The “Berlin Club”: Germany plans to pu t Europe on rations

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Sat Jul 17 06:41:57 CEST 2010


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The “Berlin Club”: Germany plans to put Europe on rations
17 July 2010

A contingency plan is being drawn up by the German government for stricken
countries unable to pay their debts to European banks. The plan being discussed
by a small cabal of political leaders and finance experts in Berlin would
effectively strip governments of the ability to determine broad areas of
economic and budget policy.

According to a recent report in Der Spiegel, a group of experts numbering fewer
than a dozen are drawing up a document at the request of German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble. The deliberations on the
new plan are being kept as low key as possible in order not to frighten money
markets.

In May, Germany agreed with other European governments and the IMF to set up an
unprecedented rescue fund of €750 billion (US$945 billion) to be used to
refinance the debts of those eurozone countries facing repayment difficulties.
The German chancellor is now concerned that the new plan being worked out in
Berlin could be regarded as a vote of no confidence in the European bailout
package. The euro fell on Monday when news of the plan was leaked.

Essentially, the Berlin plan foresees the restructuring of debt for ailing
European countries. The prime candidates are currently the economies of Greece,
Portugal and Spain. However, a number of other countries are also struggling to
repay their outstanding loans to foreign banks and could be next in line. In
exchange for the restructuring of their debts, the countries affected would be
expected to yield up broad powers over their economies.

In the words of the Berlin draft, this process “will require restrictions on
sovereign discretionary powers.” Effective control over budgetary policy would
then be assumed by “an individual or group of individuals familiar with the
regional characteristics of the debtor nation.” This “individual or group of
individuals” would be appointed by a committee of experts in Germany known as
the Berlin Club.

Describing the concept behind the German plan, Schäuble declared: “Whenever a
company files for bankruptcy, the creditors must relinquish a portion of their
claims. The same should apply in cases of national bankruptcy.”

Schäuble’s words should be examined closely. He is declaring that bankrupt
states will be treated in the same way as defunct companies—restructured,
stripped down and forced to hand over effective control of their budgets to an
outside agency.

In a commentary on the Berlin plan this week, the Financial Times noted that
where existing European provisions to stem the continent’s financial crisis have
failed, further measures are required.

On this basis, the Times writes, “There are some things to like in this idea”,
but “The snag with Germany’s idea is that it goes too far…. External individuals
would be appointed by a supranational resolution authority to safeguard the
debtor’s financial affairs, obliging it to surrender some sovereign powers.”
Such a plan “would place the debtor nation in a position of colonial submission.
If ever agreed to, this would be politically explosive…. When sovereigns
default, what is needed is a conference table not a torture chamber.”

The Financial Times is the voice of the international finance community and
unreservedly supports its interests. Even so, the paper feels pressed to warn
against the potential political consequences following the takeover of a foreign
economy in the manner now being discussed in Germany.

A number of important conclusions should be drawn from the plans being prepared
in Berlin.

Nearly three years after the finance crisis broke out, it is now entering a new
and potentially even more explosive stage. On July 23, the results of stress
tests on 91 European banks will be published. Although the tests have been drawn
up to disguise as much as they uncover, some financial analysts are predicting
that the statistics could reveal major problems in 10 to 20 banks. In this
event, further additional billions will be required to bail out these banks and
buy up their toxic assets.

Plagued by worries that the eurozone rescue package is insufficient to bail out
both ailing European banks and stricken economies, the German government is now
drawing up its own radical contingency plan for Europe.

The proposals for a Berlin Club will also only exacerbate national antagonisms
across the continent. As Der Spiegel notes: “Countries immediately or
potentially threatened by insolvency, like Greece, Portugal and Spain, will be
up in arms against the proposals from Berlin. Why should they agree to rules
that would make it easier for the remaining euro countries to deny them aid in
an emergency?”

The Berlin plan will also aggravate relations with Germany’s neighbours,
including France, which is already severely critical of the German government’s
response to the finance crisis and its increasing resort to unilateral initiatives.

Finally, the German plan reveals the complete inability of the ruling elite to
deal with the current economic crisis within the traditional framework of
bourgeois democracy. Recently, Schäuble admitted a truth no minister likes to
make public—governments take their orders from the financial markets. Now, in
order to appease the banks, Schäuble is demanding insolvent nations be handled
like bankrupt businesses, taken into receivership and made subject to rations.
This is a formula for financial autarchy and dictatorship.

Europe has already experienced rule by non-elected “councils of experts” in
recent years. Such councils were appointed by the political elite to implement
drastic austerity programmes in Hungary between 2009 and 2010 and the Czech
Republic until January 2010. The latest German plan goes one decisive step
further: the imposition of a semi-dictatorial regime by a group of non-elected
“experts” based in Berlin.

Discussions for the junking of established democratic procedures in favor of
authoritarian alternatives are well advanced within German and European ruling
circles. The working population of Europe must prepare its own alternative by
building an international socialist party pledged to the creation of the United
Socialist States of Europe.

Stefan Steinberg

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/jul2010/pers-j17.shtml

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