A
famous quotation that is commonly attributed to Paul Volcker, former
Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, is ''In my next life, I want to
be all-powerful. So I want to be reborn as the bond market.'' Over
the past half century, various developing and ''emerging'' markets
were forced to learn about this power of financial markets the hard
way, as volatile inflows and outflows of capital (in the debt markets
and in stock markets) created boom and bust cycles that often left
a trail of devastation in real economies.
People in these countries also grew familiar with their own government
representatives looking nervously over their shoulders for signs of
financial market approval or disapproval, and tailoring their policies
to meet the expectations of these markets. The desire of governments
to attract global capital, and then to prevent capital outflow, dominated
over the justified demands of citizens for fulfilling their social
and economic rights in terms of basic needs and dignity. Despite electoral
systems and the need for government to establish some public legitimacy,
politically, there was little doubt about which of these forces has
been stronger.
The media in most developing countries were not just chroniclers of
this trend of the growing power of finance to affect national economic
policy making. They were also active (and often enthusiastic) participants
in the process, vesting financial players with significant public
voice. The behaviour of the stock market (which rarely if ever reflected
the real economy) was treated as important news at almost every hour
and given a lot of prominence in daily news; opinions of those representing
financial markets in different ways were given a great amount of time;
even the analyses of media persons were coloured by the perspective
of finance capital. Merchant bankers and hedge fund managers would
raise their eyebrows at the size of the fiscal deficit, or at some
proposed taxes on capital, and governments would quake and rush to
modify their measures.
Worst of all, the dominance of the markets appeared to permeate the
political system to such an extent that whichever government happened
to be in power, the economic and financial policies would be broadly
the same. Governments that alienated the people by privileging the
interest of capital over the people would get defeated by the electorate;
the newly elected government would come in and do the same thing.
Since ''technocratic'' leaders were more favoured by financial markets,
governments led by supposedly apolitical ''technocrats'' less affected
by political pulls and pushes, and more subject to the supposedly
iron laws of the markets, also became more common.
But all this was for developing countries, the subalterns of the global
system. In the ''mature'' democracies of rich capitalist countries,
however much the will of the people was actually thwarted by economic
processes, the formal structures of democracy were not just retained
but also given explicit recognition and importance.
That was then. Things have changed quite a bit in a relatively short
time. In economic history books of the future, November 2011 may well
be remembered as the month when European leaders explicitly placed
the appeasement of financial markets over the requirements of political
democracy.
Consider two countries at the centre of recent action. In Greece,
the elected Prime Minister George Papandreou, and his Socialist party
government, had already put in place severe budget cuts and other
austerity measures designed to reduce the public deficit so as to
appease the financial markets sufficiently to bring down the rising
yields on Greek government bonds. Greece had already availed of bailouts
from the IMF and the European Central Bank, and requires still more
infusion of funds. But the measures being insisted upon are essentially
counterproductive, because they force an economy that is already into
a downward spiral into further contraction, and thereby make the deficit
to GDP and public debt to GDP indicators look even worse.
It is evident that some debt restructuring is inevitable. And so the
European Union, in a major first, negotiated directly with bankers
- through the Institute for International Finance in Washington DC,
a global association of financial institutions. This resulted in yet
another package designed to ''save'' Greece, but actually to save
the bank responsible for overlending, with a declared 50 per cent
write down of debt (though in fact the loss faced by banks would be
much less) and further severe austerity measures to be imposed on
Greece in the effort to ''rebalance'' the economy.
These measures are not just macroeconomically misguided. They are
also deeply unpopular with the Greek public, who see themselves as
being forced to pay for irresponsible banking practices, with massive
unemployment, falling real wages, reduced public services. (Incidentally,
the widespread myth in northern Europe - about lazy Greeks lying in
the sun drinking ouzo while hardworking Germans support them - is
completely false. Real wages in Greece are significantly lower than
in Germany; average working hours in Greece are significantly longer
than in Germany; the rate of productivity increase in Greece in the
decade preceding their crisis was one of the fastest in Europe.)
The simmering anti-austerity mood in Greece finds expression in strikes
and street protests, which have become commonplace. When the latest
round of such cuts was insisted upon by the EU, Papandreou announced
that he would have to take strategy to a popular referendum. Of course,
this should have been done much earlier. It is not even clear if he
intended to phrase the question in such a manner as to ensure a ''yes''
vote to give legitimacy to further cuts. But the very possibility
of such democratic referral and the associated uncertainty created
outrage and fury among European bosses.
Like an errant schoolboy, Papandreou was quickly summoned to Cannes
where G20 leaders were meeting. According to reports, he was subjected
to a humiliating dressing down by the Gang of Four of Angela Merkel
of Germany, Nicolas Sarkozy of France, Christine Lagarde of the IMF
and Jean Claude Juncker, head of the eurozone group. He was told in
no uncertain terms that any such moves to refer to public opinion
amounted to ''disloyalty'' that would not be tolerated, and that Greece
would not receive the next crucial tranche of EU-IMF money of 8 billion
euros if it persisted with this plan.
Papandreou returned to Athens, cancelled the referendum, and even
resigned in the process, as his position had now become untenable.
A ''government of national unity'' has been set up, to be run by former
banker Lucas Papademos. No career politician was found acceptable
by the markets, only an insider (he has been Governor of Greece's
Central Bank and Vice President of the European Central Bank) whose
stated priority is to keep Greece in the eurozone at all costs, with
no mention at all of what the people of Greece might happen to want.
In Italy, where bond markets next turned their attention, the head
to fall was that of Silvio Berlusconi, whose period in power has been
more noted for salacious scandals and aggressive buffoonery. Bond
yields in Italy touched the declared danger mark of 7 per cent; other
European leaders then announced openly that Berlusconi had to go.
As it happens, he should have gone much earlier, for a variety of
other crimes. But the EU leaders now felt that his departure was necessary
''to calm the markets''. And so go he eventually did, announcing that
he would resign once the Parliament passed further austerity measures
that were also ''required'' by the markets.
The new government in Italy is even farther from any democratic norm
than that in Greece. It is headed by another economist/banker, Mario
Monti, who has the added advantage for the markets of having worked
for a trusted institution like Goldman Sachs (which was heavily involved
in helping the earlier Greek government to fudge its accounts to conceal
the extent of its debts and deficits). Mr Monti runs a government
composed entirely of ''technocrats'' rather than any representatives
of political parties: bankers, businessmen and former bureaucrats,
who are completely in tune with the expectations and requirements
of finance capital.
As if these examples are not enough, elected leaders in Europe are
now more openly expressing their intellectual and policy subservience
to financial markets in different ways. Recently, Finland's Minister
for Europe has argued that the eurozone's six Triple A-rated countries
should have a greater say in economic affairs within the single currency
and act as its inner decision-making core, because ''a country that
is not triple A rated is not going to be the best one to give you
advice on your public finances.'' So now credit-rating agencies are
going to decide which governments in Europe get to make the decisions
for all of the eurozone!
Note that these credit rating agencies have almost universally underperformed
massively especially in the past decade, missing signs of fragility,
over-reacting after the event and generally behaving in procyclical
and herd-like ways that are typical of financial market functioning
in general. Yet elected leaders in Europe are seriously suggesting
that they hold the key to which governments can be more ''trusted''
to make crucial decisions for the people of Europe.
It is hard to see how any of this can be taken seriously, but this
is actually the way that governments in Europe are currently responding
to the advancing crisis. It does not follow that these efforts to
placate finance at all costs will be possible, though, since this
subservience to financial markets is now more questioned by the people.
Governments may have decided to sacrifice democracy to the markets,
but the people may still not let this happen.