Quote of the day

“I find economics increasingly satisfactory, and I think I am rather good at it.”– John Maynard Keynes
Showing posts with label ECB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ECB. Show all posts

Friday, 6 December 2024

Have a look at the options for France:

 

For his next stunt, will Emmanuel Macron invoke emergency powers?

The impact of the French president’s dangerous pyrotechnics is making it easier for him to justify recourse to Article 16

French President Emmanuel Macron, right, and Prime Minister Michel Barnier
Macron could reasonably argue that failure to pass a budget prevents the country from fulfilling its EU treaty commitments Credit: Ludovic Marin/POOL AFP

France will have to face the discipline of the global debt markets on its own. The European Central Bank (ECB) cannot legitimately intervene to hold down French borrowing costs unless, and until, the country faces a full-blown financial crisis.

If the ECB were to abuse its legal powers to let France off the hook, it would set off a political and legal storm, and further erode German confidence in the management of the euro.

“France will have to face fiscal reality and dig itself out of the hole that it has dug itself into,” said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Germany’s Berenberg Bank.

“Nobody on the governing council wants to get mixed up in a French problem. The ECB will intervene only if there is contagion to other countries, or if the spreads reach ludicrous levels,” he said.

That point has not been reached. There is no contagion. Risk spreads on 10-year French bonds over German Bunds have settled at around 80 basis points, and have not risen further since the collapse of the Barnier government.

The market reaction is so far surprisingly gentle, given the dangerous pyrotechnics of Emmanuel Macron over the last two and a half years – which have rendered France literally ungovernable with a fiscal deficit heading towards 7pc of GDP next year.

Some suspect that he would prefer a harsh verdict from the bond vigilantes. The worse the spread, the easier it is for him to justify recourse to Article 16 – the constitutional clause that allows him to assume emergency powers. The “Korean” solution, without the added touch of stormtroopers.

Agnès Verdier-Molinié, the director of French Institute of Public Administration and Politics (IFRAP), says the sorcerer’s apprentices who blocked the budget and defenestrated Barnier on Wednesday have set off a chain of events that they may regret. She thinks Macron will up the ante, invoking the fiscal crisis to pull the trigger on Article 16.

The powers can be invoked if there is a threat to the “execution of France’s international obligations”. Benjamin Morel, a political scientist at Paris-Panthéon, said Macron could reasonably argue that failure to pass a budget prevents the country from fulfilling its EU treaty commitments.

He told Ouest-France, the French newspaper, that France is the only country in Europe where the president can assume these pleins pouvoirs at his own discretion. “Everywhere else it is a separate body that authorises them,” he said.

Charles de Gaulle invoked Article 16 in 1961 following the Algiers putsch by retired army officers. It gave him the temporary powers of a Roman dictator, which he rolled over for almost six months, spicing it up with eyewash about a Communist “revolution from the inside”.

Activation of the clause requires both a “grave and immediate” threat, and a breakdown in the regular functioning of the state. The Constitutional Council can issue an opinion after 60 days. “It remains only an opinion. It does not oblige the president to change tack,” said Mr Morel.

Would Macron really pull such a stunt? Perhaps, if his next premier faces instant dismissal. He might calculate that his enemies could never command the two-thirds majority in both the assembly and the senate necessary to impeach him. But if he did take this fateful step, the nation would erupt. He raised the spectre of “civil war” in June. Article 16 almost invites it.

France risks slow ruin – as does Britain – but it does not face an imminent financial crisis. French spreads approached Greek levels last week but that is a nonsense story, promoted by Barnier himself in a catastrophist effort to sell his rejected budget. Greece is shielded from market forces. Most of its bonds are held by bail-out bodies.

French debt has an average maturity of 8.6 years. It takes a long time for higher borrowing costs to feed through. The growth rate of nominal GDP is still above the average interest rate. Debt dynamics have not yet succumbed to a snowball effect, though that safety margin could vanish if the eurozone core relapses into recession, which may already be happening.

Nevertheless, French yields have been higher than Spanish or Portuguese yields for months. This is an extraordinary development and a warning to the French political class that their country no longer enjoys an exorbitant privilege as co-anchor of monetary union.

The ECB cannot salve French amour propre. It was able to prop up high-debt countries during the deflation years by purchasing €5 trillions (£4.1 trillions) of bonds under the cover of quantitative easing. That is no longer impossible.

The bank has since invented an anti-spread shield (TPI) but has never dared to use it, and for good reason – it is highly contentious and a flaming violation of the no-bail clause in the Lisbon Treaty.

