http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f7ac05c8-82fa-11e1-ab78-00144feab49a.html

April 11, 2012 6:27 pm
Europe’s future is not up to the Bundesbank

By George Soros

Far from abating, the euro crisis has recently taken a turn for 
the worse. The European Central Bank relieved an incipient credit 
crunch through its longer-term refinancing operations. The 
resulting rally in financial markets hid an underlying 
deterioration; but that is unlikely to last much longer.

The fundamental problems have not been resolved; indeed, the gap 
between creditor and debtor countries continues to widen. The 
crisis has entered what may be a less volatile but more lethal phase.

At the onset of the crisis, the eurozone’s break-up was 
inconceivable: assets and liabilities denominated in the common 
currency were so intermingled that it would have caused an 
uncontrollable meltdown. But, as the crisis has progressed, the 
eurozone has been reoriented along national lines.

The LTRO enabled Spanish and Italian banks to engage in very 
profitable and low-risk arbitrage in their own countries’ bonds. 
And the preferential treatment received by the ECB on its Greek 
bonds will discourage other investors from holding sovereign debt. 
If this continues for a few more years, a eurozone break-up would 
become possible without a meltdown – but would leave creditor 
countries’ central banks holding big claims that would be hard to 
enforce against debtor countries’ central banks.

The Bundesbank has seen the danger. It is now campaigning against 
the indefinite expansion of the money supply, and it has started 
taking measures to limit the losses it would sustain in a 
break-up. This is creating a self-fulfilling prophecy: once the 
Bundesbank starts guarding against a break-up, everybody will have 
to do the same. Markets are beginning to reflect this.

The Bundesbank is also tightening credit at home. This would be 
the right policy if Germany was a freestanding country, but the 
eurozone’s heavily indebted members badly need stronger demand 
from Germany to avoid recession. Without it, the eurozone’s fiscal 
compact, agreed last December, cannot possibly work. The heavily 
indebted countries will either fail to implement the necessary 
measures or, if they do, they will fail to meet their targets 
because of collapsing demand. Either way, debt ratios will rise, 
and the competitiveness gap with Germany will widen.

Whether or not the euro endures, Europe is facing a long period of 
economic stagnation or worse. Other countries have gone through 
similar experiences. Latin American countries suffered a lost 
decade after 1982, and Japan has been stagnating for a quarter of 
a century; both have survived. But the European Union is not a 
country and it is unlikely to survive. The deflationary debt trap 
threatens to destroy a still-incomplete political union.

The only way to escape the trap is to recognise that current 
policies are counterproductive and change course. I cannot propose 
a cut-and-dried plan, only some guidelines. First, the rules 
governing the eurozone have failed and need radical revision. 
Defending a status quo that is unworkable only makes matters 
worse. Second, the current situation is highly anomalous, and 
exceptional measures are needed to restore normality. Finally, new 
rules must allow for financial markets’ inherent instability.

To be realistic, the fiscal compact must be the starting point, 
although some obvious defects will need to be modified. The 
compact should count commercial as well as financial debts and 
budgets should distinguish between investments that pay and 
current spending. To avoid cheating, what qualifies as investment 
should be subject to approval by a European authority. An enlarged 
European Investment Bank could then co-finance investments.

Most important, some new, extraordinary measures are needed to 
return conditions to normal. The EU’s fiscal charter compels 
member states to reduce their public debt annually by 
one-twentieth of the amount by which they exceed 60 per cent of 
gross domestic product. I propose that member states jointly 
reward good behaviour by taking over that obligation. They have 
transferred to the ECB their seignorage rights, valued at 
€2tn-€3tn by Willem Buiter of Citibank and Huw Pill of Goldman 
Sachs, working independently. A special-purpose vehicle owning the 
rights could use the ECB to finance the cost of acquiring the 
bonds without violating Article 123 of the Lisbon treaty.

Should a country violate the fiscal compact, it would be obliged 
to pay interest on all or part of the debt owned by the SPV. That 
would surely impose tough fiscal discipline.

By rewarding good behaviour, the fiscal compact would no longer 
constitute a deflationary debt trap. The outlook would radically 
improve. In addition, to narrow the competitiveness gap, all 
members should be able to refinance existing debt at the same 
interest rate. But that would require greater fiscal integration. 
It would have to be phased in gradually.

The Bundesbank will never accept these proposals, but the European 
authorities ought to take them seriously. The future of Europe is 
a political issue: it is beyond the Bundesbank’s competence to decide.

The writer is chairman of Soros Fund Management. His latest book 
is titled ‘Coming Soon: Financial Turmoil in Europe and the United 
States’
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