Sep/Oct 2012): 2-0_1.
Abstract (summary)
After
World War II, Europe began a process of peaceful political unification
unprecedented there and unmatched anywhere else. But the project began to go
wrong in the early 1990s, when western European leaders started moving too
quickly toward a flawed monetary union. Now, as Europe faces a still-unresolved
debt crisis, its drive toward unification has stalled-and unless fear or
foresight gets it going again, the union could slide toward irrelevance.
How
the Union Came Together and Why It's Falling Apart
May
10, 1943: German forces are destroying the Warsaw ghetto. Facing armed
resistance from Polish Jewish fighters, they set fire to it house by house,
burning some inhabitants alive and driving others out from the cellars.
"Today, in sum 1,183 Jews were apprehended alive," notes the o/cial
report by the ss commander Jürgen Stroop. "187 Jews and bandits were shot.
An indeterminable number of Jews and bandits were destroyed in blown-up
bunkers. The total number of Jews processed so far has r isen to 52,683."
An appendix to this document contains the now-famous photograph of a terrified
small boy in an outsize cloth cap, his hands held high in surrender. Marek
Edelman, one of very few leaders of the Warsaw ghetto uprising to survive,
concluded a memoir published immediately after the war with these words:
"Those who were killed in action had done their duty to the end, to the
last drop of blood that soaked into the pavements. . . . We, who did not
perish, leave it up to you to keep the memory of them alive-forever."
Fast-forward
exactly 60 years, to May 10, 2003, a month before Poland holds a referendum on
whether to join the European Union. At a "yes" campaign rally in
Warsaw, a banner in Poland's national colors, red and white, proclaims,
"We go to Europe under the Polish flag." Outside the rebuilt Royal
Castle, a choir of young girls in yellow and blue T-shirts-echoing the European
flag's yellow stars on a blue background- breaks into song. To the music of the
eu's o/cial anthem, which is drawn from the final movement of Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony, they sing, in Polish, the words of the German poet Friedrich
Schiller's "Ode to Joy." Soon these young Poles will be able to move
at will across most of a continent almost whole and free, to study, work,
settle down, marry, and enjoy all the benefits of a generous European welfare
state, in Dublin, Madrid, London, or Rome. "Be embraced, ye millions! This
kiss to the entire world! Brothers, a loving father must live above that canopy
of stars!"
To
understand how a predicted crisis of European monetary union became an existential
crisis of the whole post-1945 project of European unification, you have to see
Europe's unique trajectory from one May 10 to the other. Both the memories of
World War II and the exigencies of the Cold War drove three generations of
Europeans to heights of peaceful unification that were unprecedented in
European history and unmatched on any other continent. Yet that project began
to go wrong soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, as western European leaders
hastily set course for a structurally flawed monetary union.
While
many governments, companies, and households piled up unsustainable levels of
debt, young Europeans from Portugal to Estonia and from Finland to Greece came
to take peace, freedom, prosperity, and social security for granted. When the bubble
burst, it leftmany feeling bitterly disappointed and led to excruciating
divergences between the experiences of diaerent nations. Now, with the current
crisis still unresolved, Europe lacks most of the motivating forces that once
propelled it toward unity. Even if a shared fear of the consequences of the
eurozone's collapse saves it from the worst, Europe needs something more than
fear to make it again the magnetic project it was for a half century. But what
can that something be? war on the mind
Historians
have identified many factors that contributed to the process of European
integration, including the vital economic interests of European nations. Yet
the single most important driving force across the continent was the memory of
war. Among those parading down the streets of Warsaw in May 2003 was the
bearded professor Bronislaw Geremek, who, as a ten-year-old Polish Jewish boy,
had seen the Warsaw ghetto burning before his eyes. It was no accident that he
became one of Poland's most ardent advocates of European integration, as a
leader of the Solidarity movement, the Polish foreign minister, and then a
member of the European Parliament.
To
be sure, the Warsaw ghetto survivor, the Nazi soldier, the British o/cer, the
French collaborator, the Swedish businessman, and the Slovak farmer had very
diaerent wars. Yet from all their throats rose the same passionate cry:
"Never again!" For all the diaerences in national and subnational
experiences across a hugely diverse continent, the historian Tony Judt could
still title a history of Europe that covers the 60 years up to 2005 with a
single word: Postwar. In this respect, if in no other, the European Union's
favorite catch phrase, "Unity in diversity," was strictly accurate.
Those
memories played an important role for those British Conservatives, most of them
World War II veterans, who took the United Kingdom into the European Economic
Community, the precursor to the European Union, in 1973. But above all,
personal experience motivated those continental Europeans, up to and including
French President François Mitterrand and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who
created the eu of today. In a conversation I had with him after German
reunification, Kohl delivered a line I will Madrid, London, or Rome. "Be
embraced, ye millions! This kiss to the entire world! Brothers, a loving father
must live above that canopy of stars!"
