence among investors and consumers. But there is no denying that it is much easier to support fiscal austerity when one is wealthy enough not to rely on public services or be at serious risk of becoming mired in long-term unemployment. (The wealthy also remain largely in control of the media, the public discourse, and cross-border capital flows.)
For the millions of workers – and especially young people – with no job prospects, fiscal sustainability simply cannot be the only priority. When unemployment benefits are slashed, they are the ones who suffer. And when budget cuts extend to education, it is their children who are unable to gain the skills they need to reach their future potential.
Austerity-induced suffering is particularly extreme in Greece. Severe pension cuts are preventing the elderly from living out their lives with dignity. A large burden has been placed on those who actually pay their taxes, while many – often the wealthiest, who long ago stashed their money abroad – continue to evade their obligations. Health care has lapsed, with many cancer patients losing access to life-saving treatment. Suicides are on the rise.
Yet Greece's creditors have continued to ignore these developments. This is clearly not sustainable – a point that former Director of the International Monetary Fund's Europe Department Reza Moghadam recognized when he recently called for writing off half of Greece's debt, provided an agreement can be reached on credible growth-enhancing structural reforms.
Social sustainability is essential for long-term economic success. A country cannot prosper if its educational system lacks the resources and capacity to prepare its children to thrive in the digital economy. Likewise, a reform program cannot be implemented if inequality, poverty, and social frustration strengthen extremist political parties, such as Greece's overtly fascist Golden Dawn party or France's far-right, anti-Europe National Front, which now boasts 25% electoral support.
When times are tough, immigrants and minorities become easy targets. As Joseph Stiglitz recently pointed out, it is unlikely that Hitler would have come to power in Germany if the unemployment rate was not 30% at the time. It does not help when some of those trapped in the poor ghettos surrounding major cities – however small a minority – become tempted by violence and fall prey to terrorist recruiters.
Regardless of what today's corporate profit reports and stock indices may show, a country cannot achieve inclusive, sustainable success – in economic or human terms – if these fundamental social issues are not adequately addressed. Of course, fiscal caution cannot be abandoned; after all, if governments or the private sector were to spend borrowed or newly minted money freely, the result would simply be more crises, which would hurt the poor most. But social sustainability must be an integral part of a country's economic program, not an afterthought.
The persistent tendency to pay lip service to social sustainability, while implementing economic programs focused on unrelenting austerity, is a leading cause of political instability in Europe. Though reform programs aimed at building viable macroeconomic frameworks remain essential, they must include strong provisions for countercyclical policies to offset the “paradox of thrift" (the tendency to save more during a recession, undermining economic growth). When aggregate demand falls short of aggregate supply, governments must increase public spending.
Moreover, governments that are now focused narrowly on microeconomic issues need to devote the same level of attention and commitment to designing and implementing social policies that focus explicitly on ensuring the livelihoods, health, education, and housing of the most vulnerable segments of the population. And, using new technology to analyze large amounts of data, they should boost the efficiency of social programs, while encouraging the active participation of concerned citizens.
The European Commission and the IMF have admitted their errors – not only the inaccurate macroeconomic forecasts on which the Greek program was based, but also the decision not to account for social sustainability – and have acknowledged that the program has not produced the expected results. Yet, for some reason, Greece's creditors refuse to negotiate with the new government (which enjoys strong domestic support) to develop a new program that incorporates debt relief, a lower fiscal surplus, and structural reforms that support growth and promote social cohesion. This must not continue.
The last five years have underscored the challenge of achieving financial stability. But political and social stability have proved to be even more elusive. Policymakers must direct just as much effort and resources toward realizing social sustainability as they do toward getting the Basel III financial reforms right. Europe's future prosperity – and its global role – depends on it.
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CommentedRogelio Villajos
It is like a joke... the brightest mind of Europe is a non-European ...
Commentedslightly optimistic
Therefore there is a need for enforceable global political economy.
But, based on past events, US/Wall Street for example are unlikely to agree to be overseen by a cross border organisation such as they're recommending for their proposed international trade agreements - the investor state dispute settlement [ISDS].
The ultimatum to the US from the G20 [chaired by Turkey, next year by China] to release its grip on the IMF shows how reluctant a national government is to surrender some of its sovereignty.
