Euro Zone Crisis - Group 6
Euro Zone Crisis - Group 6
Euro Zone Crisis - Group 6
Contents
1. EURO ZONE CRISIS .................................................................. 3 1.1 Euro Zone A Background: ................................................ 3 1.2 Justification for the Euro: ................................................... 4 1.3 Impact of Global Crisis on the Euro zone: .......................... 5 2. IS-LM Curve analysis of the Crisis ........................................... 7 3. Economic Effects of the crisis ................................................. 8 3.1 Impact on Labour Market and Employment: ..................... 8 3.2 Impact on Budgetary Positions: ......................................... 9 4. Effects of Euro crisis on rest of the world ............................. 10 4. POLICY RESPONSES: Crisis control and mitigation ............... 12 4.1 Banking Support: .............................................................. 13 4.2 Macroeconomic Policies: ................................................. 13 4.3 Monetary Policies:............................................................ 14 4.4 Fiscal Policies: ................................................................... 15 4.5 Labour market policies: .................................................... 15 5. Policy Implications ................................................................ 16 6. The Challenges Ahead........................................................... 16 7. Conclusion: Implications for Today ....................................... 18 8. References ............................................................................ 19
EMU and pertained to the size of budget deficits, national debt, inflation, interest rates, and exchange rates. Denmark, Sweden, and the United Kingdom chose not to join from the inception. The "Euro system" comprised the European Central Bank (ECB), with 11 central banks of participating States assuming the responsibility for monetary policy. A large part of Europe came to have the same currency much like the Roman Empire, but with a crucial difference. The members were sovereign countries with their own tax systems. Greece failed to qualify, but was later admitted on 1 January 2001. The Euro took the form of notes and coins in 2002, and replaced the domestic currencies. From eleven euro zone members in 1999, the number increased to 17 in 2011.
was strong, it was hard to make out whether there had been an improvement in the fundamentals, or it was a bubble. Till 2005, the general growth momentum was in place, perhaps waiting for a trigger.
Source: Eurostat
Source: Eurostat
In order to meet liquidity problem arising from financial crisis, on 11 October 2008, the EU held an extraordinary summit in Paris to define a joint action for the euro zone and agreed to a bank rescue plan to boost their finances and guarantee interbank lending. Coordination against the
crisis was considered vital to prevent the actions of one country harming another and exacerbating bank solvency and credit shortage. The various emergency measures announced to counter financial crisis during 2008-2009, appeared to have been successful in averting financial crisis and supporting short-term domestic demand. However, they aggravated fiscal deficit and debt. In late 2009, Greece admitted that its fiscal deficit was understated (12.7 % of GDP, as against 3.7 % stated earlier). Ratings agencies downgraded Greek bank and government debt. In late 2009, its public debt was over 113 % of GDP, far more that the euro zone limit of 60 %. A crisis of confidence due to high fiscal deficit and debt was marked by widening bond yields and risk insurance on credit default swaps. By early 2010, a sovereign debt crisis in the euro zone was clearly on hand with Greece in the eye of the storm. The problems of Ireland, Portugal and Spain were also out in the open. In May 2010, to reassure investors confidence, the EU and IMF put together a 110bn bailout package for Greece conditional on implementation of austerity measures. This was followed on 9th May 2010 by a decision by 27 member states of the European Union to create the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), a special purpose vehicle, in order to help preserve financial stability in Europe by providing financial assistance to euro zone states in difficulty. The EFSF was empowered to sell bonds and use the money to make loans up to a maximum of 440 billion to euro zone nations. The bonds were to be backed by guarantees given by the European Commission representing the whole EU, the euro zone member states, and the IMF. The agreement allowed the ECB to start buying government debt which was expected to reduce bond yields. As per the conditions, Greece was to mobilise $ 70 billion by way of privatisation of its state enterprises. In November, 2010 EU and IMF agree to bail-out the Irish Republic with 85 billion Euros. The Irish Republic soon passes the toughest budget in the country's history. The measures taken in May 2010 had a palliative effect. Serious doubts remained on the ability of Greece to service its debt and bond yields started to spike again. In April 2011, Portugal admitted that it could not deal with its finances and asked the EU for help. In May 2011, European finance ministers approved euro 78 billion rescue loans to Portugal. Meanwhile, Moodys lowered Greeces credit rating to junk status in June 2011. An extraordinary summit was again convened on 21 July 2011 in Brussels. The leaders decided to take measures to stop the risk of contagion. They agreed on a further bailout for Greece for 109 billion Euros with the participation of the IMF and voluntary contribution from the private sector in order to cover the financing gap. The EFSF was indicated as the financing vehicle for the disbursement with regular assessment by the Commission in liaison with the ECB and the IMF. All these measures have so far failed to assuage the financial markets. The indications are that the financial markets continue to be deeply sceptical about their effectiveness. While Greece remains an extreme case, the problem of public and private debt (in varying proportions) in other peripheral economies like Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy are also a source of concern albeit with their own peculiarities.