To
understand how a predicted crisis of European monetary union became an
existential crisis of the whole post-1945 project of European unification, you
have to see Europe's unique trajectory from one May 10 to the other. Both the
memories of World War II and the exigencies of the Cold War drove three
generations of Europeans to heights of peaceful unification that were
unprecedented in European history and unmatched on any other continent. Yet
that project began to go wrong soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, as
western European leaders hastily set course for a structurally flawed monetary
union.
While
many governments, companies, and households piled up unsustainable levels of
debt, young Europeans from Portugal to Estonia and from Finland to Greece came
to take peace, freedom, prosperity, and social security for granted. When the
bubble burst, it leftmany feeling bitterly disappointed and led to excruciating
divergences between the experiences of diaerent nations. Now, with the current
crisis still unresolved, Europe lacks most of the motivating forces that once
propelled it toward unity. Even if a shared fear of the consequences of the
eurozone's collapse saves it from the worst, Europe needs something more than
fear to make it again the magnetic project it was for a half century. But what
can that something be?
war
on the mind
Historians
have identified many factors that contributed to the process of European
integration, including the vital economic interests of European nations. Yet
the single most important driving force across the continent was the memory of
war. Among those parading down the streets of Warsaw in May 2003 was the
bearded professor Bronislaw Geremek, who, as a ten-year-old Polish Jewish boy,
had seen the Warsaw ghetto burning before his eyes. It was no accident that he
became one of Poland's most ardent advocates of European integration, as a
leader of the Solidarity movement, the Polish foreign minister, and then a
member of the European Parliament.
To
be sure, the Warsaw ghetto survivor, the Nazi soldier, the British o/cer, the
French collaborator, the Swedish businessman, and the Slovak farmer had very
diaerent wars. Yet from all their throats rose the same passionate cry:
"Never again!" For all the diaerences in national and subnational
experiences across a hugely diverse continent, the historian Tony Judt could
still title a history of Europe that covers the 60 years up to 2005 with a
single word: Postwar. In this respect, if in no other, the European Union's
favorite catch phrase, "Unity in diversity," was strictly accurate.
Those
memories played an important role for those British Conservatives, most of them
World War II veterans, who took the United Kingdom into the European Economic
Community, the precursor to the European Union, in 1973. But above all,
personal experience motivated those continental Europeans, up to and including
French President François Mitterrand and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who
created the eu of today. In a conversation I had with him after German
reunification, Kohl delivered a line I will never forget. "Do you
realize," he asked, "that you are sitting opposite the direct
successor to Adolf Hitler?" As the first chancellor of a united Germany
since Hitler, he explained, he was profoundly conscious of his historical duty
to do things diaerently.
European
integration has rightly been described as a project of the elites, but Europe's
peoples shared these memories. When the project faltered, as it did many times,
the elites' reaction was to seek some way forward, however complicated. Until
the 1990s, when the custom of holding national referendums on European treaties
began to spread, Europeans were seldom asked directly if they agreed with the
solutions found, although they could periodically vote in or out of o/ce the
politicians responsible for finding them. Nonetheless, it is fair to say that
for about 40 years, the project of European unification could rely on at least
a passive consensus among most of Europe's national publics.
These
40 years were those of the Cold War, the other conflict that shaped the eu.
From the 1940s through the 1970s, a central argument for Western European
integration was to counter the Soviet threat, visible for all to see in the
presence of the Red Army in East Germany and divided Berlin. Beside the
memories of Europe's own self-inflicted barbarism, there were, so to speak, the
barbarians at the gate. Soviet leaders from Joseph Stalin to Leonid Brezhnev
should be awarded posthumous medals for their service to European integration.
Cold
War competition also goes a long way to explaining why the United States lent
such strong support to European unification, from the Marshall Plan of the
1940s to the diplomacy surrounding the reunification of Germany and the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1989-91.
For
the half of Europe stuck behind the Iron Curtain-what the Czech writer Milan
Kundera called "the kidnapped West"-the will to "return to
Europe" went hand in hand with the struggle for national and individual
freedom. The growing prosperity of Western Europe had a magnetic eaect on those
who saw it, whether at first hand or on Western television.
It
is the most elementary historical fallacy to suggest that an event was caused
by one that occurred after it, yet something that was only to happen in 1992
was a contributing cause of the velvet revolutions of 1989. The target year
1992, the widely trumpeted deadline that the European Economic Community had
given itself for completing its single market, conveyed an urgent sense of
being leftever-further behind, not just to the peoples of Eastern Europe but
also to reform-minded Soviet-bloc leaders, including Mikhail Gorbachev.
