Olli Rehn should resign for crimes against
Greece and against economics
By Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard Economics
Nobody has
taken responsibility for the disastrous errors made by the EU-IMF Troika
in Greece, where youth unemployment has just reached 58.3pc.
Nobody has
resigned, or missed a day’s pay, or faced any kind of censure from an
elected body, despite the withering indictment just issued by the IMF.
Worse yet,
the basic conceptual policy errors that led to this tragic episode have
not been fully corrected.
With a
little trimming here and there, the eurozone is sticking to the same mix
of self-defeating contractionary policies that have tipped the region back
into a double-dip recession, with seven quarters in a row of falling GDP,
soaring unemployment, and an ever starker divergence with the United
States.
Just to
recap what our man Bruno Waterfield reported from Brussels, the IMF’s
mea culpa admits that the Troika sacrificed Greece to save the euro.
It
completely misjudged the ferocity of the downward spiral caused by
austerity a l’outrance, and then blamed the victim by pretending that
Greece was failing to comply with the terms.
The Troika
recoiled from the standard IMF policy of debt restructuring for Greece in
2010 because it was “politically difficult” for countries (France?
Germany?) whose banks held Greek bonds.
The report
said the terms of the rescue violated three of the IMF’s four key rules
for lending to insolvent countries, no small matter given that it was the
biggest loan the Fund has ever made in proportion to a member’s quota,
and given that staff were “unable to vouch that public debt was
sustainable”.
It admitted
that the 2010 package was a “holding operation” that “gave the euro
area time to build a firewall to protect other vulnerable members and
averted potentially severe effects on the global economy”.
The European
Commission defended itself yesterday, saying a debt restructuring in 2010
would have caused havoc in the bond markets and virulent contagion. This
is true, but what kind of a defence is that?
Yes,
everybody feared a chain-reaction of sovereign defaults reaching Italy and
Spain, but this was entirely because the ECB was recklessly refusing to
carry out its responsibility as a lender of last resort, the ultimate
purpose of any central bank. In doing so, it was endangering the entire
global financial system.
You can
trace this paralysis to Maastricht and the nature of the ECB mandate, but
as the Draghi (OMT) backstop for Italy and Spain has since demonstrated,
what it really showed was that a lot of ECB governors were out of their
depth, or pursuing naked national agendas, or both, and hiding behind what
are in reality very elastic treaty clauses)
The IMF
makes it crystal clear that the EU institutions and the leaders of EMU
countries (still refusing to face up to the implications of EMU, or admit
to their own voters that monetary union costs real money) were the chief
villains in this saga.
What we see
is a near perfect exhibit of what is wrong with the European Project.
There is no mechanism of accountability. The buck stops nowhere.
I don’t
wish to pick on Economics Commissioner Olli Rehn, although one’s
patience runs out after listening to the Commission’s retort that the
IMF is “plainly wrong”.
Mr Rehn is a
decent man, with an impossible task, carrying responsibility without
power. The politicians of the northern EMU states and the ECB are chiefly
to blame.
I wrote at
the time that Germany’s Wolfgang Schauble crossed a line by threatening
to eject Greece from the euro and persistently vilifying the Greeks for
failure to comply, when the essential failure was the policy itself.
Greece kept missing deficit targets because the economy was collapsing,
causing tax revenues to shrink.
Yet Mr Rehn
is the titular official in charge. The Troika is “his” baby. If he
were the finance minister of a democratic state he would surely have to
resign after such blistering demolition of his tenure.
The fact
that nobody ever resigns for botched policies in the EU system (Pace, the
Santer Commission: the exception that proves the rule) should not deter Mr
Rehn from falling on his sword from a high sense of honour. Such a gesture
would clear the air, and mark a recognition that the policy formulae of
EMU must be swept away to allow for recovery.
His
director-general of economic and monetary affairs, Marco Butti, has
admitted that the fiscal multiplier is higher than normal in a countries
during a region-wide slump where the financial system has partially broken
down and interest rates are near zero, and therefore that fiscal
tightening does more economic damage.
But he
admits it only in hindsight. The Commission now argues that the return to
calm after the Draghi `Put’ has lowered the multiplier again, so there
is no real need to change policy (other than letting the fiscal
stabilizers do their work, avoiding the mistake of yet further tightening
to chase missed deficit targets)
If no such
resignation comes from Commissioner Rehn, we know the Rehn of Terror will
go on. The regime will persist in destructive folly, adding 100,000 people
to the jobless rolls each month.
Just a
reminder of the scale of error, which I wrote about in this blog last
year.
The Troika
originally said that Greece’ economy would contract by 2.6pc in 2010
under the austerity regime, before recovering with growth of 1.1pc in
2011, and 2.1pc in 2012.
In fact,
Greek GDP remained in an unbroken free-fall. It did not grow in either
year. It contracted a further 7.1pc in 2011, 6.4pc in 2012.
Roughly
speaking, the Troika misjudged the scale of economic decline over three
years by 12pc of GDP. The total decline will be around 25pc, surely a
Great Depression.
Don’t tell
it was hard to foresee. The Greek Labour Institute and the think tank IOVE
produced very accurate forecasts. The truth is that the Troika’s
ideology of “expansionary fiscal contraction” is bunk, and doubly
dangerous when compounded by tight money.
Like the
Spartans, Thebans, and Thespians at the Pass of Thermopylae, the Greeks
were sacrificed to buy time for the alliance.
Instead of
applause, they were then vilified for their heroic efforts by ill-informed
and self-interested Dutch, Finnish, Austrian, and German politicians. A
squalid episode.
Caption: The
consequences of Greek austerity (Photo: Getty)
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