IS LM
LM IS LM
IS
r2 r1 r3
y1
y2
y3
Income
The German economic prosperity makes domestic investment rate of return (real interest rates) much higher than that of Greece, which therefore attracts the Greek capital to flow to Germany.
The outflow of the Greek capital will severely affect the development of domestic economy in Greece, so the Greek economy will appear passively decline, and the Greek recession will inevitably lead to fiscal imbalance. In order to maintain high domestic fiscal spending, Greece issues huge amounts of government bond for debt financing towards its people and allied country at any cost. On the other hand, the inflow of Greek capital to Germany will make the real money supply increase in Germany. Of course, the Greek economy is much smaller when compared with Germany, so the capital inflow into the Germany accounts for relatively small percentage of total German economy, but that can still cause the real interest rate of Germany to fall slightly. The ultimate result is the output of Germany increases, which not only because of its own enterprising spirit, but also because of the absorbed capital transferred from the Greece to make its output further increase.
The global impact of a full on European credit crisis, which is one of the principal sources of global risk would be very bad indeed, slamming output by as much as 3 percent for the world's biggest economies. The impact on the world would be worse than the Lehman collapse. A Greek exit could trigger bank runs and capital flight in Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain and beyond, causing collapse in asset prices and large GNP falls. According to the IMF the euro zone accounts for about 14.5% of world economic output in 2010. The euro zones share of world trade is even greater than its share of output. It accounts for over a quarter of both world exports and imports in goods and services. From these figures alone it should be clear that a substantial downturn in the euro zone would have a significant effect on the global economy. With the eurozone accounting for almost a fifth of global output and over a quarter of world trade the knock-on effects are likely to be high. Eurozone imports could well fall sharply while many financial institutions would face difficulties. However, it is wrong to examine the eurozone question through the concept of contagion. If the rest of the world economy were healthy then it would be fairly resilient to a euro shock. The impact would be at least partly compensated for by activity elsewhere.
10
Unfortunately, the weaknesses of the advanced economies stretch beyond the eurozone. The US, Britain and Japan all have trouble generating durable growth and all three have built up high debt levels as a result. America is the most important single economy because of its size. Its yawning current account deficit is merely the most visible expression of how its competitiveness is falling relative to the rest of the world. The eurozone crisis has distracted attention from Americas domestic weaknesses. China is the biggest question mark in relation to the durability of the world economy. However, without its rapid growth the global economy would already be in more serious trouble. Even in 2009, a terrible year for the global economy, China managed to expand by 9.2%. The multi-billion dollar question is whether China can maintain a rapid growth rate or whether it is likely to slow. China faces several potential problems, including the emergence of a financial bubble and weaker export markets. Finding a definitive question to how well it is coping is an urgent task in assessing the health of the global economy. The Euro crisis threatens the economic stability of much more than the Euro area alone. A weakened Europe implies slower export growth in developing countries as well as increased financial volatility. The Euro crisis may also be only the first episode in which post-financialcrisis vulnerabilities converge to such devastating effect, implying that similar dangers for developing countries could emerge from sovereign debt crises in other regions or another global credit crunch. In addition, the crisis underscores the importance of the IMF as a lender of the last resort. Impact of the Crisis on Developing Countries Exports: The Euro crisis is likely to deduct at least 1 percent of growth, and potentially much more, from Europea market that consumes more than 27 percent of developing countries exports, In addition, the euro has already devalued more than 20 percent against the dollar since November 2009 and the two could reach parity before the crisis is over. A lower euro will sharply reduce the profitability of exporting to the European market and will also increase competition from Europe in sectors ranging from agriculture to garments and low-end automobiles. Tourism and Remittances: A lower euro will reduce the purchasing power of European tourists traveling to developing countries, and the value of remittances originating from Europe. At the same time, a lower euro may provide opportunities for consumers and firms to import from Europe at a lower cost. Capital Flows: The Euro crisis will force the European Central Bank to maintain a very low policy interest rate for the foreseeable future. Similarly low rates in Japan and the United States,
11
combined with low growth in Europe, may lead even more capital to flow to the fastest-growing emerging markets. This will lead to inflation and currency appreciation pressures, as well as increase the risk of asset bubbles and, eventually, of sudden capital stops in emerging markets. Market Volatility: The Euro crisis will add greatly to the volatility of financial markets and will lead to sharp bouts of risk-aversion. The VIX index, which measures the cost of hedging against the volatility of stocks, has more than doubled in the last two months. This, in turn, has increased the level and volatility of spreads on emerging market bondswhich have risen by more than 130 basis points since Apriland will make currencies more volatile across the globe. Credit Availability: The Euro crisis may constrain trade and other bank credit available to developing countries as it raises questions about the viability of European banksespecially those based in vulnerable countries whose assets likely include large amounts of their own governments bonds. But all international banks will be viewed as having either direct or indirect (through other banks) exposure to the vulnerable countries. The confidence that banks have in lending to each other has already fallen; the TED spread (the difference between the three-month inter-bank lending rate and the yield on three-month Treasury bills) reached a nine-month high of 35 basis points in May, up from this years low of 10.6 basis points in March. Contagious Crises: A failure to contain the crisis in Greece and its spread to Spain or other vulnerable countries will raise the alarm on sovereign debt in other industrial countriesfor example, Japan, whose debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to be nearly twice that of Greece in 2015and inevitably in any exposed emerging market. If more countries are hit, the pressures on trade, global credit, and capital flows to emerging markets will only increase.
