Tell us what you think after you check out this Interview conducted by
Thomas Tuma and Alexander Jung of Spiegel Online International
with.........

Peter Bofinger, 55, a member of the German Council of Economic
Experts, a respected panel of five economists who advise the federal
government in Berlin. The economist, who lives in the Bavarian city of
Würzburg, founded a pro-euro initiative in 1997.

AND

Joachim Starbatty, 69, a professor emeritus in economics at the
University of Tübingen in southwestern Germany. In 1997, he and three
other academics filed a lawsuit against the introduction of the euro
at Germany's Constitutional Court, though it was ultimately
unsuccessful.

The Interview is titled:
Bringer of Prosperity or Bottomless Pit?
Top German Economists Debate the Euro

SPIEGEL: Mr. Bofinger and Mr. Starbatty, do you think it was a mistake
to introduce the euro?

Peter Bofinger: No, of course not. Today, we live in a currency zone
that, despite everything, is significantly more stable than where the
dollar or yen are used. The euro has brought growth and prosperity to
Europe.

Joachim Starbatty: Actually, the euro was a mistake with particularly
serious consequences. A monetary union requires its members to pursue
the same policies and be similarly productive. The so-called
convergence criteria were meant to ensure that this would happen. But
-- as the dramatic developments in Greece are now showing -- they
didn't.

SPIEGEL: Do you feel vindicated today?

Starbatty: Unfortunately, our fears have become a reality. The
monetary union was launched with real self-deception.

Bofinger: Excuse me?

Starbatty: The euro was sold to us as a modernization program for
Europe, and we were also told that it would push the Community toward
stability. But, in reality, it has drifted apart and become a truly
unstable entity.

Bofinger: Unstable? The inflation rate has been very moderate,
hovering at around 2 percent since 1999, and it is significantly lower
than it was when Germany used the mark. We have a lower budget deficit
than the Americans, the Japanese and the British. Our debt-GDP ratio
is also lower than it is in the United States and Japan. There is no
reason why the euro should be coming under pressure. The decision to
introduce it was smart and far-sighted.

SPIEGEL: Without any drawbacks?

Bofinger: Sure, the euro zone is currently looking a little worse for
the wear. But that's to be expected, given the storm the global
economy has gone through. Still, thanks to the common currency, it's
no longer possible, for example, to wage speculative attacks on
individual currencies. This eliminates a key disruptive factor that
massively destabilized markets in the past.

Starbatty: But that's exactly the problem! In the past, exchange rates
served as a valve. Individual countries could control their economies
by allowing their currencies to gain or lose value. Now, this
adjustment mechanism no longer works and, as a result, a completely
different sort of dangerous imbalance has emerged. Today, there are
two blocs within the monetary union: a strong currency bloc in the
north and a weak one in the south. The robust north has joined forces
with countries that have constantly devalued their currency throughout
their histories. Just look at the Italian lira, for example. At the
end of the 1950s, I paid 6.70 German marks for 1,000 lire. The final
exchange rate was less than one mark for 1,000 lire.

SPIEGEL: What would happen if the old currencies were reintroduced in
the euro zone tomorrow?

Bofinger: It would be a catastrophe. The German mark would have to
appreciate significantly -- I'd say by 10 percent to 20 percent.
Everything that we've worked so hard to attain in terms of
competitiveness would vanish overnight. There would be wailing and the
gnashing of teeth in Germany. And Europe would be making a serious
mistake if it were to revert to regionalism and nationalism during
this phase of advancing globalization.

Starbatty: I see things completely differently. The euro was also sold
to citizens as an instrument for securing peace. I never understood
that because, if that really were the case, you would have to open the
monetary union to everyone. Instead, in light of its failure, we are
now witnessing just how nationalism arises in the first place. EU
flags have already been burned in Greece.

SPIEGEL: Would it have been better if all countries in Europe had kept
their own currencies?

