martes, 21 de junio de 2011

martes, junio 21, 2011


Mario Monti

At the roots of the eurozone crisis lies of course the past
 indiscipline of specific member states, Greece in the first place. But such indiscipline could simply not have occurred without twowidespread failings by governments as they sit at the table of the European Council: an unhealthy politeness towards each other, and
 excessive deference to large member states.


This week will tell us whether this lesson – which is even more
 important for the future of the eurozone and the European Union than a solution”
 to the Greek crisis – has been learnt. The events to watch are the
Ecofin Council (eurozone finance ministers meeting) on Monday and the European Council meeting of EU leaders on Thursday
 and Friday.


As for politeness, would Greece have been able to run for years public
deficits vastly above its officially published figures – until the
excess became known in late 2009 – had Eurostat had the power to
conduct serious investigations to check the adequacy of nationally 
produced statistics? Of course not.


Yet, when the European Commission proposed years ago that the European statistics office should be given those powers, most member states found the idea 
improperly intrusive. Led by Germany and France, they blocked it. Each
 government was, of course, aware that sharing a single market and even
 more a single currency with countries that might violate the rules 
would have dangerous consequences.


Nonetheless, to allow objective but
 indiscreet eyes to probe government accounting would definitely have
 gone – they thoughtone step too far. Today they must all, including
 Greece, regret that the commission’s proposal was blocked.


More generally, an unhealthy degree of politeness has often
 characterised member states when it comes to peer review exercises.
 The understanding is that if a government is spared the domestic
political embarrassment of receiving a very negative grade, it is
likely to return the favour when the turn comes to assessing other
 governments.


As for deference to large member states, it is, in a sense, enshrined
in the treaty. In fact, a large member state has more votes in Council
deliberations and more members of the European Parliament than a small
member state. Thus, it has more influence on the legislative process,
as is perfectly justified on democratic grounds.


However, when it
 comes to the enforcement of EU laws or decisions, member states should
 all be treated as equal, and they normally are. There have been 
exceptions, however. They have had a lasting negative impact on the
credibility of two key policy instruments of the EU over the last
decade or so: the stability and growth pact and the Lisbon strategy towards greater competitiveness.


The credibility of the stability pact was severely impaired, as
Chancellor Angela Merkel underlined when the Greek crisis exploded, by
 the decision taken by the Ecofin Council at the end of 2003. The
 commission had proposed issuing the prescribed warnings to France and
Germany because they were on a collision course with the requirements
of the pact, as it had done for Ireland and Portugal the year before.


The council, however, under the combined pressure of those two
governments, helped by the Italian government which was holding the presidency, did not follow the commission’s proposal, as it had done for the two smaller countries. There was, one could say, an “excess of deferenceprocedure – to paraphrase the pact’s terminology.


So it can be no surprise that other countries, perhaps by tradition
less keen anyway on the “culture of stabilitypromoted by Germany,
took that almost as a licence to interpret the requirements of
 discipline in a more relaxed way.
 When the Lisbon strategy launched in 2000 was reviewed five years later, it was proposed that the commission should regularly publish a transparent scoreboard to put more pressure on member states to
deliver on their commitments. Germany’s then chancellor Gerhard
 Schroeder strongly objected and the commissionwrongly, in my view –
decided not to proceed to the “naming and shaming” of member states.


It is now recognised that a system of putting explicit pressure is needed. The Europe 2020strategy stresses the need for explicit
 and candid monitoring. The commission published earlier this month bold recommendations for each member state, regarding both the stability
 pact and national reform policies.


So now for this crucial week. In the interest of an effective and
 disciplined enforcement of the new stability pact, the Ecofin Council
 should accept the two key requests of the European Parliament: first, an extended scope for the “reversed qualified majorityrule (a qualified majority would be needed to block a proposal, not to approve it) will ensure that the commission’s proposals will have a greater role, with reduced opportunities for exchanges of favours among 
member states.


Second, the European Parliament’s involvement as
 promoter of an openeconomic dialogue” would, by
 ensuring greater transparency, make such exchanges – and indeed
 displays of deference – less likely. In short this would boost both
 the discipline and credibility of the eurozone.


The European Council should by no means dilute the recommendations for
 each member state. If their individual or combined resistance were to
 erode the commission’s recommendations, Europe 2020 would soon join the Lisbon strategy in 
lack of credibility and effectiveness.


When he chairs the council later this week, President Herman van Rompuy will have to be the 
guardian of healthy impoliteness – and lack of deference.


The writer is President of Bocconi University and a former European Commissioner.

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