The
Greek Crisis and an Imperfect EU
UPSC GS-II Mains
Topic: - India and its neighborhood -
relations
Question
1) “The crisis in Greece does not in itself pose an economic risk for Indian
investors and traders, but a Europe-wide crisis would.” Elaborate. (200 Words)
If you
find the below Article, you see very long article but you should read question
first and what question is asking. then elaborate in 200 words only as the
question.
The
European Union (EU) was never a union. Greece has called the bluff. At the
heart of the economic crisis in the EU is a political failure. The inability,
indeed the unwillingness, of the member nations of the “Union” to move beyond a
single market and a monetary union to create a political entity. The economic
crisis in Greece is a manifestation of that political failure across the EU.
National politics have worsted regional economics.
Imagine
an India in which a less developed State was on the verge of default and
neither New Delhi nor any of the more developed States were willing to step in
and help. The success of the Indian Union rests on the fact that the developed
regions of the country, and the Union government, have taken upon themselves
the responsibility of offering a safety net to the less developed regions. All
federal systems and continental nations are built on this foundation of
regional interdependence and mutual support facilitated by federal political
systems.
A
commentary on EU
The
failure of the EU’s more developed nations, especially Germany, to provide such
a safety net to a less developed one like Greece has brought the EU to the
brink of unravelling. This situation has been long in making.
The
distance between Brussels, Berlin and Athens was brought home to me 20 summers
ago when I opted for Athens as a destination for my travels as a guest of the
European Union Visitors Programme (EUVP). The head of the Delegation of the EU
in Delhi at the time, a French diplomat, suggested politely that I drop Athens
and opt for Paris instead. The EUVP invitee was allowed to visit two European
capitals of choice apart from the visit to Brussels. Berlin and Paris are the
heart of Europe, she told me. Why waste time visiting Athens?
Since I
had been to Paris many times and never to Greece, I insisted on Athens. When
the ambassador of Greece to India found out that I was under pressure to visit
Paris rather than Athens, he threw a mighty fit causing a diplomatic brouhaha
in Brussels. Two decades later, the relationship between Europe’s major powers
and its peripheral nations has not changed much.
Germany
has behaved much in the same way that developed States in India like to when it
comes to the question of transferring funds to less developed States. The
former usually sermonise the latter on the virtues of industriousness and hard
work and blame them for their backwardness. The latter demand all manner of
special assistance. The Indian union has the political instruments to deal with
such issues. The EU doesn’t.
Through
the 1990s and well into the 2000s, EU enthusiasts from various European,
especially German, think tanks would often lecture Indians about the virtues of
regional cooperation and hold up the EU as an example for South Asia to
emulate. The fact is that long before the EU tried its experiment with
unification, India did. The reason why India stuck together and the EU is now
facing the prospect of “Grexit” and “Brexit” (the exit of Greece and Britain)
is because the Indian Union became not just an economic and political union but
adopted the principle of federal financing administered by a democratically
elected Union government.
The absence of such a principle of internal safety net for an
imploding economy, and the weakness of the EU’s political institutions, has
brought the EU to this brink. How the citizens of Greece would view their
future and how much importance they attach to their membership of the EU to
safeguard their future will be determined this weekend when Greece conducts a
referendum.
Future
of Europe
Two
exogenous factors have come to shape the Western response to an unfolding Greek
tragedy. First, the rise of Germany as a geoeconomic power and, second, the
return of Russia as a geopolitical player. Over the years, a more economically
successful and prosperous Germany has asserted itself, projecting its post-war
“geoeconomic’” power to acquire political influence. The eastward expansion of
the EU has further facilitated this.
Germany’s
ascendance within Europe was shaped by two additional factors. First, the
relative decline of other European economies, especially the economies of
southern Europe.
Second,
the induction into the EU of several east and north European economies worried
about the resurgence of Russia as a geopolitical player. Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s aggressive leadership has sent a shiver down Europe’s spine
and many of East Europe’s smaller nations.