12
13
thereby ensuring the allocation tion of short short-term bank funding on dysfunctional money markets. Reflecting the discretionary fiscal stimulus adopted, but also, and more importantly, tax shortfalls and inertia in expenditure programs, program government deficits have increased more than twice as much as one would predict from the automatic stabilisers. The overall support of government finances to the economy in 2009 and 2010, as measured by the deterioration in the government balance, amounts to 5 percentage points in the EU (around 4.5 percentage points in the euro area).
14
15
confidence and supporting demand and potential growth and hence indirectly would also support employment.
5. Policy Implications
Though there are no one-size-fits-all prescriptions for developing countries given their very different starting points, some general policy conclusions emerge: Developing countries will need to rely less on exports to the industrial countries and more on their own domestic demand and South-South trade. In some cases, greater caution may be called for in reversing stimulus policies. In other cases, even greater prudence may be called for in containing fiscal deficits and moderating the accumulation of public debt. Given the sharp rise in exchange rate uncertainty, matching the currencies of foreign liabilities with those of export proceeds and reserve holdings will become even more important. The Euro crisis also calls for great caution in the way surging capital inflow is managed. In some countries, regulations to moderate the inflow of portfolio capital and to instead encourage the more stable form of foreign direct investment may be warranted. Countries with large external surpluses and that receive large capital inflows may allow their currencies to appreciate, as this may help both stimulate domestic demand and moderate inflationary pressures.
The crisis has exposed the limitations of regional mechanisms in dealing with financial crisis, even among countries with deep pocketsand underscored instead the vital role that a global lender of last resort, in the form of the IMF, can play. Not only can the institution bring more resources and broader expertise than would plausibly be available to a regional institution, but its distance from potentially divisive regional politics can also be a big asset.
16
Crisis control to minimise the damage by preventing defaults of banks or by containing the output loss and easing the hardship because of from recession. The main objective is thus to stabilise the financial system and the real economy in the short run. It must be coordinated across the European nations in order to strike the right balance between national disturbances and its resulting effects affecting other Member States. Crisis resolution to bring crises to a lasting close, and at the lowest possible cost for the taxpayer while containing systemic risk, securing consumer protection and minimising competitive distortions in the internal market. This in part requires reversing temporary support measures as well action to restore economies to sustainable growth and fiscal paths. This includes policies to restore banks' balance sheets, the restructuring of the sector and an orderly policy 'exit'. An orderly exit strategy from expansionary macroeconomic policies is also an essential part of crisis resolution.
At the crisis control and mitigation stage, financial assistance by home countries to their financial institutions may have potentially disrupting spill over effects. Moreover, it must be ensured that financial rescues attain their objectives with minimal competition distortions and negative spillovers. The coordinated response put in place in the autumn of 2008 in the face of the risk of financial meltdown shows that EU policymakers became fully aware of the need of a joint strategy. The need for deeper policy coordination and improved cross-border crisis management is a key lesson learnt from the recent crisis. Fiscal stimulus also has cross-border spillover effects, through trade and financial markets. Spillover effects are even stronger in the euro area in the absence of exchange rate offsets. At the crisis resolution stage a coordinated approach is necessary to ensure an orderly exit of crisis control policies. It is important that state aid for financial institutions or other severely affected industries not persist for longer than is necessary in view of its implications for competition and the functioning of the EU Single Market. National strategies for a return to fiscal sustainability should be developed, for which a framework exists in the form of the Stability and Growth Pact which was designed to tackle spillover risks from the outset. The rationales for the coordination of structural policies have been spelled out in the Lisbon Strategy and apply also to the exits from temporary intervention in product and labour markets in the face of a crisis. Within the euro area, the adjustment of excessive current account imbalances should be facilitated by both structural reforms and macroeconomic policies. For instance, surplus countries should implement measures conducive to stronger demand while deficit countries should be urged to not resist the unwinding of their construction slumps. At the global level an appropriate strategy to reduce the global imbalances should be adopted e.g. China should be encouraged to reduce its national saving surplus and change its exchange rate policy. The rationale for policy coordination is thus strong: without it, Member States would not sufficiently take into account the favourable or unfavourable cross-country spillover effects of their policy choice. 'Internalising' these spillover effects in their policy choices would benefit both the European Union as a whole and its Member States.
17
18
8. References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. www.wikipedia.com ec.europa.eu/eurostat www.ecb.int.com www.cfr.org Macroeconomics by Gregory Mankiw
19