This
brings us to the last great motor of European integration until the 1990s: West
Germany. The West Germans, both the elites and a large part of the populace,
demonstrated an exceptional commitment to European integration. They did this
for two very good reasons: because they wanted to, and because they had to.
They wanted to show that Germany had learned from its terrible pre-1945 history
and wished to rehabilitate itself fully in a European community of values, even
to the point of surrendering much of its own sovereignty and national identity.
Having been the worst Europeans, the Germans would now be the best. (As a joke
at the time went, if someone introduced himself just as "a European,"
you knew immediately that he was German.) But they also had a hard national
interest in demonstrating that European commitment, for only by regaining the
trust of their neighbors and international partners (including the United
States and the Soviet Union) could they achieve their long-term goal of German
reunification. As Hans-Dietrich Genscher, the former West German foreign
minister, once observed, "The more European our foreign policy is, the
more national it is." West German Europeanism was not simply
instrumental-it reflected a real moral and emotional engagement-but nor was it
purely idealistic.
After
the two German states were reunited in 1990, many observers wondered whether
what was essentially an expanded West Germany would continue this extraordinary
commitment to European integration. Well before the crisis of the eurozone
broke, the answer was already apparent. Reunited Germany had become what some
participants in the post-Wall debate called a "normal" nation-state-a
"second France," in the commentator Dominique Moïsi's striking
phrase. Like France, the new Germany would pursue its national interests
through Europe whenever possible, but on its own when it deemed it necessar
y-as it did, for example, when securing its energy needs bilaterally with
Russia, notably in the Nord Stream gas pipeline deal of 2005. Its leaders, in
Berlin now, not Bonn, would still try to be good Europeans, but they would no
longer open the checkbook so readily if Europe called.
the
birth of a malformed union
The
immediate origins of the malformed currency union that is at the epicenter of
today's European crisis also lie in the tempestuous moment of German
reunification and its aftermath. Following the fall of the Berlin Wall on
November 9, 1989, Mitterrand, alarmed by the prospect of German reunification,
pushed hard to pin Kohl down to a timetable for what was then called economic
and monetary union. That proposal had already been elaborated to help the
European Economic Community complete its single market and address the di/culty
of managing exchange rates within it. Mitterrand's general purpose was to bind
a united Germany, if united those two Germanies really must be, into a more
united Europe; his specific purpose was to enable France to regain more control
over its own currency, and even win some leverage over Germany's.
In
a remarkable conversation with Genscher, the West German foreign minister, on
November 30, 1989, Mitterrand went so far as to say that if Germany did not
commit itself to the European monetary union, "We will return to the world
of 1913." Meanwhile, Mitterrand was stirring up British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher to sound the alarm as if it were 1938. According to a British
record of their private meeting at the crucial Strasbourg summit of European
leaders in December 1989, Mitterrand said that "he was fearful that he and
the Prime Minister would find themselves in the situation of their predecessors
in the 1930s who had failed to react in the face of constant pressing forward
by the Germans."
David
Marsh, the best chronicler of the euro's history, concludes that the
"essential deal" to proceed with monetary union was done at
Strasbourg. Tough negotiations followed, and exactly two years later a treaty was
agreed on in the small Dutch city of Maastricht, setting the basic terms of
what would become today's eurozone. It is too simplistic to characterize this
as a straight tradeoa: "the whole of Deutschland for Kohl, half the
deutsche mark for Mitterrand," as one wit quipped at the time. But
Germany's need for its closest European allies-above all, France-to support its
national reunification had a decisive influence on both the timetable and the
design of Europe's monetary union.
To
be sure, Kohl was a deeply committed European. He never tired of repeating that
German and European unification were "two sides of the same coin." So
now, he told U.S. Secretary of State James Baker three days after the
Strasbourg summit, he had even agreed to a European monetary union. What
stronger proof could he oaer of Germany's European credentials? Kohl "took
this decision against German interests," the German minutes of that
meeting record him telling Baker. "For example, the president of the
Bundesbank was against the present development. But the step was politically
important, since Germany needed friends." As one does, when one is trying
to unite Germany without blood and iron.
The
design of the resulting monetary union can also be understood, like so much
else in the history of European integration, as a Franco-German compromise. At
the insistence of Germany, and especially of the Bundesbank, the European
Central Bank would be a Bundesbank writ large, fiercely independent of
governments (unlike in the French tradition) and devoted with Protestant fervor
to the one true god of price stability (lest the Weimar nightmare of
hyperinflation return). To his credit, Kohl wanted the monetary union to be
complemented by a fiscal and political union, so there could be control of public
spending and coordination of economic policy among the states, and more direct
political legitimation of the whole enterprise. "Political union is the
essential counter part to economic and monetary union," he told the
Bundestag in November 1991. "Recent history, not only in Germany, teaches
us that it is absurd to expect in the long run that you can maintain economic
and monetary union without political union."
But
France was having none of that. The point was for it to gain some control over
Germany's currency, not for Germany to gain control over France's budget. So
the discussion of a fiscal union withered away into a set of "convergence
criteria," which required would-be members of the monetary union to keep
public debt under 60 percent of gdp and deficits under three percent.
Thus,
in the Sturm und Drang of the largest geopolitical change in Europe since 1945,
a sickly child was conceived. Most Germans opposed giving up their treasured
deutsche mark. But they would not be asked; the West German constitution did
not envisage referendums. Kohl had no intention of changing that. Alexandre
Lamfalussy, the head of the European Monetary Institute, the precursor to the
European Central Bank, later recalled telling him, "I don't know how you
will get the German people to give up the D-Mark." Kohl's reply: "It
will happen. The Germans accept strong leadership."
In
France, meanwhile, the Maastricht Treaty scraped through in a September 1992
referendum with a yes vote of just over 50 percent. The passive consensus for
further steps of European integration, advancing ever closer to the heart of
national sovereignty, was beginning to break down even in heartlands of the
postwar project.
a
crisis foretold
With
a hat tip to Gabriel García Márquez, a history of Europe's monetary union could
be called Chronicle of a Crisis Foretold. By the time the eurozone's 11
founding member states were preparing to introduce a common currency on January
1, 1999, most of the problems that would beset the euro a decade later had been
predicted.
Critics
at the time questioned how a common currency could work without a common
treasury, how a one-size-fitsall interest rate could be right for such a
diverse group of economies, and how the eurozone could cope with economic
shocks that varied from region to region-what economists call "asymmetric
shocks." For Europe had neither the labor mobility nor the level of fiscal
transfers between states that characterized the United States.
"Since
1989, we have seen how reluctant West German taxpayers have been to pay even
for their own compatriots in the east," noted one article in these pages
in 1998. "Do we really expect that they would be willing to pay for the
French unemployed as well?" Reporting a widespread view that the monetary
union would face a crisis sooner rather than later, and that this would
catalyze the necessary political unification, the author cautioned, "It is
a truly dialectical leap of faith to suggest that a crisis that exacerbates
diaerences between European countries is the best way to unite them."
Since
I was that author, I should add that I did not anticipate three important
things. First, I did not expect that the monetary union would flourish for so
long. For nearly a decade, the euro appeared to be strong, edging up toward the
dollar as a global trading and reserve currency. For businesses, it removed the
risk of exchange-rate fluctuations inside the eurozone. For the rest of us, it
was a delight to be able to travel from one end of the continent to the other
without having to change currencies. To visit Dublin, Madrid, or Athens was to
see cities booming as never before. Small wonder that in 2003 those young Poles
sang Schiller's "Ode to Joy" at the prospect of joining the happy
Irish, Spaniards, and Greeks. And I, like others sympathetic to the project,
was lulled into a false sense of security.
Because
the crash came later than originally expected, it was worse when it came. Over
time, enormous imbalances had built up between the core, mainly northern
European countries (above all, Germany), and the peripheral, mainly southern
European countries (especially Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain,
which have sometimes been unkindly labeled "the pigs").
To
be sure, the initial shocks that started the earthquake came from outside
Europe, in the U.S. subprime mortgage market. In this sense, the travails of
the eurozone are part of a broader crisis of Western financial capitalism.
Yet
the second thing we did not fully anticipate in the 1990s was the extent to
which the eurozone would generate its own asymmetric shocks. Whereas Germany,
still staggering under the financial burden of German reunification,
impressively massaged down its labor costs, trimmed its welfare spending, and
became competitive again, many of the peripheral countries allowed their unit
labor costs to soar.
While
Germany and some other northern European countries maintained fiscal discipline
and moderate levels of debt, many of the peripheral countries went on the
mother of all binges. In some places, such as Greece, it was public spending
that skyrocketed; in others, such as Ireland and Spain, it was private
spending. The open sesame to both kinds of excess was the same: governments,
companies, and individuals could borrow at unprecedentedly low interest rates
thanks to the credibility that eurozone membership lent their countries. In
eaect, Greece, which had snuck into the eurozone in 2001 with the aid of
falsified statistics, could borrow almost as if it were Germany.
When,
therefore, Germany was asked to help bail out those countries, German voters
were understandably indignant. Why should we work even harder and retire even
later, they asked, so these feckless Greeks, Portuguese, and Italians can
retire earlier than we do and go sun themselves on the beach? "Sell your
islands, you bankrupt Greeks," snorted Bild, Germany's largest tabloid, in
October 2010.
The
Germans had a good point: they had demonstrated remarkable prudence; the
peripheral countries had not. But there was another side to the story. The
moment the Stability and Growth Pact (the formalized successor to the
convergence criteria) was revealed to be toothless was when Germany itself,
along with France, violated the deficit limit of three percent of gdp in
2003-4. The penalties envisaged in the pact were not even enforced.
Moreover,
Germany had fared so well partly because the peripheral countries had fared so
badly. The peripheral eurozone countries could no longer compete with Germany
on price by devaluing their own national currencies, and part of their binge
spending went to buying more bmws and Bosch washing machines. The euro also
enabled German exporters to price their goods more competitively in markets
such as China. (One study, by Nathan Sheets and Robert Sockin of Citigroup,
estimated that Germany's lower real exchange rate, courtesy of the euro, has
lifted its real trade surplus by about three percent of gdp annually.) As the
economist Martin Feldstein noted in these pages, in 2011 Germany's $200 billion
trade surplus roughly equaled the rest of the eurozone's combined trade
deficit. Germany was to Europe what China is to the world: the exporter that
requires others to consume.
In
addition, Germany and other northern European countries with current account
surpluses recycled those surpluses partly by lending to Greeks, Irish,
Portuguese, and Spaniards. So when Germany bailed out the peripheral eurozone
countries, it was also bailing out its own banks.
The
third element few foresaw in the 1990s was the spiraling scale, speed, and
folly of global financial markets. Most egregious, bond markets contributed to
the burgeoning imbalances by mispricing sovereign risk in general and the
diaerential risk between various eurozone government bonds in particular.
Despite the presence of a "no bailout" clause in the Maastricht
Treaty, bond traders acted as if the risk associated with lending to the Greek
or Portuguese governments was only fractionally higher than that of lending to
Germany or the Netherlands.
When
belief in the solidity of the eurozone began to collapse, soon after its tenth
birthday, the markets plunged to the other extreme. Again and again, they
punished eurozone leaders' belated half measures with soaring bond yield
spreads, so that country after country found its borrowing costs whizzing
upward. At interest rates of five to eight percent, it becomes very di/cult for
a government to sustain its debt burden, even with the most exemplary
German-style fiscal discipline and structural reform. There was only so much
that even the wisest and most economically responsible leaders, such as Italian
Prime Minister Mario Monti, could ask of their own people.
europe's
dysfunctional triangle
Structurally,
Europe now finds itself caught in a dysfunctional triangle, between national
politics, European policies, and global markets. Ever since the European Coal
and Steel Community was founded, in 1951, integration has proceeded through the
development of common European policies: from those on agriculture, fisheries,
and trade, all the way to monetary policy. The democratic politics of the eu
have, however, remained stubbornly national.
While
the volcanic magma was heating up under the outwardly calm crust of the
eurozone, European leaders spent much of this century's first decade engaged in
an ambitious attempt to write what some called a constitution for Europe. To
cope with both the deepening of the eu, through monetary union, and its
widening, through the historic enlargement to eastern Europe, they proposed a
new set of institutional arrangements for the eu's 27 states (since 2007) and
500 million people. But in referendums, voters in France and the Netherlands
rejected even a watered-down version of these lofty plans. "The nations
don't want it," commented Geremek, that passionate but also realistic
European, shortly before he died in 2008.
So
the mountain labored again, and brought forth a mouse. The Treaty of Lisbon,
which came into force in 2009, did give more powers to the directly elected
European Parliament. But decisionmaking in today's eu still consists mainly of
national politicians cutting deals behind closed doors in Brussels. And the
politics and media they worry about are national, not European. There are
Europe-wide political groupings, based on those in the European Parliament, but
there are no truly European politics. The average turnout for elections to the
European Parliament has declined with every vote since direct elections began
in 1979. Although there are some good Europe-wide media outlets, watched and
read by a happy few, there is no broader European public sphere.
The
French historian Ernest Renan said that a nation is "an everyday
plebiscite." Well, today's eu has an election almost every day, but these
are national elections, conducted in diaerent languages and in national media.
Increasingly, the election campaigns feature parties that blame the country's
current travails on other European nations, or on the eu itself, or on both.
Visiting Maastricht earlier this year-a city now a little worried about its
place in the history books-I was told how the anti-immigrant and anti- Islamic
Dutch populist Geert Wilders has redirected his political fire against
"Europe." That's where he thinks the votes are now.
At
the same time, panicky global markets instantly impinge on both European
policies and national politics. As country after country finds its credit rating
cut and its borrowing costs going through the roof, governments tremble and
call yet another emergency summit in Brussels. As the clock ticks into the
early hours, exhausted national leaders are torn between their terror of what
the markets will do to them when trading opens the next morning and their
terror of what their national media, coalition partners, parliaments, and
voters will do to them when they get back home.
