The Delaware Gazette

Austerity now dirty word in Europe, but what next?

Paris build­ings reflect in a shop win­dow dis­play­ing the cover of a mag­a­zine with a pic­ture of President-elect Fran­cois Hol­lande in Paris Mon­day. France handed the pres­i­dency Sun­day to left­ist Hol­lande, a cham­pion of gov­ern­ment stim­u­lus pro­grams who says the state should pro­tect the down­trod­den, a vic­tory that could deal a death blow to the drive for aus­ter­ity that has been the hall­mark of Europe in recent years. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)

ADAVID McHUGH, SARAH DiLORENZO

Asso­ci­ated Press

PARIS — The day after Fran­cois Hol­lande rode to power in France on a slo­gan of “change now,” the con­ver­sa­tion in Europe was already dif­fer­ent Mon­day: Aus­ter­ity had become a dirty word.

What replaces it, though, was any­thing but clear.

The newly pow­er­ful in France and Greece want to roll back the spend­ing cuts and tax increases that have defined Europe’s response to its 3-year-old debt cri­sis. But cam­paign rhetoric is likely to prove more extreme than any real-world rever­sal of the bud­get tightening.

World finan­cial mar­kets took Europe’s lat­est round of polit­i­cal upheaval in stride, con­vuls­ing early and then recov­er­ing. The continent’s uncer­tain future — includ­ing the pos­si­bil­ity of Greece leav­ing the euro — was caus­ing anx­i­ety but not panic about the threat to the global economy.

But there is hardly unity in Europe.

Sun­day night, Social­ist president-elect Hol­lande cel­e­brated his vic­tory over Nico­las Sarkozy by vow­ing, “Aus­ter­ity can no longer be inevitable!”

On Mon­day, Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Angela Merkel gen­tly pushed back.

She rejected Hollande’s call to rene­go­ti­ate a treaty signed last month on tougher action to con­trol gov­ern­ment deficits. “We in Ger­many, and I per­son­ally,” she said, “believe the fis­cal pact is not up for negotiation.”

Still, she stressed the impor­tance of French-German coop­er­a­tion — and her will­ing­ness to meet soon with Hollande.

Econ­o­mists said that while the anti-austerity winds are bound to stir up short-term polit­i­cal insta­bil­ity, espe­cially in Greece, they could even­tu­ally bring some finan­cial calm.

“This is going to force some rethink­ing” all across Europe about how to man­age the debt cri­sis, said Laura Gon­za­lez, a finance pro­fes­sor at Ford­ham Uni­ver­sity in New York. “That is good for everybody.”

Greece remains the focus of Europe’s finan­cial and polit­i­cal unease. Polit­i­cal par­ties that made gains by reject­ing belt-tightening still have to assem­ble a major­ity coali­tion in Par­lia­ment before they can begin gov­ern­ing. The con­ser­v­a­tives got the first try Mon­day but failed — leav­ing a new left-wing, party to take its turn. If no party can assem­ble a coali­tion, the coun­try will need to hold new elec­tions, prob­a­bly in June.

The main stock index in Greece plunged almost 7 per­cent. France’s CAC-40 ended 1.7 per­cent higher.

The Dow Jones indus­trial aver­age in the United States fell as much as 68 points early Mon­day but recouped its losses and ended the day down 30 at 13,008.

The biggest fear was that Greece’s new lead­er­ship would renege on com­mit­ments made to secure the country’s mas­sive res­cue loans — or even leave the euro. Merkel pressed Greek lead­ers on Mon­day to stay the course. “Of course, the most impor­tant thing is that the pro­grams we agreed with Greece are con­tin­ued,” she said.

Greece wasn’t the only prob­lem. The 17 coun­tries that use the euro — and nine other Euro­pean coun­tries — agreed in March to the fis­cal com­pact that seeks to make coun­tries bal­ance their bud­gets. But bailout fears have inten­si­fied in recent months as Spain, Italy and other gov­ern­ments face ris­ing bor­row­ing costs on bond mar­kets, a sign that investors are ner­vous about the size of their debts rel­a­tive to their eco­nomic out­put. Aus­ter­ity was intended to address these jit­ters by reduc­ing their government’s bor­row­ing needs, but there has been a neg­a­tive side effect: As eco­nomic out­put shrinks, the debt bur­den actu­ally looks worse.

