Blog post

How the EU could stop the global crisis becoming a European problem

Publishing date
22 August 2009
Authors
André Sapir

Imagine the US was facing the current crisis with the following situation: only 30 of its 50 states belong to the dollar area; most of the southern states are outside the dollar area and so is New York, home of the US financial centre; the seat of the US government is in Washington, but dollar area chairman Ben Bernanke operates from Pittsburgh and secretary Tim Geithner is mainly governor of Vermont, one of the smallest US states, with a population of roughly half a million.

Absurd? Yet this is exactly what the European Union looks like, with only 16 of its 27 member states belonging to the euro area; most of the eastern states and the UK, home of the EU financial centre, outside the euro area; the seat of the EU institutions in Brussels, but ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet operating from Frankfurt and Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker mainly the prime minister of Luxembourg.

The point here is not that the EU should become the United States of Europe, but simply that its current organisation poses major problems that risk transforming the current global crisis into a European crisis. There are at least four issues that the EU needs to address urgently.

The first is banking regulation and supervision. It has become evident that the coexistence of pan-European banks and purely national supervision is unsustainable. As the Turner Review commissioned by the UK government puts it, ‘sounder arrangements require either increased national powers, implying a less open single market, or a greater degree of European integration’. The choice will not be easy for the euro area and for the UK. Euro area members area share clear common financial interests since they share a common central bank, but they also have common financial interests with the non-euro area EU countries, and the UK in particular, with whom they share a single market in financial services. The UK, however, cannot afford to be a bystander on this matter since any remedy to the euro area’s financial governance that did not include the UK - for instance a euro area banking supervision mechanism - would risk jeopardizing the role of London as the euro area’s de facto financial centre.

The second is the EU’s ability to take part effectively in global efforts to reshape financial rules. The EU institutions have a seat at the G20 table, but face a double challenge of legitimacy. One is vis-a-vis the EU countries which also sit at the table (the four members of the G7 plus Spain and the Netherlands) and whose leaders tend to overshadow EU institution representatives. The other is towards the rest of the (and smaller) EU countries which fear, with some reason, that coordination at G20 level could become a substitute for coordination at EU level. Having a seat but little legitimacy is bound to prove untenable.

The third issue is the economic situation in some new member states outside the euro area. Their earlier impressive growth, which relied on massive capital inflows, now looks problematic. The potential for catching up with the old EU members remains generally good but the path towards
it is much less assured and the new member states that financed present consumption with foreign savings will need to reassess their economic strategy fundamentally. Intervention by the IMF inside the EU for the first time in three decades highlights the seriousness of the situation and Europe’s limited ability to address its own difficulties. In some of the new member states, the dramatic revision of growth prospects may even end up shaking the existing consensus in favour of European integration.

Last but not least the crisis has once again exposed the EU’s inability to deal effectively with its own regional backyard. With the crisis, some neighbours, like Ukraine, are facing dire conditions. Yet, the EU is keeping a low profile, preferring instead the IMF to take the lead. In contrast to the US Fed which has opened currency swap lines to Mexico and other emerging countries, the ECB has refused to offer swap facilities to emerging countries outside the EU.

How should the EU respond? First, all member states, including the UK, should adopt sounder financial sector arrangements with common EU discipline. Second, EU countries should speak with one voice at the G20, at the very least by dividing the responsibility among EU participants. Third, the EU should improve implementation of the criteria for adopting the euro, giving more weight to economic logic and less to legal procedure. This would speed up enlargement of the euro area to nearly all EU members. Finally, the EU should assume greater economic responsibility towards its neighbours, including those with little or no prospect of joining the EU any time soon, by providing them with balance-of-payment assistance.

Ultimately, the euro area should have its own full-time, Brussels-based secretary of the treasury providing strategic orientations to national finance ministers. The best solution would to follow the foreign policy template created by the Lisbon Treaty and merge the two posts of Eurogroup chairman and of EU commissioner for economic affairs into one. This would give to the Eurogroup chairman the economic services and expertise that he currently lacks and to the commissioner the political weight he lacks.
Andre Sapir is professor of economics at Université Libre de Bruxelles and senior fellow at Bruegel, the European think-tank, which is soon releasing his new volume ‘Memos to the New Commission’

About the authors

  • André Sapir

    André Sapir, a Belgian citizen, is a Senior fellow at Bruegel. He is also University Professor at the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB) and Research fellow of the London-based Centre for Economic Policy Research.

    Between 1990 and 2004, he worked for the European Commission, first as Economic Advisor to the Director-General for Economic and Financial Affairs, and then as Principal Economic Advisor to President Prodi, also heading his Economic Advisory Group. In 2004, he published 'An Agenda for a Growing Europe', a report to the president of the Commission by a group of independent experts that is known as the Sapir report. After leaving the Commission, he first served as External Member of President Barroso’s Economic Advisory Group and then as Member of the General Board (and Chair of the Advisory Scientific Committee) of the European Systemic Risk Board based at the European Central Bank in Frankfurt.

    André has written extensively on European integration, international trade and globalisation. He holds a PhD in economics from the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, where he worked under the supervision of Béla Balassa. He was elected Member of the Academia Europaea and of the Royal Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.

Related content