As
soon as the meeting ends, each leader will dash out from the conference room to
brief his or her own national media, so that every time, there is not just one
version of a European summit but 27 diaerent ones-plus a 28th, the implausibly
irenic conclave described by the eu's own clutch of institutional heads. This
is Europe's political Rashomon, with 28 conflicting versions of the same event
delivered in 23 languages. It is an odd way to run a continent.
the
missing i ngredients
Europe's
monetary union was a bridge too far-meaning not a bridge that should never have
been crossed but a bridge that was crossed too soon, before Europe was
strategically prepared to defend it. To be sure, carrying on for another decade
or two with a sy stem of fixing the margins within which exchange rates could
fluctuate-the so-called Exchange Rate Mechanism-would have been demanding. But
it is hard to disagree with this retrospective judgment by the economic
commentator Martin Wolf: "Consider how much better oa Europe would have
been if the exchange rate mechanism had continued, instead, with wide bands."
We
also have to consider other roads not taken. What if, instead of introducing
the euro, Europe had deepened its stillfar- from-complete single market? What
if the whole eu had concentrated on improving its competitiveness, as Germany
did so impressively, and not merely paid lip service to that goal in a catalog
of good intentions called "the Lisbon agenda"? What if it had used
this time to develop a more eaective foreign policy? But regret is futile. An
old and now politically incorrect English joke has an American couple arriving
at a crossroads, deep in the Irish countryside, and asking a tweed-clad farmer
the way to Tipperary. "If I were you," says the Irishman, "I
wouldn't start from here." Yet here is where we are.
At
the end of June this year, the eu held yet another "save the euro"
summit- by a rough count, the 19th of the crisis. Germany said it would allow
special European funds to be used to help imperiled Spanish banks, and the
eurozone states resolved to create a single banking supervisory structure run
by the European Central Bank. Although nobody noticed, the summit communiqué
was a reminder of useful things the eu continues to do. For example, European
leaders reached agreement on a unitary European patent system, which is
expected to lower patenting costs for European companies by as much as 80
percent. They also decided to open accession negotiations with Montenegro, a
newly independent state that just 13 years ago was still embroiled in the wars
of former Yugoslavia.
As
of this writing, no one knows how the euro saga will end. The possibilities
include a total, disorderly collapse of the eurozone, a continued muddling
through, and, most optimistically, systemic consolidation into a genuine fiscal
and political union. Yet even if the eurozone crabmarches toward a political
union, it will still have to generate the solidarity among its citizens
necessary to underpin it, a degree of European compatriotism that does not yet
exist. Another open question is how a more united eurozone core, which would
itself contain creditor and debtor nations with very diaerent perspectives,
would relate institutionally and politically to eu member states not in the
zone, such as the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Poland.
According
to one projection by analysts at ing, a total collapse of the eurozone could
cause gdp to fall by more than ten percent over two years in all the leading
European economies, including Germany. Coming on top of the hardships already
endured, that could lead to dangerous political radicalization. (Unlike in the
1930s, such radicalization, to the far right and the far lef t, has been
remarkably limited so far, even in Greece-a tribute to the resilience of
contemporary European democracies.) But even if the eurozone falls apart, there
will still be a place called Europe and probably a set of institutions called
the European Union. And there will be a new yet also familiar historic
challenge for Europeans: to pick themselves up from the ruins and rebuild.
Today's
crisis is the greatest test yet of what has been called "the Monnet
method" of unification, after Jean Monnet, a founding father of European
integration. Monnet proposed moving forward, step by step, with technocratic
measures of economic integration, hoping that these would catalyze political
unification-not least through moments of crisis. "Crises are the great
unifier!" he once explained. Yet even in the first 40 years of European
integration, crises sometimes pulled Europe together and sometimes did not. If
they tended more often to promote unity than division, that was in large part
thanks to wartime memories and Cold War imperatives. So where are the drivers
of integration now? Go back down the list.
A
single market of 500 million consumers remains a powerful economic attraction
for most European countries. However, it no longer seems as evident as it once
did that Europe brings steadily growing prosperity and welfare to all its
citizens. Exporting nations, especially Germany, and global service providers,
such as the United Kingdom, are increasingly looking to emerging markets, where
the growth is.
Unlike
during the Cold War, there is no obvious external threat in Europe's front
yard. Try as he might, Vladimir Putin just does not match up to Stalin, or even
Brezhnev. Could China step into that role? Without stigmatizing China as an
enemy, the most compelling new rationale for European unification is indeed the
rise of non-Western great powers: China, mainly, but also India, Brazil, and
South Africa.
One
cannot simply extrapolate from current economic and demographic trends, but in
any likely world of 2030, even Germany will be a small to mediumsized power.
