Waiting For A European Santa Claus
By: Rachel Marsden
While your co-workers hover around the water cooler debating whether it
matters if Mitt Romney bullied some kid in his youth, a formerly First World
nation called Greece is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Why, you might
ask, should Middle America pry its overworked eyes away from Jennifer Lopez
gyrating around in a bodysuit on "American Idol" long enough to bother caring?
Now replace "Greece" with "your bank." It suddenly matters a little more,
doesn't it? What if your bank couldn't loan you money, give you a mortgage or
allow you to ring up credit-card debt, all because the bank abruptly had much
less with which to leverage your lifestyle since Greece decided to finally pull
itself off fiscal life support. Granted, American banks only hold about $2
billion in Greek debt bonds, according to a 2011 Federal Reserve survey. But
more significantly, they hold $34 billion worth of such bonds in Italy and
Spain. If these two countries ever decide to flake out -- a real possibility,
referred to as "contagion" -- good luck trying to get your bank to finance that
car you can't afford.
Not that staying in the eurozone would prevent collapse, either. If anything,
it would only hasten the demise of the other member states. The eurozone fell
into this crisis due to the stunningly illogical idea that a cost-heavy system
could support itself indefinitely. When reality slowly dawned on the European
powers that be, they proposed a series of desperate tax grabs, many under the
guise of environmentalism and climate change. Too little, too late, and way too
scammy to be worth pursuing for any single national leader who risks being voted
out of office as a result of martyring himself for Europe.
Sheer political will continues to be the only container keeping this
high-entropy system from blasting into full chaos. The scene of former French
President Nicolas Sarkozy browbeating German Chancellor Angela Merkel to bail
out Greece in the very first installation of this graphic international
snuff-film series should remain a symbol of why the whole concept was destined
for disorder.
The most troublesome thing of all is that logic and pragmatic realism, however
painful, are still taking a back seat to short-term appetites. Voters in France
and Greece proved that they're willing to cycle through governments over and
over until someone fixes their predicament. They want Santa Claus, as if they
were 5 years old again. They don't care if Mom and Dad are broke and have no
money -- they're going to sit on that lap and scream until the magic elves at
the North Pole workshop are commanded to make it all better. Rejecting austerity
is like asking Santa for a Ferrari and a baby brother when your parents are
broke and post-menopausal.
New French President Francois Hollande was apparently mugged by reality on the
way home from his victory party, as he admitted before even taking office that
he'd discovered the fiscal situation in France was even worse than portrayed by
his predecessor. While likely disappointing for some, that admission is a
reassuring sign of sanity.
I have no idea what goes on in the heads of anti-austerity French, Greeks or any
other citizens of financially strapped European countries who think there's an
alternative to austerity that's any less drastic than an entire systemic
revamping of the welfare state and public service. Even austerity measures have
had a minimal impact thus far, mainly because the situation is so dire in
countries like Greece that almost any countermeasure is just a case of putting a
Band-Aid on a gushing head wound. Austerity is the very least that ought to be
inflicted in an attempt to reverse course, and voters don't even want that.
So what's the solution? The best thing that could happen would be for the euro
to be forced down in value to stimulate exports, to promote local products over
foreign ones, and to boost domestic production -- similar to the way that China
has benefitted from keeping the yuan devalued, much to the irritation of U.S.
President Barack Obama and leaders in other Western nations. This would get the
economic ball rolling again and improve European productivity, rather than
leaving the task to China, India, Brazil and other emerging markets. This idea
certainly couldn't be any worse than what's been tried to date. And it beats
waiting around for Santa Claus to get elected.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN