May
brought home to the world evidence of the popular rejection of the
irrational pursuit of austerity amidst recession in Europe and elsewhere.
One telling signal was the victory of Francois Hollande in the French
Presidential run-off, making this the first presidential victory
for the Left since 1988 and only the second occasion when an incumbent
French president has not been re-elected. Nicolas Sarkozy's defeat
may partly be the result of his excessively flamboyant style and
arrogance. But it is largely the consequence of his willingness
to collaborate with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in pushing for
fiscal consolidation across Europe and imposing austerity on countries
whose public debt levels were arbitrarily declared as unsustainable.
The country that was the worst sufferer of this economic philosophy
that lacks rationale in the midst of a crisis was Greece. Burdened
with austerity ever since the first bail-out agreement in 2010,
Greece has not only seen incomes and output shrink dramatically,
but is also experiencing an unemployment rate of 22 per cent, with
one in every two jobseekers under the age of 24 unemployed. The
austerity measures were ostensibly aimed at reducing Athens' debt
from 160 per cent of GDP to 120 by 2020, through cuts in wages,
pensions, healthcare, public sector employment, and much else. But
with the austerity slowing growth, revenues have been falling short
as well, making it near impossible to meet staggered debt-reduction
targets. The bailout has failed.
The bailout was actually designed to help private finance capital.
Access to credit from Eurozone governments, the European Central
Bank and the IMF prevented the repudiation of private debt and an
exit of Greece from the euro. In 2010, before the first bailout
agreement, Greece owed about 310 billion euros, almost wholly to
the private sector. According to the Greek Debt Management Office's
estimates, Greece now owes 266 billion euros, of which close to
75 per cent is owed to the European Central Bank, Eurozone governments
and the IMF. While there is talk of a greater than 50 per cent haircut
taken by private banks, the real outcome has been a huge swap of
private debt for official debt.
The cruel cut was that this redistribution in favour of financiers
who had lent to Greece without diligence had at its other pole severe
austerity. That this would be unacceptable was known. Hence, when
former Prime Minister George Papandreou announced on 31 October
2011 that the government would hold a referendum to assess popular
support for the terms of the bailout agreement, the response from
the counterparties to the bailout was aggressive. The move, which
was seen as a means to scupper the bailout deal, was attacked both
within and outside Greece. This led to its withdrawal and the resignation
of Papandreou as Prime Minister ten days later. Clearly, democracy
was not seen as a suitable environment for implementing the austerity
presented as a prerequisite for restoring confidence and kick-starting
growth.
Elections were also postponed for long so as to allow an unrepresentative
''national government'', in the form of an opportunistic coalition
between the centre-right New Democracy and the PanHellenic Socialist
Movement (Pasok), to obtain legislative sanction for the austerity
measures. The intention was to accede to the demands of the German
and French governments, the European Central Bank and the IMF, even
though protestors clashed with police outside parliament while the
details of the austerity package were being debated and made into
law.
But the elections had to be finally held. And they have left the
erstwhile ruling coalition short of a majority, with the New Democracy
winning 19 per cent of the vote and 108 (out of 300) seats in parliament
and Pasok garnering 13 per cent of the vote and 41 seats. What is
remarkable is the showing of Syriza, the Coalition of the Radical
Left, which came in second with 17 per cent of the vote and 52 seats.
In the October 2009 polls, Syriza had won just 4.6 per cent of the
vote and 13 seats. The vote was clearly a rejection of the two leading
two parties that had come together to accept and implement the austerity
agenda in return for bailout funding.
Anger against austerity has also led a good showing by the Ultra-right
and neo-Nazi Golden Dawn Party that reportedly advocates forcing
immigrants into work camps and planting landmines along the Turkish
border. The party has won 6.9 per cent of the vote and 21 seats
in the Greek Parliament.
But with two seats short of a majority the coalition led by New
Democracy has little chance of forming the government, since it
is committed to both staying with the euro and continuing with the
bailout policies. The one party that could have helped form a new
''national government'', the Democratic Left, which has won 19 seats,
is committed to the euro but campaigned for a reversal of austerity
measures. Thus barely a day after he began his effort to forge a
new coalition in favour of austerity and the euro, New Democracy
leader Antonis Samaras, gave up his bid to form the government.
The next to get the opportunity is Alexis Tsipras of Syriza, who
needs to forge a left coalition. His declared objective is to scrap
the austerity measures. In Tsipras' view, there cannot be a government
of ''national salvation'' to implement austerity, since such austerity
amounts not to salvation ''but tragedy for the people and the place''.