As Europe’s econ­omy got weaker, the pub­lic and politi­cians grew weary of the budget-cutting required to make the fis­cal com­pact work. Across Europe, aus­ter­ity meant lay­offs and pay cuts for state work­ers, scaled-back expen­di­tures on wel­fare and social pro­grams, and higher taxes and fees to boost gov­ern­ment revenue.

Hol­lande says he intends to rene­go­ti­ate the fis­cal treaty so that it places an empha­sis on growth and not just deficit reduc­tion. He says gov­ern­ments should actu­ally increase spend­ing now, while economies are so weak.

Merkel and the Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank have instead stressed deeper, long term fixes such as reduc­ing red tape for small busi­nesses, mak­ing it eas­ier for work­ers to find jobs across the euro­zone and break­ing down bar­ri­ers that coun­tries have cre­ated to pro­tect their own indus­tries. Those changes involve chal­leng­ing unions and other pow­er­ful con­stituen­cies — and they can take years to have an effect.

The anti-austerity sen­ti­ment appears to be pick­ing up strength.

In Italy on Mon­day, sev­eral can­di­dates in local elec­tions who oppose the deficit-cutting pro­moted by Pre­mier Mario Monti had a strong show­ing. And the head of the Inter­na­tional Mon­e­tary Fund — one of the insti­tu­tions that designed the Greek bailout and the aus­ter­ity mea­sures that go with it — warned that Europe has to be care­ful about push­ing aus­ter­ity too far. Chris­tine Lagarde said Euro­pean coun­tries should reduce their bud­get deficits grad­u­ally to avoid fur­ther dam­age to their economies.

Eight of the 17 euro­zone nations are already in reces­sion and unem­ploy­ment across the bloc rose to 10.9 per­cent in March — its high­est ever.

The Euro­pean com­mis­sion called upon Greece to make “full and timely” imple­men­ta­tion of its bud­get cuts. Those include €11.5 bil­lion in new cut­backs that must be found in June to make sure Greece keeps get­ting money under the terms of its sec­ond, €130 bil­lion bailout.

Econ­o­mist Christoph Weil at Com­merzbank said that if aid is cut off, Greece would be unable to pay its debts by autumn, lead­ing to a sec­ond default fol­low­ing a write­down of €107 bil­lion in March.

“There is cer­tainly room for nego­ti­a­tions that could save face for both sides,” Weil said. But “patience is wear­ing thin” with Greece and “I would not count on this happening.”

The U.S. and Euro­pean finan­cial sys­tems are so inter­twined that a loss of con­fi­dence in Europe could cloud the U.S. economy.

But there were few expec­ta­tions that the votes in France and Greece would have much imme­di­ate effect in the U.S.

Still, they make it more likely that Greece will have to aban­don the euro, roil­ing world mar­kets, said Jacob Kirkegaard, research fel­low at the Peter­son Insti­tute for Inter­na­tional Economics.

Sarkozy and Merkel were the archi­tects of the Euro­pean aus­ter­ity plan — so close they were known as “Merkozy.” The big ques­tion now is if there will be a “Merkol­lande” in Europe’s future.

Hollande’s plans to jump-start the French econ­omy by invest­ing in infra­struc­ture and buoy­ing small busi­nesses will deter­mine how bumpy the road ahead is.

He has promised to keep the deficit in check by rais­ing taxes on the wealthy and clos­ing some cor­po­rate loop­holes — but some investors say that will kill the very growth he hopes to foster.

If he does start wildly increas­ing spend­ing, France will no doubt see its bor­row­ing costs rise — which could make his poli­cies unten­able and prompt a shift back to aus­ter­ity. It was those ris­ing bor­row­ing costs that even­tu­ally forced fel­low euro­zone nations Greece, Ire­land and Por­tu­gal to seek bailouts.

Some are hop­ing that Hol­lande will turn out to be more pragmatic.

“Adieu, elec­tion cam­paign. Bon­jour, real­ity,” read an edi­to­r­ial in Germany’s daily Sued­deutsche Zeitung.

AP News Posted by on May 7 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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