Starbatty: Yes. A community can't function when it's made up of
unequal partners who are supposed to behave as equals. With the euro,
Germany has created an artificial competitive advantage for itself,
which has enabled us to conquer markets all over the world. But this
has also led to the buildup of massive excess capacity in our export
industries and, consequently, the export-oriented companies in the
southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg are hurting. The monetary
union changed the structure of economies in an unhealthy way.

Bofinger: Oh, come on! You can't blame the euro for these imbalances!
The blame primarily lies with economic policies. Since 1995, there
have been almost no appreciable wage increases in Germany, partly as a
result of pressure brought on from increases in subcontracted labor.
Politicians have done everything to relieve employers of the burden of
paying social security contributions because we fell into this strange
panic, believing we weren't globally competitive. With our economic
policies, we placed too much of a lopsided emphasis on exports. The
Irish, Greeks and Spaniards, on the other hand, put too much emphasis
on domestic demand.

'Putting the Virtuous in the Dock Rather than the Real Offenders'

SPIEGEL: In recent days, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde has
repeatedly criticized Germany's export surpluses for being high
compared with those of other EU countries. Is she right to do so?

Starbatty: No. I think it's strange that Madame Lagarde is putting the
virtuous, who have always been oriented toward stability, in the dock
rather than the real offenders.

Bofinger: But the Germans have sinned just as much as the Spaniards,
for example. The Spaniards made their wages too high, while we in
Germany practiced the opposite by not increasing the purchasing power
of workers for years.

Starbatty: So what? It made us successful. It arose from the concern
that jobs would migrate abroad. And Germany's moderate wage policy has
made the country attractive to companies again.

Bofinger: You should look at it more holistically. We wouldn't have
been able to increase our exports if the other countries had behaved
like us and had not increased their demand for an entire decade. In my
view, the monetary union is like a relationship: To function properly,
its participants must orient their behavior toward the general good.
If each participant only contemplates his or her own benefit, it leads
to the kind of relationship crisis we are currently experiencing.

SPIEGEL: Such crises occasionally also end in divorce. Would that be
an option at some point in the future for Greece, a euro-zone member?

Starbatty: I think that step would make the most sense. The Greeks
should voluntarily leave the monetary union and reintroduce the
drachma. If they did, they would export more and could replace foreign
products with domestic ones. Likewise, tourists would travel to Greece
instead of Turkey because it would be the cheaper alternative.

Bofinger: Excluding Greece from the Union would be the completely
wrong approach. Greece's problem is its inefficiency in terms of
public finances. That can be corrected. Compared with other countries,
Athens has always collected too few taxes. The government's budget
wasn't even balanced in the good years, when there was strong economic
growth. That's not the way to manage a country. Greece's government
could, for example, raise the top tax rate from 40 percent, where it
is today, to something much higher. After Germany's reunification,
when Helmut Kohl was chancellor, our top tax rate was 56 percent.

Starbatty: And you seriously believe that would help? Following that
approach, the Greeks would save themselves to death, just as the
Germans did in the early 1930s under then-Reich Chancellor Heinrich
Brüning. What you expect the Greeks to do is Brüning squared. The real
problem is that Greece shouldn't have been accepted into the monetary
union in the first place. The country submitted doctored numbers, as
anyone who read the newspapers knew. And others did the same thing.
But officials in Brussels, who were worried that the Greeks would go
public with the fraud, said: 'Let's forget it!'

Bofinger: But that's all water under the bridge now! We have to deal
with the current situation. In the Council of Experts, we proposed a
consolidation pact, under which each country would be required to
specify a fully verifiable path that it will follow as it puts its
financial house in order. It wouldn't just be a solution for Greece;
it would be for everyone. In return, the Community would be expected
to provide guarantees to problem countries that they will be able to
raise money in the capital markets at favorable, rather than extremely
high, rates. It's unacceptable that governments have spent the last
few years spending billions upon billions and incurring debt to save
the financial markets, only to see speculators push the countries out
of the monetary union.

