Not Dead Yet, Says Pohl - But Could It Be On Life Support?
Credit: LuxEuroCoins.
the country's Central Bank, and Chairman of its Central Bank Council from 1980 to 1991.
Born in Hanover, Lower Saxony, Pöhl worked as a sports reporter to help pay his way through the Georg August University of Göttingen.
A graduate economist, he became a Director at Munich's prestigious Ifo Institute for Economic Research.
In the 1960s he worked as an economic journalist in Bonn until the Social Democratic Party of Germany won the 1969 national election.
He then was employed by the Federal government's Economics Ministry and then the Finance Ministry.
During the 1970s and 1980s, Pöhl was the driving force behind German efforts to get Europe's rampant inflation under control,
and to lay the framework for broad monetary cooperation among industrialized countries.
He is often considered one of the fathers of the euro, which must certainly make the following interview he gave to Der Spiegel re the Euro-zone's sovereign debt crisis all the more painful for him.
Pöhl is currently a partner in Sal. Oppenheim Jr. & Cie., a German private investment bank, and member of the Advisory Board of the Carlyle Group.
He has also been a member of the influential Washington-based financial advisory body, the Group of Thirty since 1992.
While we certainly don't agree with everything Pöhl says here --
especially about the reality of speculators systematically attacking the credit ratings of perceived weak states,
nor the likelihood of a serious boycott of the bonds from those same countries --
he IS a systematic thinker, and does present a strong case against the "approach" that the EU has taken in dealing with the Greek crisis.
In this sense, we definitely agree with him that the approach taken is only going to make speculator attacks against the bonds of states' seen as weak --
a reality that, of course, he strenuously denies ;-) --
even MORE likely than MIGHT have been the case if they followed the strategy he outlines below.
Pöhl: I still have money in euros, but the question is justified. There is still danger that the euro will become a weak currency.
Pöhl: The foundation of the euro has fundamentally changed as a result of the decision by euro-zone governments to transform themselves into a transfer union.
That is a violation of every rule.
In the treaties governing the functioning of the European Union, it explicitly states that no country is liable for the debts of any other.
But what we are doing right now, is exactly that.
Added to this is the fact that, against all its vows, and against an explicit ban within its own constitution,
the European Central Bank (ECB) has become involved in financing states. Obviously, all of that will have an impact.
Pöhl: The euro has already sunk in value against a whole list of other currencies.
This trend could continue, because what we have basically done is guarantee a long line of weaker currencies that never should have been allowed to become part of the euro.
Pöhl: I don't believe that. Of course there were alternatives.
For instance, never having allowed Greece to become part of the euro zone in the first place.
Pöhl: All the same, it was a mistake. That much is completely clear.
I would also have expected the (European) Commission and the ECB to intervene far earlier.
They must have realized that a small, indeed a tiny, country like Greece, one with no industrial base, would never be in a position to pay back €300 billion worth of debt.
Pöhl: ... which that country has even less chance of paying back.
Without a "haircut," a partial debt waiver, it cannot and will not ever happen.
So why not immediately? That would have been one alternative.
The European Union should have declared half a year ago -- or even earlier -- that Greek debt needed restructuring.
Pöhl: I do not believe that. I think it was about something altogether different.
Pöhl: It was about protecting German banks, but especially the French banks, from debt write offs.
On the day that the rescue package was agreed on, shares of French banks rose by up to 24 percent.
Looking at that, you can see what this was really about -- namely, rescuing the banks and the rich Greeks.
Pöhl: I believe so. They could have slashed the debts by one-third.
The banks would then have had to write off a third of their securities.
Pöhl: I believe the opposite would have happened.
Investors would quickly have seen that Greece could get a handle on its debt problems.
And for that reason, trust would quickly have been restored.
But that moment has passed. Now we have this mess.
Pöhl: It did indeed happen with the stroke of a pen -- in the German parliament as well.
Everyone was busy complaining about speculators and all of a sudden, anything seems possible.
Pöhl: No. A lot of those involved are completely honorable institutes --
such as banks, but also insurance companies and investment- and pension funds --
which are simply taking advantage of the situation. That's totally obvious. That's what the market is there for.
Pöhl: No. They should be investing their investors' money as securely as possible.
Should the credit rating of a debtor worsen because that debtor has been living beyond his means for years,
then it is completely rational for these institutions to get rid of these bonds -- because they have become insecure.
Then other investors buy them at a lower price. They receive a higher return, but also have greater risk.
That is totally normal market behavior.
Pöhl: Yes, and that is harmful.
It means that the basic balancing mechanism in the market economy is out of sync.
Pöhl: Of course that's possible. In fact, it's even plausible.
Pöhl: The whole mechanism of the European community will change.
The EU is a federation of nations, not a federal republic.
But now the European Commission will have a lot more power and more authority as well as the potential to interfere in national budget law.
That, however, is constitutionally problematic in Germany.
Pöhl: Yes, that is the logical next step of our union, but we must bear the burden.
You only have to look at what it is going to cost us Germans.
I would have preferred that things hadn't gone quite this far.
Pöhl: The president of the Bundesbank, Axel Weber, is in a bind.
He has been issuing warnings about these kinds of developments for some time and he continues to do so.
But of course it is difficult to keep this up in the face of a political majority.
Pöhl: That may also play a role.
Pöhl: It depends on what one wants to achieve.
If the point was merely to calm the markets temporarily, then yes.
But that can't be the only reason.
Pöhl: Absolutely.
Just imagine if claims were made.
Germany would have to pay countless billions, which is dreadful.
And, it could lead to the euro becoming a weak currency.
Pöhl: No, no, we have not gone that far quite yet.
In my opinion, the euro is in no danger.
Perhaps one of the smaller countries will have to leave the currency union.