The idea of the Euro project was also at least partly
underpinned by an impetus that has been a constant theme in European history
throughout the last three millennia; namely the evolution of hundreds of tribal
states in the face of hegemony from a succession of various dominant empires
from within or from outside Europe.
When the 19th century dawned, modern Italy and Germany did
not even exist while the various Slav and Balkan states were embarking on a
course of self-determination that has ultimately resulted in the tortuous
journey to the status that they enjoy today. The Ottoman, Russian and
Austro-Hungarian Empires which had once been the major bulwarks on the eastern
side of Europe were already declining. Balancing ageing empires against the
nascent force of nationalism preoccupied the major European powers throughout
much of the 19th century and was a significant factor in the conflicts of the
last century, with very mixed results.
Italy in 2011 has achieved the successes that it has despite
its strong sense of being a collection of disparate regions and city states that
were simply united by a post-Napoleonic desire to achieve a home-grown
democratic republic rather than pay homage to rulers whose power base was
imposed from outside. However, the greater the economic stresses that Italy
faces, the greater is the risk that regional tensions will rise ever closer to
the surface, as they did in the 1930s.
While Italy may still be very much a work in progress,
Germany seems to be the finished article. Germany was established in
installments from the series of agreements leading to the customs union, or
Zollverein, to its galvanisation as a nation by successful military campaigns
against France and Denmark. Despite talks of various secessions in 1918, Germany
remained together until 1945 and even then successfully re-unified once the
Berlin Wall came down. Perhaps this is a good indicator of where the Euro
project has gone wrong. The EU has no such ties that bind it: There is no real
sense of a single Union within the EU, merely a collection of self-interests
that have become fatally interwoven and inter-dependent.
Angela Merkel is aware that the entire German banking system
and economy could ultimately be brought to collapse by a chain reaction of
events beginning with Greek or Irish or Portuguese or Spanish or Italian default
right now. Like a row of dominoes, one falling would knock over the next. Yet
Merkel also cannot fail to recognise the anger felt by German taxpayers is not
far behind that expressed this week by the Greek protesters (whose anger is
fuelled by the triple whammy of surging unemployment, lower wages and high
inflation).
Hence the need to wring the concessions that so upset the
Greek protesters. We expect these problems to intensify throughout 2011. Debt
has always been a zero-sum game - the borrowers have to either repay the debt or
default to the detriment of the lender. But in the Euro-zone experiment, like in
the sub-prime madness in the States, this reality was suspended. The problem now
is that it is very much back in play and no-one wants to be the loser in this
high stakes game. Whatever method is used to unwind it - for example default,
restructure, or extend at sub-market rates - will result in an effective loss to
the lenders.
The recent “Cucumber Wars” between Spain and Germany are a
sign that tensions between lenders and borrowers are rising while competitive
divisions are also appearing between the recipients of bailout funds as each
justifies its actions to its own electorate by insisting that it negotiated
better terms than its peers had before. This merely adds extra spice to the
merry-go-round of bankrupt countries taking turns to queue up with their hands
out.
The day of reckoning for debtors, and therefore the creditors
linked to them by the umbilical cord of debt, is getting closer - Irish
government debt is just one level above junk with a worsening outlook, and Greek
borrowing costs have soared, not just because of recent protests but because of
the dawning realisation that whatever austerity is now imposed, Greece and the
fellow GIPSIs, having spent a decade being force-fed more than they could chew
by the ECB, will never be able to repay.
These irreconcilable interests cannot be held together much
longer with the sticky tape of more bailouts. The instant that any party in this
hugely expensive co-dependency walks away from its perceived obligations, the
game is up and the Euro-zone experiment will implode. With stakes continuing to
rise, the moment of my Big Fat GIPSI Divorce keeps getting closer and closer.
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The above data and research was compiled from sources
believed to be reliable. However, neither MBMG International Ltd nor its
officers can accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
above article nor bear any responsibility for any losses achieved as a
result of any actions taken or not taken as a consequence of reading the
above article. For more information please contact Graham Macdonald on
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