CommentedBernhard Kopp
No demand for austerity from the outside, the IMF, the EU, or from Germany for that matter, demands that the economic pains of austerity are solely or predominantely inflicted on the bottom-50% of the socio-economic sprectrum of society. Austerity is also not an isolated goal. The demand to restore fiscal order should, so the hope and the legitimate expectation, lead to supply-sided reforms to improve the investment climate and economic competitivness. Tax increases on the top-third of the socio-economic sprectrum of society, privatisations and deregulations are equal tools. Not 'teh people' are the problem, but the local politicians who want to maintain that one can eat one's cake and keep it too.
CommentedMr Econotarian
Greece's problem is not austerity. Greece's problem is being ranked last in Economic Freedom in the Eurozone, with the labor market "rigid and stagnant", stifling business licensing rules, and the fact that "Protection of property rights is not strongly enforced." Greece is also ranked as the most corrupt country in the EU by Transparency International.
Germany reformed its labor market in 2004 with the Hartz Reforms, and dramatically reduced unemployment. Spain's economic growth is now accelerating due to recent labor reforms, and even laggard Italy is trying to pass labor reforms. Meanwhile, Greece's Syriza is going back on recent minimal labor reforms and ending the privatization of corrupt and inefficient state-owned-enterprises.
Why does Ireland have major headquarters for multinational companies like Google, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter, instead of Greece? The answer is a policy of economic freedom. Government budgets, deficits, and debt are not what puts people to work - private industry's ability to flexibly serve the needs of their consumers is what puts people to work.
CommentedRogelio Villajos
Then... the best solution for Greek is to become an off-shore... like Luxemburg, or better than that, like Bahamas, with a 2% firms tax.
CommentedPeter Schneider
"Austerity-induced suffering" - this expression is completely misleading and inverts cause and effect. Not the imposed "austerity" is responsible for the "suffering" but reckless spending before. Not the European institutions are responsible for the "suffering" but the Greek elites themselves. And neither the alternative to "austerity" is "European society" (what is this?) but the Greek withdrawal from monetary union.
Regarding the "suffering", other countries in the eurozone like Slovakia, Slovenia or the Baltic States have a much lower standard of living than Greece, however they don't complain and blackmail their neighbours and there is no issue of social sustainability. Quite the contary, they are even obliged to pay for the "rich" and brazen Greeks, financial resources that they would certainly prefer to put in their own educational system or their own infrastructure.
CommentedJonathan Lam
Sorry for the wrong article posted earlier…….
Gamesmith94134: The Eurozone’s Fork in the Road
Reply: Two model for Europe 2012-02-09
I think what Mr. Hans-Werner Sinn meant was the outflow were the collateral damage attributed by the Rogue Trader who bidden on the 1.6 instead of 1.3 to a dollar; the hedge fund managers like FM and Goldman Sacks and the fall of Dexia bank and others. Furthermore, the outflow to the Dow Jones was not accidental either at the slow down on the American economy, the stock boomed for sake of the monopoly or ‘get me out of Eurobonds’ made it obvious is upon everyone else guesses, or its disposition is part of the deleverage that Euro is pegged to dollar to promote another delusion of growth scenario. The recent sale on the Italian and Spanish bond held at 7%; and inflation rate edged higher from 2% to 3.4% in America; so, I suspect the Europe is not any lower on the account of the deleverage, rather than the shortage of resources and the questionable status in the Strait of Hermuz. Besides, the next four months in rolling over of the $900 billion Euro bonds may not be sold again at 7%, even with the direct periphery of the loans from Fed, even at the 500 basis points to exchange or 0.25% loan available to the local banks.
“MUNICH – Interest rates for public debt within the eurozone have spread once again, just as they did before the introduction of the euro. Balance-of-payment disparities are steadily increasing. The sovereign-debt crisis is eating its way from the periphery to the core, and the exodus of capital is accelerating.”
So, the question is clear for the safety net could be for the $650 net foreign wealth, if the interest rate is being sacrificed to sustain the unity of the Eurobonds? Or, how much is American banker is willing to abstain to bankruptcy if the present 8-15% for the Euros will escalate in the coming three-year-term of the Eurobonds and the exchange rate must sustain at a profitable level after being deleverage?
