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Rescuing the Euro – or Bailing Out
Profligates?
Prof. Dr. Lars P. Feld
Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg
ZEW Mannheim
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Has Happened – At First Sight?
Greece Rescue Package by EU and IMF of
110 billion Euros (135 billion US-$).
EU and IMF General Rescue Scheme of 750
billion Euros (923 billion US-$).
ECB buys government bonds of the PIIGS (in
particular Spain and Greece).
Disharmonious calls for EU reforms (SGP…)
Calls on Germany to increase domestic
consumption.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
Rescuing the Euro – or Bailing Out Profligates?
Outline of the Presentation
What Is the Problem?
The Stability and Growth Pact and
the No-Bail-Out Clause
Routes for Reform
Rescue or Bail-out?
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 1
Deficits in % of GDP
Deficits
Surpluses
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 2
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 3
Nominal Interest Rates for 10 Year Government Bonds
25
20
Deutschland
Spanien
15
Griechenland
%
Irland
10
Italien
Portugal
5
0
1993Jan
1994Jan
1995Jan
1996Jan
1997Jan
1998Jan
1999Jan
2000Jan
2001Jan
2002Jan
2003Jan
2004Jan
2005Jan
2006Jan
2007Jan
2008Jan
2009Jan
2010Jan
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 4
Looking at the profligate countries:
Greece obviously cheated regarding its
fiscal position when entering EMU;
But also in the years after.
Italy, Belgium and Portugal reduced their
debt to GDP ratios: SGP was helpful.
Spain and Ireland held debt to GDP even
below the 60 percent levels.
But: incentives to increase public or private
indebtedness.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 5
Why a Rescue Package/Bail-out?
It is all about financial markets.
Greece, but particularly Spain have been
supposed to cause a second Lehman-type
meltdown.
Not so much a problem of engagement of
other European banks.
Greece: CDS concentrated in Greek banks.
Spain: Fear of banking crises affecting
even Santander and BBVA.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
What Is the Problem? 6
Why a Rescue Package/Bail-out?
Possible contagion effects.
Rhetoric about a rescue of the Euro and the
attention its exchange rate attracted is
nothing but rhetoric and fuzz.
Exchange rate is (almost) unimportant for the
contagion problem.
What is the role of institutional frameworks
at the EU level?
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
The SGP and the No-Bail-Out Clause 1
Stability and Growth Pact:
Art. 126 Lisbon Treaty (Art. 104 EC-Treaty)
in connection with the Excessive Deficits
Protocol.
Deficit to GDP: 3 percent.
Gross Debt to GDP: 60 percent.
Compatibility if considerably reduced.
No-Bail-Out Clause: Art. 125 Lisbon Treaty
ECB is not allowed to directly buy govt. bonds
(Art. 123 Lisbon Treaty).
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
The SGP and the No-Bail-Out Clause 2
Excessive Deficit Procedure:
Each member state must provide a fiscal
report every year containing medium-term
planning targets.
Stabilization and convergence programs:
Are targets realistic?
Early warnings of deviations from the
targets and proposals to adjust.
If Commission thinks deficit is excessive, it
proposes measures on which the Council
must decide within 3 months.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
The SGP and the No-Bail-Out Clause 3
Excessive Deficit Procedure:
Council states excessive deficit: Proposal of
adjustment measures to the member
country which must be adopted within 4
months and sets a deadline to correct
deficit (usually until the next year).
Council thinks that there are no effective
measures: Publication of suggestions.
One month later: Put into delay.
2 further months: Council should impose
sanctions (not automatic).
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
The SGP and the No-Bail-Out Clause 4
Excessive Deficit Procedure:
Sanctions: Non-Interest-Bearing Deposit at
the Commission of 0.2 % of GDP plus 10 %
of GDP of the difference by which the
actual deficit (in % of GDP) exceeds the
threshold; at most 0.5 % of GDP.
Deposit turns into a sanction after 2 years
if the member state does not reduce
deficit.
Extraordinary situations allow higher deficit
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
The SGP and the No-Bail-Out Clause 5
Excessive Deficit Procedure:
2002 – 2004: Excessive deficit procedure
against France and Germany.
Last step before sanctions was set out:
Both countries were not accused to not having
adopted sufficient measures and were not put
into delay.
Majority decision by the Council that was
accepted by the ECJ.
2005: Revision of the SGP with more
procedures.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
Routes for Reform 1
Voluntary or forced exit of Greece:
No incentives (voluntary).
No legal basis in the Treaties (forced).
Economically non-sense.
Because of following turbulences.
Because devaluation as possible shock
absorber is over-valued: Inflation-devaluation
spirals.
A logistical nightmare when markets
unravel.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
Routes for Reform 2
More power to the European Union:
Reluctance of many members countries
because they do not want to lose budget
autonomy.
Breach of constitutional law in Germany:
Lisbon Treaty decision by the Constitutional
Court.
Economically dangerous, because it allows
to put pressure on the ECB.
Germany has no interest: Lagarde criticism
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
Routes for Reform 3
Strengthening the SGP:
Requirement to introduce national debt
brakes German style: Could be a Directive.
Requirement for independent statistical
offices: Could be a Directive.
Further procedural changes: also Directive.
Bankruptcy Code (Directive?):
Asymmetry between SGP and No-Bail-Out
Clause must be resolved.
U.S. Law provides help.
Paris and London Clubs are insufficient.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010
Rescue or Bail-out?
Rescue and Bail-out!
No rescue of the Euro.
But rescue of European banks and prevention
of contagion.
Bail-out as well with all negative incentives.
Whether the oversight suffices to induce
the necessary fiscal adjustments in Greece
is questionable.
Necessity to have bankruptcy code.
Forum of Federations, Ottawa,
June 2010