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Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

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Page 1: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so”

Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group

14th July, 2010

Page 2: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Can monetary union work without political union?

• In the 1990s many Eurosceptics argued that European monetary union couldn’t work without political union. Several arguments presented, but let me focus on four.

• There was never any question that – if it occurred with full political union, including centralization of tax & gov spending, monetary union was feasible. In the 1990s there had just been the example of German monetary & political unification, although that had had its problems.

Page 3: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Arguments against viability of monetary union without political union 1.

Government borrowing from the central bank creates new money and, if conducted on an excessive scale,

causes inflation. In a monetary union with many governments, responsibility for the inflation does not

lie clearly with any one particular government. There is a so-called “free rider problem”. The problem can be

anticipated by a treaty agreement on the size of budget deficits & a prohibition on government borrowing from the central bank, as in the Maastricht Treaty. But – for a

number of reasons – the Treaty is not really credible.

Page 4: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

What I said in a 1998 paper for Paul Temperton (ed.) The Euro

Page 5: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Arguments against viability of monetary union without political union 2.

In a normal monetary jurisdiction – which is also a nation state, with a single government and legal system, and a single set of arrangements for banking regulation and deposit insurance – the central bank answers to

1. the legislature of that nation, or 2. The executive of that nation, or

3. Some combination of the executive and legislature. But in the Eurozone the ECB – very explicitly – is not

accountable to any national government.

Page 6: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

What I said in a 1998 paper for Paul Temperton (ed.) The Euro

Page 7: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Arguments against viability of monetary union without political union 3.

The distribution of the seigniorage from currency issue is a highly political and contentious process, if several

governments have to share that seigniorage.

Similarly, the distribution of central bank profits and losses (if there are any) has to be fair between the

member states, since persistent “losers” would resent & oppose persistent transfers to “winners”.

Page 8: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

What I said in a 1998 paper for Paul Temperton (ed.) The Euro

Page 9: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Arguments against viability of monetary union without political union 4.

Since the 1929 – 33 Great Depression in the USA, an accepted objectives of public policy is to ensure that depositors receive back 100c in the $, etc. Deposits are protected by “a chain of security”, i.e., 1. The capital of the bank taking the deposits,

2. Capital of other banks (possibly, via takeover, etc.),3. Resources of deposit isurance agency,

4. Capital of the central bank, and5. The government’s general fiscal powers.

But what happens when the first four links in the chain have been broken and several governments are potentially liable to

pay for bank losses in only one or two countries?

Page 10: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

What I said in a 1998 paper for Paul Temperton (ed.) The Euro

Page 11: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

The problem of runaway debt interest on Greek public debt

Page 12: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Do Spain’s banks now depend entirely on the ECB to roll over their liabilities?

Page 13: Is the Eurozone breaking up?, otherwise entitled “I told you so” Talk by Professor Tim Congdon CBE to the Bruges Group 14 th July, 2010

Well, I told you so!