The Sleeping Volcano of Global Finance

Michel Rocard

 

The rejection of the European Union’s Constitutional Treaty by French and Dutch 
voters was, according to all evidence, more a rejection of unregulated 
globalization than it was a rejection of Europe. The general instability of 
social relations – most importantly, but not only, of employment – is slowly 
becoming intolerable for a growing part of the population in many developed 
countries, not just in Europe. And there cannot be a stable economic order – at 
least not in democratic countries – if electorates reject its underpinnings.

Capitalism could be reconstructed after World War II because it was buttressed 
by three necessary types of regulation: social security, which served as a 
principal stabilizer, at least in the developed countries; Keynesian tools to 
fight domestic cyclical downturns; and a universal high-wage policy aimed at 
stimulating general consumption, without which the genius of capitalism – mass 
production – does not work.

But the realignment of the rich, developed countries around the monetarist 
policies promoted by economists like Milton Friedman, which began around 1970, 
broke with all that. Not long after, the dollar was detached from the gold 
standard. Ever since, the international financial system has endured almost 
constant instability. Crises have multiplied, with each seemingly worse than 
the one that came before.

Throughout the rich world, poverty has come roaring back. Internal and 
international inequalities have been increasing at breakneck speed. Employment 
is increasingly precariousness. And where unemployment is preferred to 
universal job insecurity, it has become impossible to suppress.

It is to this state of affairs that the French and Dutch said “no” two months 
ago.

Paradoxically, however, a united Europe is likely to be needed even more in the 
near future than it was in the past. After all, beyond the social misery 
produced by the re-institutionalized cruelty of the current global economic 
system, the greatest danger facing the world nowadays is that very system’s 
inherent instability. I don’t see any institution other than the EU that has 
enough size and heft to protect Europeans from a possible implosion. 

Consider the simple fact that the American economy is now more than $600 
billion in debt. The United States cannot function without being able to borrow 
$1.9 billion dollars each and every day of the year, mainly from the emerging 
economies of Asia, and China above all. 

But this support could weaken or even cease if the dollar falls too low, if the 
price of oil rises too high, or if the American economy backfires. In fact, the 
US economy has become increasingly detached from reality. Its manufacturing 
sector now accounts for a mere 11% of America’s GDP. Ford and General Motors 
are in dire financial straits. 

Meanwhile, two speculative bubbles – in the real estate market and in mortgages 
– have become grafted upon each other and now dominate economic activity in the 
US. A crash, or at least a sharp spasm, is quite likely in the near future, and 
the consequences – for America and the world – may be catastrophic.

This instability also makes it difficult to address other grave problems 
affecting the global financial system. Sovereign debt, needed by all countries, 
but particularly by the poorest, suffers profoundly from erratic interest-rate 
and exchange-rate movements. The absence of a lender of last resort in today’s 
world only magnifies the threat involved in each crisis.

To make matters worse, national failures can no longer be addressed without 
aggravating the situation. Of course – indeed, above all – in such 
circumstances the immense investments needed to overcome underdevelopment and 
the disabilities that it entails are increasingly forgotten by the world of 
international finance.

With rich countries threatened by instability and poor countries largely left 
to their own devices, the reconstruction of the world financial system should 
be at the top of the international agenda. A new Bretton Woods could not be 
more urgent!

 

* Michel Rocard, a former Prime Minister of France and leader of the Socialist 
Party, is a member of the European Parliament.

© Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2005. 
http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/rocard8 


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