Bloomberg
 
How Bad Ideas Worsen Europe’s Debt  Meltdown
 
By John H. Cochrane Dec 21, 2011
 
Europe is as full of bad ideas as it is of bad debts.  
Conventional wisdom says that sovereign defaults mean the end of the euro: 
If  _Greece_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/greece/)   defaults it has to 
leave the single currency; German taxpayers have to bail out  southern 
governments to save the union.  
This is nonsense. U.S. states and local governments have defaulted on 
dollar  debts, just as companies default. A currency is simply a unit of value, 
as  meters are units of length. If the Greeks had skimped on the olive oil in 
a  liter bottle, that wouldn’t threaten the metric system.  
Bailouts are the real threat to the euro. The _European Central Bank_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/european-central-bank/)  has been buying Greek, 
Italian,  Portuguese and Spanish debt. It has been lending money to banks that, 
in turn,  buy the debt. There is strong pressure for the ECB to buy or 
guarantee more.  When the debt finally defaults, either the rest of Europe will 
have to raise  trillions of euros in fresh taxes to replenish the central 
bank, or the euro  will inflate away.  
Leaving the euro would also be a disaster for Greece, _Italy_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/italy/)  and the  others. Reverting to national 
currencies 
in a debt crisis means expropriating  savings, commerce-destroying _capital  
controls_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/capital-controls/) , spiraling 
inflation and growth-killing isolation. And getting out  won’t help these 
countries avoid default, because their debt promises euros, not  drachmas or 
lira.  
Perils of Devaluation 
Defenders think that devaluing would fool workers into a bout of  “
competitiveness,” as if people wouldn’t realize they were being paid in  
Monopoly 
money. If devaluing the currency made countries competitive, _Zimbabwe_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/zimbabwe/)  would  be the richest country on 
Earth. 
No Chicago voter would want the governor of _Illinois_ 
(http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=BSTIIL:IND)  to be able to devalue 
his way out of his 
state’s  budget and economic troubles. Why do economists think Greek 
politicians are so  much wiser?  
The latest plan calls for _Europe_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/europe/)  
to be tougher in enforcing deficit rules that are  similar to the ones that 
they blithely ignored for 10 years. Sure, a directive  from Brussels is 
really going to get the Greeks to shape up. Imagine how well it  would work if 
the _International Monetary Fund_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/international-monetary-fund/)  or the _United  
Nations_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/united-nations/)  tried to veto _U.S.  budget 
deficits_ 
(http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=FDEBTY:IND) . (That is, if our 
Congress passed budgets to 
begin with.)  This plan is mostly a way to let the ECB save face and buy up 
bad debt with  freshly printed euros.  
More fiscal union hurts the euro. Think of Poland or Slovakia. Using euros  
was once a no-brainer: It made sense to use the same currency as all the 
other  small countries around them, just as _Illinois_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/illinois/)  wants  to use the same currency as 
_Indiana_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/indiana/) .  
Now, it’s not so clear: If using this currency means signing up to bail out 
 Greece and Italy, then maybe adopting the euro isn’t such a good idea. A 
common  currency without a fiscal union could have universal appeal. A 
currency union  with a bailout-based fiscal union will remain a small affair.  
Europeans leaders think their job is to stop “contagion,” to “calm markets.
”  They blame “speculation” for their troubles. They keep looking for the 
Big  Announcement that will soothe markets into rolling over another few 
hundred  billion euros of debt. Alas, the problem is reality, not psychology, 
and  governments are poor psychologists. You just can’t fill a trillion-euro 
hole  with psychology.  
President _Nicolas Sarkozy_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/nicolas-sarkozy/)  
of _France_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/france/)  said Greece  is like 
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and its collapse would bring down the  financial 
system. Greece isn’t Lehman. It doesn’t have trillions of dollars of  
offsetting derivatives contracts. It isn’t a broker-dealer, whose failure would 
 
freeze all sorts of assets. Its creditors don’t have the legal right to 
seize  assets owed to counterparties. Greece is just a plain-vanilla sovereign  
borrower, like those that have been defaulting since Edward III stiffed the  
Perruzzi bank in the 1340s.  
Banks’ Debt 
Sovereign default would damage the financial system, however, for the 
simple  reason that Europe has allowed its banks to load up on debt, kept on 
the 
books  at face value, and treated as riskless and buffered by no capital.  
Indebted governments have been pressuring banks to buy more debt, not less. 
 As banks have been increasing capital, they have loaded up even more on  “
risk-free” sovereign debt, which they can use as collateral for ECB loans. 
The  big ECB “liquidity operation” that took place yesterday will give banks 
hundreds  of billions of euros to increase their sovereign bets. Bank 
depositors and  creditors have figured this out, and are running for the exits. 
 
By stuffing the banks with sovereign debt, European politicians and  
regulators are making the inevitable default much more financially dangerous. 
So  
much for the faith that regulation will keep banks safe.  
The euro’s fatal flaw then wasn’t to unite areas with differing levels and 
 types of development under one currency. After all, Mississippi and 
_Manhattan_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/manhattan/)  use  the same money. Nor 
was 
it to deprive governments of the ephemeral pleasures of  devaluation. Nor 
was it to envision a currency union without fiscal union.  
Banking misregulation was the euro’s fatal flaw. Sovereign debt, which can  
always avoid explicit default when countries print money, doesn’t remain  
risk-free in a currency union. Yet banking regulators and ECB rules continue 
to  pretend otherwise.  
So, by artful application of bad ideas, Europe has taken a plain-vanilla  
sovereign restructuring and turned it into a banking crisis, a currency 
crisis,  a fiscal crisis, and now a political crisis.  
When the era of wishful thinking ends, Europe will face a stark choice. It  
can have a monetary union without sovereign defaults. That option means 
fiscal  union, accepting real German control of Greek and Italian (and maybe 
French)  budgets. Nobody wants that, with good reason.  
Or Europe can have a monetary union without fiscal union. That would work  
well, but it needs to be based on two central ideas: Sovereigns must be able 
to  default just like companies, and banks, including the central bank, 
must treat  sovereign debt just like company debt.  
The final option is a breakup, probably after a crisis and inflation. The  
euro, like the meter, is a great idea. Throwing it away would be a real and  
needless tragedy.  
(John H. Cochrane, a professor of finance at the University of Chicago 
Booth  School of Business and an adjunct scholar of the _Cato  Institute_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/cato-institute/) , is a contributor to _Business 
Class_ (http://www.bloomberg.com/view/business-class/) . The opinions expressed 
are his own.) 

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