Far as the data indicated the unemployment and housing are merely improved the sentiment to the holiday seasons, or Fed is playing with the exchange rate again. And, the yuan went 4% over the year and inflation rate held at 6.5%, China must made its domestic growth program to ease the tension on the manufacturing slowdown. I am not sure how the debtor nations can use its austerity program to sustain the level of certainty for repayment on the next coming restructuring of the debts.
Shuffling of the 2.7 trillion with lesser growth is hard to do, even if, the investors and banker would turn into rogue trader to hold the line on the exchange rate. However, the inflation rate would certainly change one’s mind quickly if the change of status quo to commodities goods or outbreak of war in Middle East is eminent.
Perhaps, it is time to choose how the next round for the global finance and the sovereignty debts if Euro stands even it is contagious. There is no escape for most financials if Euro collapses; but EU must sustain a firewall like to create its EU zone policy as well to stop further spread of inequity and insecurity if the Basel II is not working with its banks, or breakup of the north and south under the pressure of the fiscal unity. Then we may consider the financials are separated by the disgusted investors as each develops their doors in shutting of trades by its partners by continents other than EU; if the exchange rate or interest rate becomes irrelevant. So, sovereignty debts must be traded under the scrutiny of sovereignties not bankers since they, the citizens of sovereignty, must repay them. And, capital financing should not be the part of the sovereignty debt that shared with the lower rate; it demands its proof of performance and consequence and not just politicians for promoting propagandas like ClubMed or Green industries, that they plays double jeopardy on WTO.
Personally, I refer the multi-speed, multi-currencies approaches in various zones that each enjoy their own responsibility for building up their equities; and shared retirement with their assets they earned by leaving the exchange rate and interest rate to the achievement and performance of the states, and not to bankers even for Central banks. Finally, there is no right choice of the model as available, but each must accept the alternatives in changing the model we definitely needed to meet globalization of the finance.
May the Buddha bless you?
CommentedJonathan Lam
Gamesmith94134: Why Development Aid is Not Enough 18 Jan, 2011
Erick Solheim is right on the development aid is not enough, because the system does not give a proper redistribution of the wealth to the poor; instead, it created the sovereignty debts for the developer nations since there is not an appropriate system to support or police the developments. It is because the ones control the funds are not subject to the necessity with lesser control in term of supply and demand, so whatever the outcome of the project is being manipulated my its participants, of the ruling class like brokers, manufacturers and financiers. Besides, they are to the projects based on profitability and control, whatever how fruitful the outcome of the project are. Profits are goes to the ruling class and never the entrepreneurs or its producers since they turned into labor by class by the ruling parties after the goods are subsidized by its government and price are controlled by the medium like future market systems or manufacturers.
Perhaps, it sounds like I am anti-market system or free trade, but throughout my years of observation through the transition of the past to present. I am seriously considering the system is at fault since the polarization of the up-rising of the labor classes or the poor and no-solution ruling class. And, I opposed the Millennium Development Goals because it does not have a proper system in maintaining the progress and misses the goal by proportion.
In example of story I heard of, the grain production in China, farmer got only 20% of the sack of wheat, the rest went to the processors or the mill, and the marketing. Does it really farmer’s four months works is lesser than a five minute phone call? Or the processor can give a better price to the public under the price control means the lower pay for farmers, the public may be subsidized under automation, or the farmer should be compensate more when he market his grain.
There is another story on the bullet train as the infrastructure developed in California, USA. It was cancelled because the cost of it went up three times as estimated; after its funds was diverged to projects for traffic congestion instead of buying lands that needed to build its train. I do not blame those refuse to sell the land at the lower price, but I cursed at those prospectors buying the land to sell---- developers with close tie to its friends on the projects.
• Do people learn anything from the ClubMed incident? From boom to doom, it is all delusions; just because the project is lack of control and prospectors are those control the progress; and the wealth does not trickle down as it thought but the middle man made it fortune with its alliance with the ruling class.
• “Since 2000, when the international community adopted the Millennium Declaration and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)”. Again, I question on the international community by G-20; are they work for the brokerage or the labors? And how they market their goals? I like it better if they can be inclusive to the zones of the development and monitored by the local or market system that the development can appeal it case, not brokers.