Then, the only eaective way to defend the freedoms and advance the shared
interests of all Europeans will be to act together and speak with one voice.
Intellectually, this argument is persuasive. But emotionally, to sway a wider
public, it does not compare with the visible presence of the Red Army at the
heart of Europe.
If
Russia no longer fits the bill for an external threat, the United States no
longer plays the part of active external supporter. Already in 2001, President
George W. Bush could ask, in a private meeting, "Do we want the European
Union to succeed?" Part of his administration, at least in his first term,
was inclined to answer no. President Barack Obama would definitely answer yes,
but until the eurozone crisis threatened the U.S. economy, and hence his
reelection prospects, it was hardly a priority. His administration has taken
Europe as it has found it and dealt pragmatically with Brussels or with
individual countries- whatever worked. Its geopolitical focus has been on China
and Asia more generally, not Russia and Europe.
Conceivably,
the United States' attitude could change if China really came to be seen as the
new Soviet Union, a global geopolitical threat to the West. Then one option
would be for Washington to seek a closer strategic partnership with a more
united Europe, including, for example, a transatlantic free-trade area. Old
Europe and its cousins across the water would work toward what Édouard
Balladur, the former French prime minister, has imagined as a "Western
Union." But there is scant evidence of such thinking at the moment.
Rather, both the United States and Europe are making their own tense accommodations
with China.
Another
past driver of integration, eastern European yearnings, still has some traction
today. Eastern Europeans have more recent memories than other Europeans do of
dictatorship, hardship, and war. Many appreciate the new freedoms they enjoy in
the eu; for some, belonging to the same club as western Europeans is the
realization of a centuries-old dream. One Polish economist explains why Poland
still aspires to join the eurozone thus: "We want to be on board the ship,
even if it is sinking!" Of course, they would rather the ship stays
afloat. Last fall, in a speech in Berlin, Radoslaw Sikorski, the Polish foreign
minister, memorably observed, "I will probably be the first Polish foreign
minister in history to say so, but here it is: I fear German power less than I
am beginning to fear German inactivity."
european
germany, german europe
Germany
is the key to Europe's future, as it has been, one way or another, for at least
a century. The irony of unintended consequences is especially acute here. If Kohl
was the first chancellor of a united Germany since Hitler, François Hollande is
the first Socialist president of France since Mitterrand, and it is
Mitterrand's legacy he has to wrestle with. Monetary union, the method thr ough
which Mitterrand intended to keep united Germany in its proper place-co-driver
with France, but still deferential to it- has ended up putting Germany at the
wheel, with France as an irate husband flapping around in the passenger seat
("Turn left, Angela, turn left!").
At
the time of German reunification, German politicians never tired of
characterizing their goal in the finely turned words of the writer Thomas Mann:
"Not a German Europe but a European Germany." What we see today,
however, is a European Germany in a German Europe. This Germany is an exemplary
European country: civilized, democratic, humane, law-abiding, and (although
Mann might not have rated this one) very good at soccer. But the "Berlin
Republic" is also at the center of a German Europe. At least when it comes
to political economy, Germany calls the shots. (The same is not true in foreign
and defense policy, where France and the United Kingdom are more important.)
This is not a role Germany sought; leadership has been thrust upon it.
Moreover,
if the need to win support for German reunification drove Kohl to accept
European monetary union on a tight timetable, and without the political union
he thought essential to sustain it, German reunification has changed the German
attitude to the European project. The very same set of closely linked
historical developments that has now produced, 20 years on, the need for a
special German contribution to Europe has in the meantime reduced both the
country's idealistic desire and its instrumental need to oaer that contribution.
Were
he still chancellor, Kohl would surely insist that the euro must be saved by
moving decisively toward a political union. Merkel and her compatriots have
reacted very diaerently, reluctantly doing the minimum needed to prevent
collapse. The modest and plain-speaking Merkel is in many ways the
personification of the civic, modern European virtues of this new Germany. She
is also a brilliant and ruthless domestic political tactician. Whatever her
personal convictions, she knows she faces what may be called the four Bs: the
Bundestag (the lower house of the national parliament, from which Germany's
most pro-European politicians have largely migrated to the European Parliament,
another unintended consequence of that well-intended institution), the Bundesverfassungsgericht
(the country's constitutional court, deliberately established after 1945 to be
a U.S.-style check on a leader's power), the Bundesbank (still very influential
in the German debate), and, last but by no means least, the populist tabloid
Bild.
Many
Germans resent the idea of bailing out Greeks and Spaniards and recall that
they were given no say on Kohl's decision to give up the deutsche mark. In a
German opinion poll conducted in May 2012, no less than 49 percent of
respondents said it had been a mistake to introduce the euro. So far, the
benefits they have derived from the euro have not been adequately explained.
