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Bonn
Voyage
Attitudes to monetary union in Germany
are not as negative as is sometimes thought. But, warns Jürgen
von-Hagen, may harden if stringent fiscal policies continue to be
pursued.
The Germans, it is commonly observed from
outside Germany, are reluctant to give up the D-Mark, and strongly
oppose European economic and monetary union (EMU) for fear of higher
inflation. From within Germany, the picture looks rather different.
Whether or not a German is for or against EMU depends critically on how
the question is phrased and, to a lesser extent, on his or her
profession.
At first sight, the outsiders seem to
have it right. A solid majority in Germany does answer 'no' when asked
'would you like to give up the D-Mark for a common European currency?'
More than 80% of Germans are at least somewhat proud of the D-Mark as a
symbol of German economic strength.
But a solid majority in Germany also
affirms that they are in favour of EMU as a significant step towards
closer integration in Europe. Only a third of the population wants to
slow down the pace of integration. Most see closer integration as a
guarantee of peace. And a majority of the German population seems
willing to accept monetary union as a quantum leap of European
integration.
The political significance of this
attitude was demonstrated in the last round of state elections in the
spring of 1996. Some SPD politicians tried out an anti-EMU position as
part of their campaign against the CDU. But the experiment came to no
avail: when the fired back by equating opposition to monetary union with
putting obstructions in the way of greater Europe integration, the SPD
dropped their anti-EMU line.
Anti-European positions simply go nowhere
in German politics today. It seems a safe guess that monetary union will
not play a large part in the 1998 electoral campaign. None of the major
parties will dare touch the issue for fear of being called
anti-European.
So the outsiders have it wrong after all:
the Germans are willing to accept EMU, but they accept it as the price
for political union in Europe. This position has been made most explicit
in the Bundesbank's warning that monetary union cannot succeed without
political union, although the vision most Germans hold of political
union remains very vague. So far, the Kohl government has successfully
avoided drawing up a list of conditions that would define the minimum
acceptable political union. This is a position that will allow Mr Kohl
to sell even small steps in that direction as a significant achievement
of his policy.
The generalized characterization of the
'German view' of EMU conceals a more complicated and differentiated
reality. A majority of German economists for example, remains sceptical,
if not opposed outright, to EMU. The German financial sector, on the
other hand, is firmly in favour: the three largest commercial banks, in
particular, are pushing hard for monetary integration in the expectation
that they will be among the main players in the emerging European
financial market.
German businesses also expect monetary
union to come, but remain doubtful about the timing. A large majority of
companies has yet to start gearing up to use of the Euro. Fears that the
D-Mark will be even stronger if monetary union fails, and that this
would make winning business abroad even harder, certainly contribute to
the willingness German business to accept monetary union - a position
that is not too far from the French fears of competitive devaluation.
Meanwhile, the vast majority of the
population takes little or no notice of the debate over strategies to
achieve monetary union. There is demand for information but little
interest in the controversies among experts. As almost half the
population thinks that the CDU government would be the most competent
party to manage the introduction of the common currency, the government
has little to fear from the issue.
So German attitudes towards monetary
union are not as negative as they are commonly painted outside the
country. It is often said that the Bundesbank opposes monetary union for
obvious reasons of self interest and that it has persuaded the German
public to take a similar stand.
Certainly, it is true that the German
population trusts the Bundesbank's expertise in monetary matters, giving
it considerable clout in shaping the institutions of the European
currency. But the idea that the Bundesbank alone could determine
Germany's position in what is regarded as a very important part of
Europe's future is, at best, a caricature of German politics and, at
worst, reflects a bad misunderstanding.
In fact, the risk to EMU in Germany today
is increasingly on the fiscal side. Originally intended as a political
gimmick to counter the SPD's allegation that the government was too
negligent of the inflation risk created by fiscally profligate members
of EMU, Mr. Waigel's proposal of a stability pact hardening the limits
on national government deficits has earned more recognition outside
Germany than inside, where it does not benefit the government
politically. Indeed, my analysis of international evidence suggests that
deficit limits of the kind embedded in the Waigel pact do little to
control government debt.
More significantly, Mr. Waigel's and Mr.
Kohl's repeated assertions that the fiscal criteria for EMU will not be
weakened have forced the government to cut the deficit by raising taxes
and slashing welfare benefits in the face of what is already a sluggish
economy. Some of my recent empirical research illustrates that such a
strategy, if adopted by a majority of the EMU candidates, risks pushing
the European economy into a severe recession.
The resulting mix of weak or negative
growth, increasing unemployment and protesting labour unions is hardly
promising for a happy transition to monetary union. In such
circumstances, the quiet German resistance to monetary union may become
more outspoken if unions and opposition parties present rising taxes and
the removal of the welfare safety net as the price for Mr. Kohl's
strategy of political union through union.
Jürgen von Hagen
Professor of Economics at
Universität Bonn, Indiana University and Research Fellow in CEPR's
International Macroeconomics programme.
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