The ECB arrogated to itself the power to buy distressed bonds as it sees fit, but only on behalf of countries that pursue a) “sound fiscal and macroeconomic policies”; b) are not “subject to an excessive deficit procedure”; c) do not have “severe macroeconomic imbalances”; d) where the “trajectory of public debt is sustainable”; and e) where stress is “not warranted by country-specific fundamentals”.

France is in breach of every one.

Markets are betting that the ECB will find some way around this. No doubt it will, in extremis. But Isabel Schnabel, Germany’s enforcer on the governing council, has a message for them. The TPI can only be used to “tackle disorderly dynamics” and to “prevent destabilising interest rate spirals, which might otherwise drag the euro area into a severe crisis”.

Any sustained help would require a “macroeconomic adjustment programme”, which means an austerity package by the EU bail-out fund (ESM) – and probably an IMF regime, given the scale of France’s €3.3 trillion debt.

This would come with tough conditions and require a vote in the German and Dutch parliaments. There is zero possibility that Left-wing Popular Front or Marine Le Pen’s Eurosceptic nationalists would accept such terms, or any terms at all.

Macron is back at square one, but in an even weaker position, amid mounting calls for his own resignation. “No confidence, no government, no budget, no solution,” was the pithy verdict of Arnaud Marès, chief European economist at Citigroup.

The idea of a technocrat coalition is a fool’s illusion in a great political nation like France. There are only two permutations that can plausibly deliver a government. Both are explosive.

Either Macron swallows his pride, lets the Left take charge as the largest bloc, throws what remains of his inglorious party behind it in cohabitation, and accepts that much of his seven-year edifice will be torn down.

Or, he eats his rhetoric, lifts the cynical cordon sanitaire that is so corrupting French politics, accepts that Le Pen’s 11m voters are a legitimate political community, and reaches a pact with her National Rally, ministers and all.

That is to say, he must do overtly what he has been trying to do on the sly whilst hiding behind Barnier. This would lead to a general strike and mass demonstrations, but it would lance the boil.

Macron caused this crisis by systematically destroying the centre-Left and the centre-Right, aiming to construct a nouvel ordre in the centre for his own Jupiterian glorification.

He succeeded in the first part, even if in nothing else. He refused to back down when this blew up in his face in 2022, opting ever since to ram through his agenda against popular and parliamentary will by executive decree.

Nothing can be resolved until Macron either falls on his sword or learns the meaning of democracy and falls on his knees at Canossa.

Thursday, 26 May 2022

You'll have to look for the nuggets in here for Paper 2

 

The world’s financial system is entering dangerous waters again, warns guru of the Lehman crisis

Columbia professor Adam Tooze: ‘We don't know what is going to break until it does, but there are a lot of reasons to worry’

world economic forum
The 51st annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos on 22 May 2022 CREDIT: LAURENT GILLIERON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

If anybody knows where the points of maximum stress lie as monetary tightening collides with epic levels of global debt, it is the man who wrote the definitive opus on the last traumatic blow-up in 2008.

Columbia professor Adam Tooze is the rising star of the Davos circuit. His book Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World is a superb forensic analysis of the political and economic brew that led to the meltdown of the western banking system, and led to the Lost Decade that followed, with invidious consequences for Western liberal democracies.

There is a frighteningly-long list of shoes to drop as inflation finally forces central banks to do what they desperately wish not to do, which is to yank away the debt shield that lulled both investors and the political class into a false sense of security.

"We don't know what is going to break until it does, but there are a lot of reasons to worry, and there is going to be severe stress," he said on the eve of the World Economic Forum, the conclave of the great and the good in Davos.

The global economy has never been so sensitive to the slightest change in borrowing costs. The Institute of International Finance says global debt has reached 348pc of GDP since the pandemic. It was 269pc at the peak of the last debt bubble in 2007.

The perennial locus of trouble is Europe's half-built monetary union, where the bond-buying spree of the European Central Bank has mopped up Club Med (and French) debt issuance as if there was no tomorrow, and tomorrow has now arrived. 

"Could Italy get bad quickly? Yes, it certainly could," he said.

Italy's 10-year bond yields have tripled this year to 3pc. Risk spreads have ballooned to 200 basis points, higher than they were when Mario Draghi was drafted by the political elites to save the country.

Prof Tooze said the ECB has no credible mechanism to defend the southern European states as QE winds down.

"They're talking about a 'spread-management' instrument and telling us they've got a magic bullet, but the markets don't believe it," he said.

