George Friedman
Everyone is wondering about
the next disaster to befall Europe. Italy is one focus;
Spain is also a possibility. But these crises are already under way. Instead,
the next crisis will be political, not in the sense of what conventional
politician is going to become prime minister, but in the deeper sense of
whether Europe’s political elite can retain power, or whether new political
forces are going to emerge that will completely reshape the European political
landscape. If this happens, it will be by far the most important consequence of
the European financial crisis.
Thus far we have seen some
changes in personalities in the countries at the center of the crisis. In
Greece, Prime Minister George Papandreou stepped aside, while in Italy Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi now has resigned. Though these resignations have
represented a formal change of government, they have not represented a formal
policy change. In fact, Papandreou and Berlusconi both stepped down on the
condition that their respective governments adopt the austerity policies
proposed during their respective tenures.
Europeanists dominate the
coalitions that have replaced them. They come from the generation and class
that are deeply intellectually and emotionally committed to the idea of Europe.
For them, the European Union is not merely a useful tool for achieving national
goals. Rather, it is an alternative to nationalism and the horrors that
nationalism has brought to Europe. It is a vision of a single Continent drawn
together in a common enterprise — prosperity — that abolishes the dangers of a
European war, creates a cooperative economic project and, least discussed but
not trivial, returns Europe to its rightful place at the heart of the
international political system.
For the generation of
leadership born just after World War II that came to political maturity in the
last 20 years, the European project was an ideological given and an
institutional reality. These leaders formed an international web of European
leaders who for the most part all shared this vision. This leadership extended
beyond the political sphere: Most European elites were committed to Europe
(there were, of course, exceptions).
Greece and the Struggle of
the European Elite
Now we are seeing this elite
struggle to preserve its vision. When Papandreou called for a referendum on austerity, the European elite put tremendous pressure
on him to abandon his initiative. Given the importance of the austerity
agreements to the future of Greece, the idea of a referendum made perfect
sense. A referendum would allow the Greek government to claim its actions
enjoyed the support of the majority of the Greek people. Obviously, it is not
clear that the Greeks would have approved the agreement.
Led by German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, the European elite did everything possible to prevent such an
outcome. This included blocking the next tranche of bailout money and
suspending all further bailout money until Greek politicians could commit to
all previously negotiated austerity measures. European outrage at the idea of a
Greek referendum makes perfect sense.
Coming under pressure from
Greece and the European elite, Papandreou resigned and was replaced by a former
vice president of the European Central Bank. Already abandoned by Papandreou,
the idea of a referendum disappeared.
Two dimensions explain this
outcome. The first was national. The common perception in the financial press
is that Greece irresponsibly borrowed money to support extravagant social
programs and then could not pay off the loans. But there also is validity to
the Greek point of view. From this perspective, under financial pressure, the
European Union was revealed as a mechanism for Germany to surge exports into developing EU
countries via the union’s free trade system. Germany also used Brussels’
regulations and managed the euro such that Greece found itself in an impossible
situation. Germany then called on Athens to impose austerity on the Greek
people to save irresponsible financiers who, knowing perfectly well what
Greece’s economic position was, were eager to lend money to the Greeks. Each
version of events has some truth to it, but the debate ultimately was between
the European and Greek elites. It was an internal dispute, and whether for
Greece’s benefit or for the European financial system’s benefit, both sides
were committed to finding a solution.
The second dimension had to do
with the Greek public and the Greek and European elites. The Greek elite
clearly benefited financially from the European Union. The Greek public, by
contrast, had a mixed experience. Certainly, the 20 years of prosperity since
the 1990s benefited many — but not all. Economic integration left the Greek
economy wide open for other Europeans to enter, putting segments of the Greek
economy at a terrific disadvantage. European competitors overwhelmed workers in
many industries along with small-business owners in particular. So there always
was an argument in Greece for opposing the European Union. The stark choice
posed by the current situation strengthened this argument, namely, who would
bear the burden of the European system’s dysfunction in Greece? In other words,
assuming the European Union was to be saved, who would absorb the cost? The
bailouts promised by Germany on behalf of Europe would allow the Greeks to
stabilize their financial system and repay at least some of their loans to
Europe. This would leave the Greek elite generally intact. The price to Greece
would be austerity, but the Greek elite would not pay that price. Members of
the broader public — who would lose jobs, pensions, salaries and careers —
would.
Essentially, the first
question was whether Greece as a nation would deliberately default on its debts — as many corporations do — and force a
restructuring on its terms regardless of what the European financial system
needed, or whether it would seek to accommodate the European system. The second
was whether it would structure an accommodation in Europe such that the burden
would not fall on the public but on the Greek elite.
The Greek government chose to
seek accommodation with European needs and to allow the major impact of
austerity to fall on the public as a consequence of the elite’s interests in
Europe — now deep and abiding — and the ideology of Europeanism. Since by its
very nature the burden of austerity would fall on the public, it was vital a
referendum not be held. Even so, the Greeks undoubtedly would seek to evade the
harshest dimensions of austerity. That is the social contract in Greece: The
Greeks would promise the Europeans what they wanted, but they would protect the
public via duplicity. While that approach might work in Greece, it cannot work
in a country like Italy, whose exposure is too large to hide via duplicity.