Yet this European Germany is a free country, open to argument, and some are now
making the attempt.
memory,
fear, and hope
The
greatest single driving force of the European project since 1945, personal
memories of war, has disappeared. Where individual memory fades, collective
memory should step in. Remember Edelman's appeal: "We, who did not perish,
leave it up to you to keep the memory of them alive-forever." Yet most
young Europeans' consciousness of their continent's tortured history is
shallow. Their formative experiences have been in a Europe of peace, freedom,
and prosperity. Even younger eastern Europeans from states such as Estonia,
which did not exist on most maps just 22 years ago, have come to take these
hard-won achievements for granted. In this sense, the deepest problem of the
European project is the problem of success.
Over
the last decade, European peoples with historical complexes about being
consigned to the periphery of Europe felt themselves to be at last enter ing
the core. Eastern Europeans joined the eu. Southern Europeans thought they were
flourishing in the eurozone. In Athens, Lisbon, and Madrid, there was a sense
of a leveling up of European societies, of a new, not merely formal equality
among nations.
Now
that illusion has been shattered. In Greece, the homeless line up at soup
kitchens, pensioners commit suicide, the sick cannot get prescription
medicines, shops are shuttered, and scavengers pick through dustbins-conditions
almost reminiscent of the 1940s. In Spain, every second person under the age of
25 is unemployed; across the eurozone, the average is nearly one in four. But
the pain is unevenly spread. In Germany, youth unemployment is comfortably
under ten percent. There is a new dividing line across Europe, not between east
and west but between north and south. Now, and probably for years to come, it
will be a very diaerent experience to be a young German or a young Spaniard, a
young Pole or a young Greek.
Think
back to those two May 10 moments in Warsaw. Someone whose formative teenage
experience was of the terrors of 1943 would find today's crisis shocking, but
still not half as bad as what he remembered-and he would insist that Europe
must never fall back to that. The teenager of 2003 has a diaerent mental lens:
this is terrible, she thinks, and not what she was led to expect.
Europeans
such as Geremek and Kohl witnessed Europe tear itself apart, and then dedicated
themselves to building a better one. The generation of Spain's indignados,
young protesters who have rallied across the country since May 2011, grew up in
that better Europe, and have now been thrown backward. The trajectory of those
who were, say, 15 years old in 1945 went from war to peace, poverty to
prosperity, fear to hope. The trajectory of those who were 15 in 2003,
especially in the parts of the continent now suaering the most, has arched in
the opposite direction: from prosperity to unemployment, convergence of
national experiences to divergence, hope to fear.
Could
this very discontent provide the psychological basis for a popular campaign to
save Europe? The signs are not promising. Popular movements have arisen during
the crisis, but they have pointed in other directions. One of the largest was
against the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which many young Europeans saw
as a threat to their online freedom. The indignados of all countries, Europe's
counterparts to the Occupy Wall Street movement, rail against bankers,
politicians, and baby boomers, whom they see as having stolen their future. An
interview-based survey of activists in these diverse campaigns, coordinated by
Mary Kaldor and Sabine Selchow of the London School of Economics, found that
the eu is either invisible among them or viewed somewhat negatively.
Fear
should not be underestimated as a motivating force in politics. When, in a
repeat election this June, the Greeks narrowly voted for parties that were
serious about keeping the countr y in the eurozone, the S wiss cartoonist
Patrick Chappatte drew a weary-looking man standing next to a ballot box in the
shadow of the Acropolis and exclaiming, "Good news! Fear triumphed over
despair." Adapting a famous phrase of U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt,
one might almost say that today Europe has nothing to put its hope in but fear
itself.
The
fear of collapse, the Monnet-like logic of necessity, the power of inertia:
these may just keep the show on the road, but they will not create a dynamic,
outward-looking European Union that enjoys the active support of its citizens.
Without some new driving forces, without a positive mobilization among its
elites and peoples, the eu, while probably surviving as an origami palace of
treaties and institutions, will gradually decline in e/cacy and real
significance, like the Holy Roman Empire of yore. Future historians may then
identify some time around 2005 as the apogee of the most far-reaching,
constructive, and peaceful attempt to unite the continent that history has ever
seen.
Sidebar
After
World War II, Europe began a process of peaceful political unification
unprecedented there and unmatched anywhere else. But the project began to go
wrong in the early 1990s, when western European leaders started moving too
quickly toward a flawed monetary union. Now, as Europe faces a still-unresolved
debt crisis, its drive toward unification has stalled-and unless fear or
foresight gets it going again, the union could slide toward irrelevance.
AuthorAffiliation
Timothy
Garton Ash is Professor of European Studies at Oxford University and a Senior
Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. © Timothy Garton Ash.
Copyright
Council on Foreign Relations NY Sep/Oct 2012
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