Such an instrument, if it ever emerges, moves beyond anything plausibly billed as monetary policy. It looks like a naked rescue of insolvent sovereign states in breach of EU treaty law, and invites a challenge at the German Constitutional Court. It is anathema for northern hawks alarmed by the ECB's slide into fiscal dominance.

"We all know that if there was a legal way to control yields they would already have used it. So it is just sleight of hand," he said. The ECB can "skew" the reinvestment of its existing portfolio to vulnerable countries but that is a token gesture.

A fresh spasm of Club Med debt angst is coming as market vigilantes test the ECB's ability to act. The exchange rate will take the strain: Europe's €2 trillion investment giant Amundi says it expects the euro to hit parity against the dollar this year.

Prof Tooze does not think euroland will disintegrate. Europe's leaders cannot let that happen, but neither will they resolve the incoherence of an orphan currency union without fiscal union. "The whole eurozone has been in suspended disbelief for years. It ought to blow up but it never does because somehow they find ways to improvise," he said.

That does not exclude a crisis along the way, and Italy is the stand-out candidate because it has incendiary politics as well as zero trend growth and a debt ratio of 151pc of GDP. The unelected Mr Draghi will soon be gone and the eurosceptic hard-Right leads the polls. Markets will test that too.

The silver lining is that inflation works wonders for debt-dynamics. It erodes the real burden of legacy borrowing through the denominator effect. People across the West should stop fretting about the CPI horror story and remember that bond holders — with broad-shoulders — are paying the main tab for the pandemic.

"Two or three years of inflation above 5pc is beneficial: it burns off the debt. But you have to protect vulnerable people from real income losses. That is a poverty problem, and there are policies to address it," he said.

The UK is assuredly not addressing it. The Government is pushing through the fastest fiscal retrenchment in the developed world seemingly in the belief that public debt is nearing a critical threshold, or judging that mid-sized open economies with big trade deficits cannot take risks.

"It is a rerun of the 2010 panic, but without the rhetoric. I don't see how they are going to build a working class coalition like this," he said.

The arguments over austerity have never been settled. There is a persuasive case that a fiscal squeeze at the wrong moment and at the wrong therapeutic dose is counter-productive on its own terms. It does not lower the debt ratio more than would otherwise occur, leaving aside the lost economic growth and social misery caused along the way.

America is doing its own variant of austerity-lite, swinging abruptly from eye-watering deficits to a negative fiscal impulse, but not because the White House has chosen to do so. Joe Biden cannot get his spending packages through Congress.

Prof Tooze said the Rooseveltian $6 trillion New Deal proclaimed during those hubristic halcyon days of early Bidenism have sputtered out.

"It’s completely collapsed. The Democrats are going to face a massive defeat in the midterms this autumn, and they'll have trouble holding the White House," he said.  

"All they have really done is the Recovery Act, which is really just sending out cheques, and a bit of infrastructure. In the end, Biden is going to achieve less than Obama," he said.

He does not buy the line that America is roaring back at the head of a resurgent West, even if the autocracies have suffered a crushing reverse over recent months. “I see America as the huge weak link," he said.

He broadly subscribes to the Fukuyama thesis that the American body politic is by now so rotten within, so riddled with the cancer of identity politics that it is developing a paranoid loser's view of the world. The storming of Congress was not so much an aberration under this schema, but rather the character of modern America.

His opinion is pertinent since one of his early classics, The Deluge: The Great War and the Making of the Global Order, 1916-1931, was about the rise of America as the global hegemon.

Another of his books, The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy, is about the failed attempt by the authoritarians to hurl themselves against this Anglo-Saxon domination.

Prof Tooze blames the disintegration of Sino-US ties largely on American petulance, describing China's sins of copyright theft and piracy as the methods of catch-up economies through the ages. 

"The escalation was driven by an American backlash. What the US has done on microchips and technology is basically a declaration of war on China. Taking down Huawei was a spectacular act of aggression.”

Nor does he accept that China is falling into the middle income trap. It will recover from the housing bubble, the tech crash, and zero-Covid, because the fundamentals remain intact. 

Beijing has invested massively in STEM education — science, technology, engineering, and maths — the foundation disciplines of ascendant nations.  

China has escaped the curse of identity politics, albeit by totalitarian means. It has the incalculable resource of what Hegel called "disposition" or what we might call patriotism. "China can call on all its citizens and mobilise the flows of labour in ways that almost no other country can," he said.

This is not, on balance, my view. I think the US will again heal itself and that China’s sorpasso will fall short as the country succumbs to Japanification and slowly fades into old age. But there is a high risk that Prof Tooze’s deep pessimism on America may be all too close to the mark.