Nouriel Roubini
Nouriel Roubini, a professor at NYU’s
Stern School of Business and Chairman of Roubini Macro Associates, was
Senior Economist for International Affairs in the White House's Council
of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration. He has worked
for the International Monetary Fund, the US Feder… read more
NEW
YORK – The market reaction to the Brexit shock has been mild compared to
two other recent episodes of global financial volatility: the summer of
2015 (following fears of a Chinese hard landing) and the first two
months of this year (following renewed worries about China, along with
other global tail risks). The shock was regional rather than global,
with the market impact concentrated in the United Kingdom and Europe;
and the volatility lasted only about a week, compared to the previous
two severe risk-off episodes, which lasted about two months and led to a
sharp correction in US and global equity prices.
Why such a mild, temporary shock?
For starters, the UK
accounts for just 3% of global GDP. By contrast, China (the world’s
second-largest economy) accounts for 15% of world output and more than
half of global growth.
Moreover, the
European Union’s post-Brexit show of unity, together with the result of
the Spanish election, calmed fears that the EU or the eurozone would
fall apart in short order. And the rapid government changeover in the UK
has boosted hopes that the divorce negotiations with the EU, however
bumpy, will lead to a settlement that maintains most trade links by
combining substantial access to the single market with modest limits on
migration.
Most important,
markets quickly priced in the conclusion that the Brexit shock would
lead to greater dovishness among the world’s major central banks.
Indeed, as in the two previous risk-off episodes, central-bank liquidity
backstopped markets and economies.
But the risk of
European and global volatility may have been only briefly postponed.
Leaving aside other global risks (including a slowdown in
already-mediocre US growth, more fear of a Chinese hard landing,
weakness in oil and commodity prices, and fragilities in key emerging
markets), there is plenty of reason to worry about Europe and the
eurozone.
First, if the UK-EU
divorce proceedings become protracted and acrimonious, growth and
markets will suffer. And an ugly divorce may also lead Scotland and
Northern Ireland to leave the UK. In that scenario, Catalonia may also
push for independence from Spain. And without the UK, Denmark and
Sweden, which aren’t planning to join the eurozone, may fear that they
will become second-class members of the EU, thus leading them to
consider leaving as well.
Second, upcoming
elections promise to be a political minefield. Austria will repeat its
presidential election in September, the previous one having ended in a
virtual tie, giving another chance to the far-right Freedom Party’s
Norbert Hofer. The following month, Hungary will hold a referendum,
initiated by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, on overturning EU-mandated
quotas on the resettlement of migrants. And, most important, Italy will
hold a referendum on constitutional changes that, if rejected, could
effectively jeopardize the country’s membership in the eurozone.
Italy currently is
the eurozone’s weakest link. Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s government
has become politically shakier, economic growth is anemic, the banks are
in need of capital, and EU fiscal targets will be hard to achieve
without triggering another recession. If Renzi fails – as is
increasingly possible – the anti-euro Five Star Movement (which recently
did well in municipal elections) could come to power as early as next
year.
Should that happen,
the Grexit fears of 2015 would pale in comparison. Italy, the eurozone’s
third-largest member, is too big to fail. But, with a public debt ten
times larger than Greece’s, it is also too big to be saved. No EU
program can backstop Italy’s €2 trillion ($2.2 trillion) of public debt
(135% of GDP).
Moreover, elections
in France, Germany, and the Netherlands in 2017 create additional
uncertainties as weak growth and high unemployment in most of Europe
boost support for anti-euro, anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, and
anti-globalization populist parties of the right (in the eurozone core)
and of the left (on the eurozone periphery).
At
the same time, Europe’s neighborhood is bad and getting worse. A
revisionist Russia has become more assertive not just in Ukraine, but
also in the Baltics and the Balkans. And the consequences of the
continuing turmoil in the Middle East are at least twofold: renewed
episodes of terrorism in France, Belgium, and Germany, which may over
time dent business and consumer confidence; and a migration crisis that
requires closer cooperation with Turkey, which itself has become
unstable since the botched military coup.
Until the coming
round of elections is over, the EU is unlikely to take any steps to
complete its unfinished monetary union by introducing more risk-sharing
and accelerating structural reforms to encourage faster economic
convergence. Given the current slow pace of reforms (and population
aging), potential growth remains low, while actual growth is on a very
moderate cyclical recovery that is now threatened by post-Brexit risks
and uncertainties. At the same time, high deficits and debts, together
with eurozone rules, constrain the use of fiscal policy to boost growth,
while the European Central Bank may be reaching the limits of what even
unconventional monetary policy can do to sustain the recovery.
The eurozone and the
EU are unlikely to disintegrate suddenly. Many of the risks they face
are on a slow fuse. And disintegration can of course be avoided by a
political vision that balances the need for greater integration with the desire for some degree of national autonomy and sovereignty over a range of issues.
But finding ways to
integrate that are democratic and politically acceptable is imperative.
Muddling through has resulted in an unstable equilibrium that will make
disintegration of the EU and the eurozone inevitable. Given the many
risks Europe faces, a new vision is needed now.
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