Unlike the 1930s, euro-zone countries today are prepared to go to great lengths to save the single currency. Virginia Mayo / AP Photo
Unlike the 1930s, euro-zone countries today are prepared to go to great lengths to save the single currency. Virginia Mayo / AP Photo
Unlike the 1930s, euro-zone countries today are prepared to go to great lengths to save the single currency. Virginia Mayo / AP Photo
Unlike the 1930s, euro-zone countries today are prepared to go to great lengths to save the single currency. Virginia Mayo / AP Photo

End of the euro? Well, it ain't necessarily so


  • English
  • Arabic

Increasingly, one hears predictions that the euro will go the way of the gold standard in the 1930s.

And, also increasingly, the reasoning behind such forecasts seems persuasive.

But does that mean that the euro doomsayers are right?

Following the 1929 stock market crash, Europe was hit by a huge deflationary shock. Output collapsed and unemployment soared. Unable to agree on coordinated reflationary action, governments opted to move unilaterally. One after another, they abandoned the gold standard, depreciating their currencies. By loosening credit in this way, they recovered, one after another, from the Great Depression.

Today, Europe has been hit again by a huge deflationary shock. This time, the constraint on reflationary action is the euro. Governments lack a national currency to depreciate and lack the power to relax credit, having delegated monetary policy to the European Central Bank (ECB). As unemployment again rises to catastrophic heights, they will have no alternative, it is said, but to abandon the euro unilaterally.

I wrote the book on Europe and the gold standard. Literally. In Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the Great Depression, published in 1992, I argued the deflationary engine that was the gold standard was a key cause of the 1930s Depression, and that abandoning it opened the door to recovery.

Yet I am reluctant to believe things will turn out the same way this time. Four differences lead me to believe that maybe - just maybe - the euro will survive.

First, mounting an appropriate monetary response is easier when you have a single central bank. Under the gold standard, it still would have been possible for central banks to reflate their depressed economies had they moved together. Unfortunately, getting central banks to move together is easier said than done. Central bankers speak different languages. They view economic prospects through different lenses.

By contrast, were the ECB to adopt decisive measures, it could reflate the entire euro zone and obviate the need for countries to act unilaterally. But, while the ECB has the capacity, the question remains as to whether it is has the will.

A second difference is that, notwithstanding recent cuts in social programmes, the unemployed receive more extensive public support than in the 1930s. This makes populist pressure to abandon the euro correspondingly less severe - the key questions, of course, being how much less severe and whether the political centre can hold.

A third difference is the political preconditions for a cooperative response are better today. In 1931, France refused to help stem the central European financial crisis because it believed Germany was re-arming, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles signed at the end of the First World War.

Political tensions between France and Germany may very well grow in the coming months and years, following François Hollande's victory in the French presidential election but they will not begin to rise to that level.

Moreover, European countries today are prepared to go to great lengths to save the euro, fearing its collapse would jeopardise their single market.

By contrast, when countries started abandoning the gold standard in 1931, tariff barriers had already gone up. There was no longer a single market to protect.

Finally, abandoning the gold standard was less disruptive than abandoning the euro would be. Reintroducing national currencies today would take weeks, at a minimum, whereas Britain in 1931 could take sterling off gold while the markets were closed for the weekend. Back then, countries still had their national currencies; they could simply stop supporting them. Bank deposits, along with most other private and public debts, were denominated in that national currency.

Today, these assets and liabilities are all in euros. Reintroducing the national currency in order to depreciate it, but leaving the euro value of other financial instruments untouched, would destroy balance sheets and wreak financial havoc. The alternative - converting those other instruments into the new national currency - would tie up the offending country in litigation for years.

Each of these differences casts doubt on the notion that the euro will go the way of the gold standard.

But a fifth difference points in the other direction.

In the 1930s, countries could not act together because they could not agree on a diagnosis of the problem. Each attributed the Depression to different causes, leading them to prescribe different remedies, which they administered unilaterally.

Agreement today on the diagnosis facilitates mounting a common response. Unfortunately, there is growing evidence that the medicine on which European countries have agreed - austerity - is killing the patient. There is now talk of adjusting the dosage but talk has not yet given way to action.

Will things turn out differently this time?

There is no question the greater scope for cooperation that exists today bodes well for the euro. But it is the precise policies on which European governments cooperate that will tell the tale.

Barry Eichengreen is a professor of economics and political science at the University of California, Berkeley.

* Project Syndicate

twitter: Follow and share our breaking business news. Follow us

iPad users can follow our twitterfeed via Flipboard - just search for Ind_Insights on the app.

Where%20the%20Crawdads%20Sing
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirector%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EOlivia%20Newman%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EStars%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Daisy%20Edgar-Jones%2C%20Taylor%20John%20Smith%2C%20Harris%20Dickinson%2C%20David%20Strathairn%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%202%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
What is dialysis?

Dialysis is a way of cleaning your blood when your kidneys fail and can no longer do the job.

It gets rid of your body's wastes, extra salt and water, and helps to control your blood pressure. The main cause of kidney failure is diabetes and hypertension.

There are two kinds of dialysis — haemodialysis and peritoneal.

In haemodialysis, blood is pumped out of your body to an artificial kidney machine that filter your blood and returns it to your body by tubes.

In peritoneal dialysis, the inside lining of your own belly acts as a natural filter. Wastes are taken out by means of a cleansing fluid which is washed in and out of your belly in cycles.

It isn’t an option for everyone but if eligible, can be done at home by the patient or caregiver. This, as opposed to home haemodialysis, is covered by insurance in the UAE.

The alternatives

• Founded in 2014, Telr is a payment aggregator and gateway with an office in Silicon Oasis. It’s e-commerce entry plan costs Dh349 monthly (plus VAT). QR codes direct customers to an online payment page and merchants can generate payments through messaging apps.

• Business Bay’s Pallapay claims 40,000-plus active merchants who can invoice customers and receive payment by card. Fees range from 1.99 per cent plus Dh1 per transaction depending on payment method and location, such as online or via UAE mobile.

• Tap started in May 2013 in Kuwait, allowing Middle East businesses to bill, accept, receive and make payments online “easier, faster and smoother” via goSell and goCollect. It supports more than 10,000 merchants. Monthly fees range from US$65-100, plus card charges of 2.75-3.75 per cent and Dh1.2 per sale.

2checkout’s “all-in-one payment gateway and merchant account” accepts payments in 200-plus markets for 2.4-3.9 per cent, plus a Dh1.2-Dh1.8 currency conversion charge. The US provider processes online shop and mobile transactions and has 17,000-plus active digital commerce users.

• PayPal is probably the best-known online goods payment method - usually used for eBay purchases -  but can be used to receive funds, providing everyone’s signed up. Costs from 2.9 per cent plus Dh1.2 per transaction.