Barry Eichengreen is Professor of Ecomics and Political Science and the U of 
California, Berkely.


How to make Europe’s big gamble pay off 
Barry Eichengreen
>From Tuesday's Globe and Mail 

The past few weeks have been the most amazing – and important – period of the 
euro’s 11-year existence. First came the Greek crisis, followed by the Greek 
bailout. When the crisis spread to Portugal and Spain, there was the 
$1-trillion rescue. Finally, there were unprecedented purchases of Spanish, 
Portuguese, Greek and Irish bonds by the European Central Bank. All of this was 
unimaginable a month ago.

Europe’s fortnight mirabilis was also marked by amazing – and erroneous – 
predictions: Greece would be booted out of the monetary union; the euro zone 
would be divided into a Northern European union and a Southern European union; 
or the euro – and even the European Union – would disintegrate as Germany 
turned its back on the project.

But, rather than folding their cards, European leaders doubled down. They 
understand that their gamble will be immensely costly if it proves wrong. They 
understand that their political careers now ride on their massive bet. But they 
also understand that they already have too many chips in the pot to fold.

Those forecasting the demise of the euro were wrong because they misunderstood 
the politics. The euro is the symbol of the European project. Jacques Delors, 
one of its architects, once called the single currency “the jewel in Europe’s 
crown.” Abandoning it would be tantamount to declaring the entire European 
integration project a failure.

It is true that Germans are incensed about bailing out Greece. It is true that 
Angela Merkel is the first postwar German chancellor not to have lived through 
the Second World War. But her views and actions are shaped by the society in 
which she lives, which in turn is shaped by that history. And what is true of 
Ms. Merkel is still true of Europe. This is why the European leaders swallowed 
hard and took their unprecedented steps.

But, having doubled their bet, the Europeans now must make their monetary union 
work. Europe has excellent bank notes. It has an excellent central bank. But it 
lacks the other elements of a proper monetary union. It needs to establish them 
– and fast – which requires finally addressing matters that have been off 
limits in the past.

First, Europe needs a Stability Pact with teeth. This will now happen, because 
Germany will insist on it. As the European Commission has proposed, the 
strengthened pact will have tighter deficit limits for heavily indebted 
countries. Exceptions and exemptions will be removed. Governments will be 
required to let the commission vet their budgetary plans in advance.

Second, Europe needs more flexible labour markets. Adjustment in the United 
States’ monetary union occurs partly through labour mobility. This will never 
apply to Europe to a similar degree, given cultural and linguistic barriers.

Instead, Europe will have to rely on wage flexibility to enhance the 
competitiveness of its depressed regions. This is not something that it 
possesses in abundance. But recent cuts in public-sector pay in Spain and 
Greece are a reminder that Europe is, in fact, capable of wage flexibility. 
Where national wage-bargaining systems are the obstacle, the European 
Commission should say so, and countries should be required to change them.

Third, the euro area needs fiscal co-insurance. It needs a mechanism for 
temporary transfers to countries that have put their public finances in order 
but are hit by adverse shocks.

To be clear, this is not an argument for Germany’s dreaded “transfer union” – 
ongoing transfers to countries such as Greece. It is an argument for temporary 
transfers to countries, such as Spain, that balanced its budgets before the 
crisis but then was hit by the housing slump and recession. It is an argument 
for fiscal insurance running in both directions.

Fourth, the euro zone needs a proper emergency-financing mechanism. Emergencies 
should not be dealt with on an ad hoc basis by 27 finance ministers frantic to 
reach a solution before the Asian markets open. And the European leaders, in 
their desperation, should not coerce the European Central Bank into helping. 
There should be clear rules governing disbursement, who is in charge and how 
much money is available. It should not be necessary to obtain the agreement of 
27 national parliaments each time action is required.

Finally, Europe needs coherent bank regulation. One reason the Greek crisis is 
so difficult is that the European banks are undercapitalized, overleveraged and 
stuffed full of Greek bonds, thereby ruling out the possibility of 
restructuring – and thus lightening – Greece’s debt load.

That happened because European bank regulation is still characterized by a race 
to the bottom. “Colleges” of regulators, the supposed solution, are inadequate. 
If Europe has a single market and a single currency, it needs a single bank 
regulator.

This is a formidable – some would say unrealistically ambitious – agenda. But 
it is the agenda Europe needs to complete to make its monetary union work.
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