"The parties that signed the memorandum now form a minority.
Their signatures have been delegitimised by the people." Tsipras
is reported to have said.
The political rejection of austerity is visible in France as well.
Immediately after his election Hollande declared that his election
signalled that ''austerity does not have to be inevitable'' for
Europe. That is significant, especially since his campaign promises
included higher taxes on business and the rich, employment subsidies,
and a partial reversal of the rise in the retirement age to 62.
There is therefore some hope that the world would see a retreat
from an unthinking commitment to fiscal conservatism. But the transition
would be difficult and divisive. Merkel has already warned Athens,
grappling with finding itself a government, that it would have to
stick to the reforms and budget targets agreed with lenders in the
bailout deal. But this is not good for Greece, for Europe or the
rest of the world. The evidence is too clear to ignore. Four and
a half years after the onset of the Great Recession, the expectation
that the world economy is on the path to recovery is being belied.
The signals are many. To start with, the GDP growth in the 27 countries
of the European Union has fallen from 2.4 per cent in the first
quarter of 2011 to 0.8 per cent in the last quarter, according to
the OECD Secretariat. Moreover, 5 out of 33 OECD countries (excluding
Greece) had recorded negative rates of GDP growth in the last quarter
of 2011. These are: Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal and
Slovenia. The United Kingdom too is faring poorly, recording GDP
growth of 0.5 per cent in the last quarter of 2011 and zero per
cent in the first quarter of 2012.
The problem does not end here. The expectation of a recovery had
been bolstered by evidence that the recession in the United States
had touched bottom and begun to reverse. Both GDP and employment
were being quoted as evidence of this. But it now seems that the
recovery may be losing steam. Though the first quarter of 2012 saw
GDP growing at 2.1 per cent, as compared to 1.5-1.6 per cent in
the previous three quarters, this was below the 2.2 per cent recorded
in the first quarter of 2011 and way below analyst expectations
of 2.7 per cent. On the employment front, the 115,000 jobs added
in April were just adequate to keep pace with population. The unemployment
rate has fallen to 8.1 per cent in the US only because less Americans
are coming onto the job market being disillusioned by past failure
to find employment.
Finally, it is not just US, the one bright spot in the OECD, which
disappoints. Countries such as China and India that were seen as
pulling up the world economy because of their rapid growth are also
slowing. China's growth slowed to 8.1 per cent in the first quarter
of 2012, according to the country's National Bureau of Statistics.
This compares with the 8.9 per cent recorded in the last quarter
of 2011, and is the slowest achieved in the last 11 quarters. The
government has reportedly lowered its growth target for 2012 to
7.5 per cent, as compared with 9.2 per cent last year. In India
too, the Central Statistical Organisation has estimated growth in
GDP during 2011-12 at 6.9 per cent as compared to the 8.4 per cent
recorded in 2010-11.
The reason for this prolonged and widespread slowdown and its intensification
into a recession in certain segments of the world economy is the
irrational fiscal conservatism that has overcome most governments.
Having spent hugely to rescue finance from bankruptcy, these governments
have turned wary about the state of their finances. So the argument
doing the rounds, aided and abetted by the IMF, is that it is time
now for fiscal consolidation in which governments must cut expenditure
and reduce their deficits in order to bring down their public debt
to GDP ratios.
The reason why spending cuts in the middle of a recession are seen
as making good sense is flimsy to say the least. Improved fiscal
positions and reduced government debt is expected to improve ''investor''
confidence, leading to more international investments and credit
and a revival of demand and growth. However, the reason why investors
should feel confident when economies are languishing in a recession
is never made clear. And the evidence that they don't is ignored.
Consider a country like Ireland, which has been a disciplined student
of the ''austerity for confidence'' school. Having recorded a negative
0.4 per cent growth in GDP in 2012, Ireland grew by just 0.7 per
cent in 2011. And growth in the last quarter of 2011 was just a
little above half that in the second quarter. Other countries that
have been experimenting with the contradictory austerity-induced
revival strategy, such as Greece, Portugal, Spain, Italy and the
UK have also been disappointed, as was to be expected. Nowhere is
the turn to austerity as severe as in the peripheral countries of
Europe. So the political backlash had to begin there. But with France
showing the same tendency, the popular mood is difficult to dismiss.
Hopefully this would restore some balance in economic policy making
across the world.
*
This article was originally published in Frontline, Vol. 29: No.
10, May 19 - Jun 01, 2012 and is available at
http://www.frontlineonnet.com/stories/20120601291004200.htm