Starbatty: In my experience, speculators are only successful when
political promises diverge from economic reality, as has become clear
in Greece. Likewise, when it comes to assistance, I think we have a
clear legal framework, according to which neither any member state nor
the entire Union can be held liable for the debt of another member
state.

SPIEGEL: You are referring, of course, to the famous no-bailout
clause.

Starbatty: You, Mr. Bofinger, would eliminate this principle with a
stroke of the pen. If we help Greece now, we'll be opening a
bottomless pit. In that happens, the euro will be in far more trouble
because other countries will expect help. The monetary union will turn
into a transfer union. If that happens, my former colleagues and I
will take legal action again.

Bofinger: But such a pact would be circumscribed to helping countries
help themselves. The idea now is not to buy Greek bonds. Rather, we
have to define clear conditions under which Greece and other countries
are to receive guarantees. But, there must also be an option to
terminate the guarantees if the rules aren't obeyed.

Starbatty: Pacts are written on paper, but what's written isn't always
necessarily true. The Stability and Growth Pact for the euro was
originally much stricter, but then it was made less so. Nothing much
ever comes out of it when sinners discuss sinners.

SPIEGEL: But government debt is still growing considerably. Doesn't
this also increase the risk of inflation?

Starbatty: That's what I assume. Inflation would be an elegant means
of reducing debt, and many academics are discussing this scenario. But
it becomes truly problematic when government bonds eventually lose
their status as a safe haven. If China or Japan arrive at this
conclusion and sell their bonds, a bubble could burst that is far more
dangerous than any other bubble. If that happens, markets will plunge,
and interest rates will shoot up.

Bofinger: Oh, Mr. Starbatty, the Chinese have no choice but to buy US
Treasury bonds. Otherwise, they would have to allow their currency to
appreciate significantly, and they would be more affected by the
decline in bond prices than anyone else. For the euro zone, at least,
what I see as being more likely is the risk of deflation -- in other
words, the risk of price declines on both fronts. If people are now
starting to save much more broadly, an enormous downward pressure will
inevitably develop as a result.

Starbatty: But people aren't saving. Instead, countries are getting
into debt beyond all measure. If Germany's economy remains stagnant
and its 1.3 million short-time workers do not find regular employment
again, government deficits will rise again, and inflationary
expectations will grow.

Bofinger: Government debts don't automatically lead to inflation, as
has been shown by developments in Japan over the last two decades. The
European Central Bank would never, ever contemplate using inflation to
eliminate debt. And even if people did start spending their money out
of fear of inflation, at least the factories would finally be
operating at full capacity again. In other words, that wouldn't be a
tragedy, either.

SPIEGEL: Turbulence in the financial markets has also created a
credibility problem for people in your line of work. Hardly any
economists predicted the fatal problems.

Starbatty: That's true. Many of us put too much stock in numbers. But
mathematical models can't depict complex realities.

Bofinger: On that, I agree with you completely. We have to realize
once again that economics is a soft rather than a hard science.

SPIEGEL: Do the two of you actually believe that the euro will still
be around in five years?

Bofinger: I'm sure it will be. Every crisis creates an opportunity,
and that should also apply to this special relationship crisis. This
assumes, however, that officials in Brussels will refrain from
pointing fingers at each other and will finally hammer out a joint,
coordinated approach.

Starbatty: That's not enough. If we drag the Greeks along now, other
member states will also push for financial assistance. And then the
monetary union will crumble. The only thing that isn't clear is when
this'll happen.

Bofinger: Then you would probably agree with the great British
economist John Maynard Keynes, who said: 'In the long run, we are all
dead." Then there will be no one left to review things.

Starbatty: I'm afraid it won't take quite that long with the euro.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Bofinger, Mr. Starbatty, thank you for this interview.

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