Daily Beast
 
 
Niall Ferguson
 
Europe’s  Disaster Is Headed Our Way
Nov 13, 2011 12:00 AM EST  
 

Can America withstand the death spiral of debt? 

 

 
 
As an author who has just published a book on the crisis of Western  
civilization, I couldn’t really have asked for more: simultaneous crises in  
Athens and Rome, the cradles of the West’s law, languages, politics, and  
philosophy.
 
Yet most Americans are baffled by the ongoing economic pandemonium in the  
European Union. For them, places like Greece and Italy are primarily tourist 
 destinations they’ll visit at most once. The finer points of Mediterranean 
 politics leave them cold, except insofar as they’re funny. After all, who 
could  resist the opera-buffa character of Silvio “Bunga-Bunga” Berlusconi?
 
But only a few weirdos really feel their pulses quicken when they hear news 
 like: the new Greek prime minister is a former central banker called 
Papademos!  Ever tried to explain to a New Yorker the finer points of Slovakian 
coalition  politics? I have. He almost needed an adrenaline shot to come out 
of the  coma.
 
So why should Americans care about any of this? The first reason is that,  
with American consumers still in the doldrums of deleveraging, the United 
States  badly needs buoyant exports if its economy is to grow at anything 
other than a  miserably low rate. And despite all the hype about trade with the 
Chinese, U.S.  exports to the European Union are nearly three times larger 
than to  China.
 
Until March, it seemed as if exports to Europe were on an upward 
trajectory.  But the eurozone crisis has stopped that. Governments that ran up 
excessive  debts have seen their borrowing costs explode. Unable to devalue 
their  
currencies, they’ve been forced to adopt austerity measures—cutting 
spending or  hiking taxes—in a vain effort to reduce their deficits. The result 
has 
been  Depression economics: shrinking economies and unemployment rates 
approaching 20  percent.
 
As a result, according to the new president of the European Central Bank,  
Mario Draghi, a “double dip” recession in Europe is now all but inevitable. 
And  that’s lousy news for U.S. exporters targeting the EU market.
 
But there’s more. Europe’s problem is not just that governments are  
overborrowed. There are an unknown number of European banks that are 
effectively  
insolvent if their holdings of government bonds are “marked to market”—in 
other  words, valued at their current rock-bottom market prices. In our 
interconnected  financial world, it would be very odd indeed if no U.S. 
institutions were  affected by this. Just as European institutions once loaded 
up on 
assets backed  with subprime U.S. mortgages, so most big U.S. banks have at 
least some exposure  to eurozone bonds or banks. One institution—MF Global, 
run by former Goldman  Sachs CEO Jon Corzine—just blew up because of its 
highly levered euro bets.  Others are biting their fingernails because it is 
suddenly far from clear that  the credit default swaps they have bought as 
insurance against, say, a Greek  default are worth the paper they are written 
on.
 
But the third reason Americans should care about Europe is more important  
even than the risk of a renewed financial crisis. It is the danger that what 
is  happening in Europe today could ultimately happen here. Just a few 
months ago,  almost nobody was worried about Italy’s vast debt, which amounts 
to 
121 percent  of GDP. Then suddenly panic set in, and Italy’s borrowing 
costs exploded from  3.5 percent to 7.5 percent.
 
Today the U.S. gross federal debt stands at around 100 percent of GDP. Four 
 years ago it was 62 percent. By 2016 the International Monetary Fund 
forecasts  it will be 115 percent. Economists who should know better insist 
that 
this is  not a problem because, unlike Italy, the United States can print 
its own money  at will. All that means is that the U.S. reserves the right to 
inflate or  depreciate away its debt. If I were a foreign investor—and half 
the debt in  public hands is held by foreigners—I would not find that 
terribly reassuring. At  some point I might demand some compensation for that 
risk 
in the form of ...  higher rates.
 
Athens, Rome, Washington ... The shortest route from imperial capital to  
tourist destination is precisely this death spiral of  debt.

-- 
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