Germany
and multipolar world
While
southern Europe, including Italy, worries more about growing German
assertiveness within Europe, northern and eastern Europe worry about a
re-assertive Russia. It is against this background that Greece’s nationalist
and Leftwing leadership reached out to Russia for help and Mr. Putin was quite
happy to step into Europe’s troubled waters. Indeed, the fact that Greek voters
opted for a Leftwing leadership has added a new dimension to the resolution of
the crisis, given concerns in Germany and the United States about rising
left-wing and right-wing forces in Europe and the decline in the influence of
centrist political parties. Therefore, the stakes are high. The crisis in
Greece is not just about sovereign default. It is about the future of Europe.
There is an interesting parallel between the Asian financial
crisis of the late 1990s and the European crisis today. In 1997-98, when
Indonesia, South Korea and Thailand faced a payments and debt crisis, it was
the political fallout of that crisis, and the failure of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) to help the economies in trouble, that altered Asian
geopolitics. While the IMF sermonised Korea and dictated to Indonesia, China
stepped in and bailed out Thailand. The IMF has not been able to return to Asia
since, while China has set up its own regional financial institutions.
Russia
does not have the deep pockets to be a China to beleaguered Greece, but the IMF
and Germany’s myopic policy response to Greece’s social crisis has set in
motion political responses that could have similar long lasting impact on big
power equations within Europe and beyond. In Greece it is not just the IMF but
also Europe’s own regional financial institutions that have been found wanting.
Germany, it would appear, would not mind the exit of Greece, and
maybe even Italy, because it has acquired a more loyal hinterland to its east.
This could well mark the beginning of a new “Pax Germanica”. The crisis in
Europe is also a test for the U.S. Having fathered the post-war trans-Atlantic order,
the U.S. is unable or unwilling to step in and preserve the EU in its present
form.
When
the dust settles in Europe the emerging multipolar world will come to stay. If
the Asian financial crisis consolidated Chinese power in Asia, the European
financial crisis will consolidate German, and perhaps Russian, power in Europe.
Economic crises do have geopolitical consequences.
Developed
economy risk
The
crisis in Greece does not in itself pose an economic risk for Indian investors
and traders, but a Europe-wide crisis would. Even as the Indian economy begins
to recover from the consequences of India’s own bad policies it may face the
risk of dealing with those of Europe. There may be some business opportunities
for Indian investors arising out of the decline in asset valuations in Europe,
but caution would be the better part of velour.
Over the past five years, there has been a flight of capital
from India to Europe. Many Indian companies have found investing in Europe a
better proposition than investing at home. What the Greek crisis shows is that
even in developed market economies there can be government failure, if not
market failure. Indian businesses that seek foreign markets and external
investment opportunities must invest more in understanding the nature of
political risk around the world. Far too many analysts have worried about
“emerging market risk” to have bothered about “developed economies’ risk”. This
now deserves attention.
What
the Greek crisis also brings home to Indian policymakers is the importance of
responsible economic management at home and the need for creating multiple
interdependencies externally. Greece’s weakness is that few in the world worry
about its economy capsizing. India was in that spot in 1990-91 and, mercifully,
is no longer in that worrisome place. But the debate on the extent of global
interdependency that India should create and maintain continues. The lesson
from Greece is not that a country should isolate itself from the global economy
but that it should carefully manage its relations with the regional and world
economy.
(Sanjaya
Baru is Director for Geo-economics and Strategy, International Institute of
Strategic Studies, and Honorary Senior Fellow, Centre for Policy Research, New
Delhi.)
Germany
has behaved much in the same way that developed States in India like to when it
comes to the question of transferring funds to less developed States… India has
the political instruments to deal with such issues. The EU doesn’t.
The IMF
and Germany’s response to Greece’s social crisis has set in motion political
responses that could have long lasting impact on big power equations within
Europe and beyond. In Greece, it is the IMF and Europe’s regional financial
institutions that have been found wanting
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