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Opinions - 11.10.2022 - 00:00 

The Euro area is now very different from just a few years ago

The concept of a common European currency was meant to unite a continent that had been torn by wars for centuries. Since the 1990s, the European monetary system has changed fundamentally. By Dr Stefan Legge.
Source: HSG Newsroom

11 October 2022. In 2019, a research paper in the journal Nature Human Behaviour empirically showed that many events that will one day be viewed as historic attract little attention at the time. It appears that this is true for the European monetary system as well. 

When the concept of a common European currency gained traction in the 1990s, the paramount idea was to unite a continent that for centuries had been torn by wars. The Euro was part of a long-term European piece project. And it did unite in the beginning: The spreads between bonds from Italy or other Mediterranean countries and those from Germany came down to zero.

Decade of harmony

After its launch in 1999, the common currency enjoyed about a decade of calm. Then things changed dramatically. The global financial crisis and the European debt crisis exposed the currency’s weak spot: Each member state was effectively indebted in a foreign currency. That is different from other parts of the world. No one would expect, for example, Japan or the United States to default as they could always print any amount needed. There is a risk of inflation and currency devaluation, but no risk of default. 

The Euro area was notably different. Italy, Greece, or Spain could actually default. This insolvency risk raised spreads on government bonds. Things cooled down only when then ECB president Mario Draghi announced to do “whatever it takes to preserve the Euro”. With the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) effectively being able to buy unlimited amounts of bonds, there was no risk of default anymore. The so-called Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) scheme never needed to be utilized. Its sheer existence calmed down investors. The OMT framework came, however, with strict conditionality to discipline Euro member governments. 

The COVID-19 effect

But then came COVID-19 and the Euro system changed fundamentally. For the first time in its history, all member states ran a public deficit in excess of 3 percent of GDP. The risk of public default was back in the news. It was inflamed when Christine Lagarde, current head of the ECB, said in March 2020: “We are not here to close spreads.” In response to the surging interest rates on Italian debt, Lagarde quickly changed her position. In fact, one could argue that the ECB had adopted a "new mandate” to reduce interest rate spreads. This became official in the summer of 2022 with the introduction of the anti-fragmentation tool named Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI). 

Is this just more of the same or different from the past? No doubt, the European monetary system has changed fundamentally.

First, the ECB now distorts relative prices. The new TPI enables the ECB to buy debt whenever “a deterioration in financing conditions [is] not warranted by country-specific fundamentals”. This implies that the central bank buys bonds selectively, unlike in the past when the ESCB bought bonds proportional to how much weight each Euro member brought to the common currency. The latest data indicate that the central bank has sold maturing German and French bonds and used the freed-up funds to purchase Italian and Spanish debt.

Second, the strict conditionality was dropped during the COVID-19 crisis. Under the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) the ESCB bought about €1.7 trillion of bonds, equivalent to 14 percent of the Euro area GDP. All the public borrowing during the pandemic was financed by the printing press – with little conditions attached. And purchases in the TPI “are not restricted ex ante”. This resembles a blank check to buy public debt.

A new generation

Third, the EU now issues its own debt through the €750 billion Next Generation EU scheme. After a decade long debate, the Eurobonds are here with us. To keep interest rates low, European institutions tap into Germany’s credibility.

The broader public has barely noticed these fundamental shifts as other topics dominated the news. On top, there is a sense of TINA (there is no alternative). The ECB, having lost much of its credibility, faces a catch-22: if it stopped buying bonds, there would be the risk of another European debt crisis. Yet, if it continues buying bonds, public deficits and inflation remain at elevated levels.

Playwright Arthur Miller said, "An era can be said to end when its basic illusions are exhausted." The common European currency has reached that point.  It is very different from what it was before 2020. And while few media documented it, financial markets recognized the fundamental change. The currency has started to depreciate severely against the US Dollar or the Swiss Franc.

This article originally appeared in the October 2022 edition of The Banker. Since 1926, the magazine has been the world’s premier banking and finance resource for the financial industry.

Dr. Stefan Legge is Lecturer and Economist at the University of St.Gallen.

Image: Adobe Stock / Christian

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