欧洲经济还没有走出危险区
| 2014-05-21 15:57
For the past year, we've been hearing that global growth, and the world's equity markets, will get a major lift from a gradual recovery in Europe.
Indeed, Ireland and Portugal recently returned to the debt markets with well-received offerings, and the Greek government claims it will soon be in a position to issue bonds. Yields on sovereign debt remain remarkably low and stable. It's indisputable that a mood of tranquility has returned to the eurozone.
But tranquility is not the same thing as progress, as the GDP figures released on May 15 by the Statistical Office of The European Union (Eurostat) alarmingly demonstrate. The 18-nation eurozone expanded by just 0.2% in the first quarter of 2014, half the figure economists were projecting.
Germany, as usual, was the leader, posting a gain of 0.8%. The problem spots are precisely the places where the comeback is supposedly underway: the beleaguered nations of Europe's southern tier, as well as that tamed tiger, Ireland.
The latest figures confirm that most of these countries aren't improving at all. Italy's economy shrank by 0.1% in the first three months of 2014, matching the average of the three previous quarters. After expanding 0.6% in Q2 2013, France recorded zero growth. Portugal shrank 0.7%, following positive numbers in the preceding nine months. While figures weren't available for Greece and Ireland in Q1, neither country is showing progress. Greek GDP dropped 2.5% in the final three months of last year, and Ireland limped ahead at 0.2%.
The lone nation demonstrating a sustained upward trend, however modest, is Spain. It grew at 0.4% in the first quarter of 2014 after pretty much flatlining for the last nine months of 2013.
Harald Uhlig, a German-born and educated economist at the University of Chicago, provides a balanced view of the current risks to the eurozone. For Uhlig, it's crucial to understand the divergent courses taken by Germany and the southern nations since the euro's introduction in 1999, and how those policies have led to the disparate economic outcomes in these nations today. "Inflation had always been a big problem in southern Europe," he says. "Rates were high, and they also carried a big 'risk premium' because you couldn't be sure that the separate central banks wouldn't do something crazy, causing more inflation."
The institution of a single currency in Europe led to the creation of a Bundesbank-like European Central Bank that then and now sets monetary policy in a rigorous, predictable fashion. "Rates dropped, and government and consumer spending exploded, driving high growth rates," says Uhlig. What's often overlooked, he notes, is that Germany didn't join the party. "Germany was the 'sick man' of Europe. It suffered when the euro was introduced, in contrast to the southern countries." Germany posted miserable GDP numbers in the early 2000s, while Ireland, Greece, and Spain all roared ahead.
Then, Germany made a turn that, in retrospect, seems astounding. Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (who served from 1998 to 2005) championed reforms designed to create a far more flexible labor market. "His model was the U.S.," says Uhlig. "Before that, I kept hearing from leaders in Germany who didn't want to reform, [saying] what you hear now in southern Europe: 'If we only have more growth in the next five years, we'll get rid of the unemployment problem.' But growth never came."
Schröder decisively lowered pension costs and unemployment compensation, and he gave companies more flexibility with hiring and layoffs. Schröder paid a heavy price for securing the most dramatic labor market reforms in modern European history. "He should have been rewarded, but he was brutally punished," says Uhlig.
Schröder lost the chancellorship to Angela Merkel in 2005. The fruits of his reforms didn't surface until around 2006, when the German economy emerged as the strongest player in Europe, as demonstrated by its resurgence from the financial crisis.
Big spending inflated wages in southern Europe, and productivity gains couldn't keep up, meaning labor costs in Spain and France for each unit of autos or steel produced grew at a faster rate than in Germany or the U.S. The crash exposed the competitiveness gap in southern Europe and Ireland. Global customers bought less and less of pricey exports from southern Europe.
So, what can these nations do now? "It can be solved in one of two ways," says Uhlig. "One is exiting the euro so that costs decline in the new currency compared to costs in other nations. The other is a combination of productivity gains and labor cost reductions. That would be the far better course."
The issue, he says, is that the troubled nations have done little to unshackle labor markets along the lines of Schröder's reforms of a decade ago.
乌利希特别关注的是法国经济的恶化。“欧洲过去有两大稳定器——法国和德国。现在只剩一个。在法国,退休太早,公司管理者往往是前政府官员,政商联系密切,因此创业者很难挑战既有竞争者。”他担心欧元区的未来越来越“落到德国这唯一一个稳定器的肩上。” 严重的经济衰退和高失业率尚不足以降低劳动力成本。“我不断听同事们说西班牙的劳动力成本已显著下降,”他说。“但还是太高。南欧国家依然没有解决劳动力成本增长快于生产率增长的问题。” 乌利希还指出,欧洲经济的平稳期没有得到好好的利用。“没有用来实施所需的改革,”乌利希说。“人们的态度是,欧元危机已经结束,收益率仍相当低,我们不需要做什么。” 乌利希特别担心一些突发事件可能损伤信贷市场的信心。“如果希腊违约,影响可能蔓延,导致其他国家利率上升,产生更多违约,甚至可能退出欧元。”乌利希希望欧元能得以保留,按施罗德的方法解决问题。不幸的是,他说,施罗德的遭遇让欧洲现任领导人们望而却步。他说:“他们害怕他们最终会落得和施罗德以及社会民主党一样的下场。” 南欧可能已经错失机会。改革的最好时机是21世纪第一个十年的中期左右,当时时间充裕。更困难的是取消几十年来在经济停滞、预算捉襟见肘时实施的种种法规和限制,削减财政支付风险重重。 欧洲领导人们不断地从一个“解决方案”向另一个解决方案摇摆,瞄瞄德国大选,瞅瞅银行资产质量考核,再看看旨在阻止通货紧缩的巨额货币刺激方案。他们忽略了真正该做的事情。如果欧洲不做出一些艰难的决定,市场将代他们做出选择。届时必将传出一声巨大的爆裂声,响彻全球。(财富中文网) 相关阅读: |