Similarly, duplicity cannot be the ultimate solution to the European crisis.
The Real European Crisis
And here we come to the real
European crisis. Given the nature of the crisis, which we have seen play out in
Greece, the European elite can save the European concept and their own
interests only by transferring the cost to the broader public, and not simply
among debtors. Creditors like Germany, too, must absorb the cost and distribute
it to the public. German banks simply cannot manage to absorb the losses. Like
the French, they will have to be recapitalized, meaning the cost will fall to the public.
Europe was not supposed to
work this way. Like Immanuel Kant’s notion of a “Perpetual Peace,” the European
Union promised eternal prosperity. That plus preventing war were Europe’s great
promises; there was no moral project beyond these. Failure to deliver on either
promise undermines the European project’s legitimacy. If the price of retaining
Europe is a massive decline in Europeans’ standard of living, then the argument
for retaining the European Union is weakened.
As important, if Europe is
perceived as failing because the European elite failed, and the European elite
is perceived as defending the European idea as a means of preserving its own
interests and position, then the public’s commitment to the European idea —
never as robust as the elite’s commitment — is put in doubt. The belief in
Europe that the crisis can be managed within current EU structures has been
widespread. The Germans, however, have floated a proposal that would give
creditors in Europe — i.e., the Germans — the power to oversee debtors’
economic decisions. This would undermine sovereignty dramatically. Losing
sovereignty for greater prosperity would work in Europe. Losing it to pay back
the debts of Europe’s banks is a much harder sell.
The Immigrant Factor and
Upcoming Elections
All of this comes at a time of
anti-immigrant, particularly anti-Muslim, feeling among the European public. In some countries, anger increasingly
has been directed at the European Union and its borders policies — and at
European countries’ respective national and international elites, who have used
immigration to fuel the economy while creating both economic and cultural
tensions in the native population. Thus, immigration has become linked to
general perceptions of the European Union, opening both a fundamental economic
and cultural divide between European elites and the public.
Racial and ethnic tensions
combined with economic austerity and a sense of betrayal toward the elite
creates an explosive mixture. Europe experienced this during the inter-war
period, though this is not a purely European phenomenon. Disappointment in
one’s personal life combined with a feeling of cultural disenfranchisement by
outsiders and the sense that the elite is neither honest, nor competent nor
committed to the well-being of its own public tends to generate major political
reactions anywhere in the world.
Europe has avoided an
explosion thus far. But the warning signs are there. Anti-European and
anti-immigrant factions existed even during the period when the European Union
was functioning, with far-right parties polling up to 16 percent in France. It is not clear that the
current crisis has strengthened these elements, but how much this crisis will
cost the European public and the absence of miraculous solutions also have not
yet become clear. As Italy confronts its crisis, the cost — and the inevitably
of the cost — will become clearer.
A large number of elections
are scheduled or expected in Europe in 2012 and 2013, including a French
presidential election in 2012 and German parliamentary elections in 2013. At
the moment, these appear set to be contests between the conventional parties
that have dominated Europe since World War II in the West and since 1989 in the
East. In general, these are the parties of the elite, all more or less buying
into Europe. But anti-European factions have emerged within some of these
parties, and as sentiment builds, new parties may form and anti-European
factions within existing parties may grow. A crisis of this magnitude cannot
happen without Tea Party- and Occupy Wall Street-type factions emerging. In
Europe, however — where in addition to economics the crisis is about race,
sovereignty, national self-determination and the moral foundations of the European Union —
these elements will be broader and more intense.
Populist sentiment coupled
with racial and cultural concerns is the classic foundation for right-wing
nationalist parties. The European left in general is part of the pro-European
elite. Apart from small fragments, very little of the left hasn’t bought into
Europe. It is the right that has earned a meaningful following by warning about
Europe over the past 20 years. It thus would seem reasonable to expect that
these factions will become much stronger as the price of the crisis — and who
is going to bear it — becomes apparent.
The real question, therefore,
is not how the financial crisis works out. It is whether the European project
will survive. And that depends on whether the European elite can retain its
legitimacy. That legitimacy is not gone by any means, but it is in the process
of being tested like never before, and it is difficult to see how the elite
retains it. The polls don’t show the trend yet because the magnitude of the
impact on individual lives has not manifested itself in most of Europe. When it
does show itself, there will be a massive recalculation regarding the worth and
standing of the European elite. There will be calls for revenge, and vows of
never allowing such a thing to recur.
Regardless of whether the next
immediate European crisis is focused on Spain or Italy, it follows that by
mid-decade, Europe’s political landscape will have shifted dramatically, with
new parties, personalities and values emerging. The United States shares much
of this trend, but its institutions are not newly invented. Old and not working
creates problems; new and not working is dangerous. Why the United States will
take a different path is a subject for another time. Suffice it to say that the
magnitude of Europe’s problems goes well beyond finance.
The European crisis is one of
sovereignty, cultural identity and the legitimacy of the elite. The financial
crisis has several outcomes, all bad. Regardless of which is chosen, the impact
on the political system will be dramatic.
George Friedman, Stratfor,
15-11-2011
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