• “Power has also shifted in the global political arena, with the global financial crisis catalyzing the emergence of the G-20”, why just 20 and not all of world takes like the United Nations with full members of it working together to avoid manipulation of the prospectors. I think the farmer should know how much he deserves in the deal then he can compete on the market of the world, not to its processors or mills.
Finally, development aid is not enough indicates the lesser profit most of the needed can get; and its aid turned into subsidies for its government or prospectors for its dealing and wheeling. It certainly needs a neutral zone for the needed to compete in our present market system among its brokerage and government. Therefore, corrupted or collapsed will be evaluated by the real communities of the Zone; not to the financier or the ones who signed in the projects. There must be a resolution comes from the United Nations Security council that can stop the hegemony from ruining the global economy by manipulating and misrepresenting the world in lesser of the global totality.
Sorry! G-20, the cook does not get his best meal, and the waiter serves only its customers; and Gourmet Restaurant gave the tasteful on a few only, McDonald provides most with a full stomach for lesser price. Development aid can never be enough if it serves only a few by proportions.
May the Buddha bless you?
CommentedJohn Brian Shannon
Hi Kemal,
There is no doubt that Europe is a defining moment.
"...Or it could mark the beginning of a realistic and beneficial re-orientation of Europe's economic strategy."
As you've pointed out, it could go either way. But I have faith in the present leadership, therefore, I would be surprised by a bad result.
Regarding Greece...
"A large burden has been placed on those who actually pay their taxes, while many – often the wealthiest, who long ago stashed their money abroad – continue to evade their obligations."
Yes, let's put the blame where it belongs. By all means.
It's also true that you can't eat GDP.
But without addressing the fundamental problems in the Greek economy, the taxpayers of other eurozone countries (many of whom are unemployed, as you've pointed out) will be the ones shouldering that burden -- for perhaps a decade.
Adding more misery, or spreading it around is surely not the answer.
When and where to add stimulus...
To me, stimulating 'reformed' economies makes sense, while stimulating basket-case economies is merely 'throwing good money after bad' and will only worsen the chances of eurozone success.
Of course, if you throw enough money at a problem it will eventually go away -- as long as the taxpayers of the donor nations don't mind. But I suspect they do.
Rewarding those nations which worked diligently to reform their economy...
When using 'carrot and stick' one must always remember the 'carrot' part of the equation.
For eurozone nations that have reformed their economies in accordance with eurozone guidelines -- let those reformed economies begin to receive the first and best of any stimulus money.
To reward unreformed economies by handing billions in eurozone money to them, only strengthens their belief that they don't need to change. It rewards bad economic behaviour.
And it sends the wrong message to nations that have worked diligently to reform their economies.
Best regards, JBS
CommentedWalter Gingery
"Yet, for some reason, Greece's creditors refuse to negotiate . . ."
Aye, there's the rub. What, if anything, can Greece offer (or threaten) to induce (or force) the creditors to start talking. Varoufakis is a game theorist; we'll see how good he really is.
CommentedBing De La Vega
The Greeks are at it again. Greece maybe poor but there are very very wealthy Greeks - shipping tycoons. They still control fairly large tonnage worldwide. For so many years, they were and are still allowed to park their billions offshore. A practice by all maritime countries. Theirs may have also been made possible given the cozy relationships between them and previous government leaderships whose campaigns and or administrations were partly funded by the wealthy shipping enclave in Pireaus. The rooster has come to roost. Perhaps, they could bundle enough to bail their own country out and still make a decent return.
CommentedMilton Churchill
European society, as polite and socially conscience as it purports to be, over the last 100 years has been an exercise in plundering the poor and public treasuries in favor of the wealthy and their statist stooges. The author of this article appears to be oblivious to this fact, or is using help of the poor and disenfranchised to line his friends as well as his own pockets. Afterall, selling reverse Robin Hood is alot easier when you flat out lie. Sir, you are the problem in Europe. And, you, sir, are the reason people in Europe are poor and have no opportunities. Your decades of socialist keynesian quackery have rendered the entire Eurozone comatose. The gig is up.
CommentedChet C.
The euro is only as strong as its weakest link.
CommentedVelko Simeonov
"But there is no denying that it is much easier to support fiscal austerity when one is wealthy enough not to rely on public services or be at serious risk of becoming mired in long-term unemployment"
This one sentence says it all. As we say back home, even 100 lashes are not enough, when its not your back at the receiveng end.
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