http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/27/opinion/krugman-what-ails-europe.html?nl=t
odaysheadlines
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/27/opinion/krugman-what-ails-europe.html?nl=
todaysheadlines&emc=tha212> &emc=tha212
 
What Ails Europe?
 
By Paul Krugman
NY Times Op-Ed: February 27, 2011
 
Lisbon
 
Things are terrible here, as unemployment soars past 13 percent. Things are
even worse in Greece, Ireland, and arguably in Spain, and Europe as a whole
appears to be sliding back into recession. 

Why has Europe become the sick man of the world economy? Everyone knows the
answer. Unfortunately, most of what people know isn't true - and false
stories about European woes are warping our economic discourse. 

Read an opinion piece about Europe - or, all too often, a supposedly factual
news report - and you'll probably encounter one of two stories, which I
think of as the Republican narrative and the German narrative. Neither story
fits the facts. 

The Republican story - it's one of the central themes of Mitt Romney's
campaign - is that Europe is in trouble because it has done too much to help
the poor and unlucky, that we're watching the death throes of the welfare
state. This story is, by the way, a perennial right-wing favorite: back in
1991, when Sweden was suffering from a banking crisis brought on by
deregulation (sound familiar?), the Cato Institute published a triumphant
report on how this proved the failure of the whole welfare state model. 

Did I mention that Sweden, which still has a very generous welfare state, is
currently a star performer, with economic growth faster than that of any
other wealthy nation? 

But let's do this systematically. Look at the 15 European nations currently
using the euro (leaving Malta and Cyprus aside), and rank them by the
percentage of G.D.P. they spent
<http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/25/european-crisis-realities/> on
social programs before the crisis. Do the troubled GIPSI nations (Greece,
Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy) stand out for having unusually large
welfare states? No, they don't; only Italy was in the top five, and even so
its welfare state was smaller than Germany's. 

So excessively large welfare states didn't cause the troubles. 

Next up, the German story, which is that it's all about fiscal
irresponsibility. This story seems to fit Greece, but nobody else. Italy ran
deficits in the years before the crisis, but they were only slightly larger
than Germany's (Italy's large debt is a legacy from irresponsible policies
many years ago). Portugal's deficits were significantly smaller, while Spain
and Ireland actually ran surpluses. 

Oh, and countries that aren't on the euro seem able to run large deficits
and carry large debts without facing any crises. Britain and the United
States can borrow long-term at interest rates of around 2 percent; Japan,
which is far more deeply in debt than any country in Europe, Greece
included, pays only 1 percent. 

In other words, the Hellenization of our economic discourse, in which we're
all just a year or two of deficits from becoming another Greece, is
completely off base. 

So what does ail Europe? The truth is that the story is mostly monetary. By
introducing a single currency without the institutions needed to make that
currency work, Europe effectively reinvented the defects of the gold
standard - defects that played a major role in causing and perpetuating the
Great Depression. 

More specifically, the creation of the euro fostered a false sense of
security among private investors, unleashing huge, unsustainable flows of
capital into nations all around Europe's periphery. As a consequence of
these inflows, costs and prices rose, manufacturing became uncompetitive,
and nations that had roughly
<http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/30/eurozone-problems/> balanced
trade in 1999 began running large trade deficits instead. Then the music
stopped. 

If the peripheral nations still had their own currencies, they could and
would use devaluation to quickly restore competitiveness. But they don't,
which means that they are in for a long period of mass unemployment and
slow, grinding deflation. Their debt crises are mainly a byproduct of this
sad prospect, because depressed economies lead to budget deficits and
deflation magnifies the burden of debt. 

Now, understanding the nature of Europe's troubles offers only limited
benefits to the Europeans themselves. The afflicted nations, in particular,
have nothing but bad choices: either they suffer the pains of deflation or
they take the drastic step of leaving the euro, which won't be politically
feasible until or unless all else fails (a point Greece seems to be
approaching). Germany could help by reversing its own austerity policies and
accepting higher inflation, but it won't. 

For the rest of us, however, getting Europe right makes a huge difference,
because false stories about Europe are being used to push policies that
would be cruel, destructive, or both. The next time you hear people invoking
the European example to demand that we destroy our social safety net or
slash spending in the face of a deeply depressed economy, here's what you
need to know: they have no idea what they're talking about. 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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