The Eurozone continues to be one of those beautiful ideas that has gone 
terribly bad.  The so-called peripheral members should just get out of it, come 
what may.

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: michael gurstein 
  To: Futurework 
  Sent: Monday, December 31, 2012 3:57 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Germany's austerity plans will beggar Europe | 
TheGuardian


  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sid 
Shniad
  Sent: Monday, December 31, 2012 12:33 PM
  To: undisclosed-recipients:
  Subject: Germany's austerity plans will beggar Europe | The Guardian

   

  
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/26/germany-austerity-beggar-europe-eurozone


  The Guardian   26 December 2012 

  Germany's austerity plans will beggar Europe
  Berlin's mantra about spending cuts in the eurozone is bringing unemployment 
and spreading hopelessness across Europe. The eurozone is becoming a vehicle 
for German mercantilism, whereby the German people are first beggared in order 
subsequently to beggar others.

  Costas Lapavitsas 

   

  Greeks protest against austerity measures outside the parliament in Athens. 
Photograph: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images

  Has the eurozone crisis ended? Many politicians in Europe, including France's 
president François Hollande, seem to think so. Well, not so fast. Far from 
ending, the crisis is yet to reach its most difficult phase.

  It is easy to see why politicians claim the crisis is over. Greece has just 
been promised another €50bn, provided it accepts still more austerity, 
deregulation and privatisation. Elsewhere in the periphery, Ireland is in its 
sixth year of recession, Portugal is heading for major economic contraction, 
and Spain is going from bad to worse – but their governments are imposing 
austerity, and people appear to be putting up with it. Even core countries, 
including Italy and France, have accepted the need for balanced budgets. Across 
the eurozone, there is no effective opposition to the mantra of austerity 
emanating from Berlin.

  The financial markets, meanwhile, have been placid since September when Mario 
Draghi, chairman of the European Central Bank, announced that he would buy the 
debt of countries in difficulties provided they accepted bailout conditions. 
The spreads on Italian and Spanish debt have tumbled by 250 basis points. The 
official launch of the European Stability Mechanism has also helped, since the 
ESM is fortified with €500bn. The calculation of bond markets is transparent: 
for the moment it is not profitable to borrow money to speculate against the 
debt of weaker European countries.

  But austerity and calmer financial markets do not amount to ending the 
crisis. Rather, they point to the emergence of a German eurozone. Commentators 
who have protested that crisis leadership in the eurozone has been weak have 
been wide of the mark. In practice, austerity is transforming the periphery 
into a vast East Germany: a zone of weak growth, low wages, poverty and no 
economic dynamism. There will not even be some of the fiscal transfers, 
amounting to perhaps €60bn annually, that have supported East Germany.

  Equally wide of the mark have been those who stress the importance of an 
overarching state in charge of fiscal policy, or of a banking union to lessen 
the risks of banking collapse in the eurozone. Germany will not accept either a 
fiscal union or a banking union that would use its taxpayers' money to 
subsidise others in the eurozone. These debates have merely distracted 
attention from Germany's determination to impose rigid fiscal discipline on 
"delinquents" and to monitor only the biggest banks in the eurozone, leaving 
smaller German banks out of the net.

  But the most telling piece of evidence of the emergence of a German eurozone 
has been the reluctance to confront the deeper cause of the crisis, namely the 
divergence in competitiveness between – mostly – Germany and the rest. German 
gains in competitiveness have not been due to greater efficiency, but are a 
result of the fact that Germany has systematically undershot the eurozone 
inflation target, while other countries have either hit, or overshot it thanks 
to the wage restraint imposed on its workers, harsher than elsewhere. Over the 
years a great gap has emerged between Germany and the rest, especially the 
periphery, whose competitiveness has collapsed.

  The benefit to Germany has been sustained current account surpluses, the true 
aim of wage restraint. By the same token, the periphery has accumulated 
deficits and debts. Austerity is now forcing a brutal correction of these 
imbalances – by crushing peripheral wages. Yet, the cure cannot be effective 
since German wages have not been rising strongly.

  The solution would be for Germany to rebalance its economy by strengthening 
domestic demand. Instead, Berlin's reliance on exports has grown: in 2012 the 
contribution of its domestic economy to growth will be zero. The eurozone is 
becoming a vehicle for German mercantilism, whereby the German people are first 
beggared in order subsequently to beggar others.

  This situation is manifestly untenable. It brings unemployment, destroys 
productive capacity and spreads hopelessness across Europe. In Greece 
conditions went beyond absurd long ago. As the eurozone moves deeper into 
recession in 2013, social and economic tensions will ratchet up across the 
continent. The most difficult phase of the crisis is still ahead of us.

  !DSPAM:2676,50e1f66c25481115718434! 



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