by Ben Sills
October 13, 2024
from
Bloomberg Website
Also from
HERE
Europe's relative
decline as a global player
risks becoming
unstoppable after decades of
warnings and sub-par
growth.
Photographer: Philipp
von Ditfurth/Getty Images
Apathy or pushback
after Mario Draghi's wake-up
call
to combat feeble productivity
growth
underscore how the region has
all
but given up trying...
The European project is
Approaching a Tipping Point
A combination of political paralysis, external threats and economic
malaise is threatening to end the European Union's ambitions to
become a global force in its own right - pushing member states
toward defending their own interests instead.
After decades of warnings and sub-par growth, the region's leaders
are suddenly confronting a barrage of evidence that decline is
becoming unstoppable.
-
France's europhile president has
surrendered veto power over his government to the far right
-
Germany's biggest carmaker is talking
about shuttering factories at home for the first time ever
-
US tech giants are turning their backs on
the European market because of its new restrictions on
artificial intelligence
Those developments all underpin the EU's
failure to act as a cohesive and dynamic economic bloc,
eroding its status and degrading its capacity to respond to a wide
range of threats from Chinese industrial policy to Russian military
aggression, or even a future antagonistic administration in the US.
Recent apathy or pushback by governments after former Italian
premier Mario Draghi's wake-up call for more investment and
common bonds to combat feeble productivity growth underscore how the
region has all but given up trying.
"If you wanted to be a geopolitical power,
then economic might is the key ingredient," says Guntram
Wolff, a professor at the Free University in Brussels and
senior fellow at the
Bruegel think tank.
"Productivity growth has just been a
disaster. Europe is still rich, but these differentials over 20
years have massive implications."
The fundamental problem is that the world is
experiencing the dramatic shifts of climate breakdown, demographic
change and the move to a post-industrial economy - all phenomena
where Europe's ability and willingness to respond are lagging.
The region's geopolitical rivals are seeking to exploit those
transformations, whereas too many of the EU's biggest members are
saddled with economic models that have failed to
deliver for too long - and restless voters who won't embrace
alternatives.
"Something is changing very, very
dramatically and very, very deeply in this world," former Polish
President Aleksander Kwasniewski said in an interview.
"We can't react correctly, because we are too
slow."
Of course, China is battling its own economic
slowdown, and the US is heading toward a potentially disruptive
election with its public finances on an unsustainable footing.
But both those nations have systems that
centralize decision making to a large extent, and generate vast
amounts of private or public capital for defense and investment in
cutting-edge technology.
Europe has None of those
Advantages - And that's Increasingly Evident
To be sure, living standards in its wealthy economies aren't on the
verge of collapse.
Some countries might well benefit from investment
or trade deals with the US, China or Russia. But the longer the
current trends persist, the greater Europe's vulnerability to
dramatic shocks will become.
"I really believe we are at risk," French
President
Emmanuel Macron said
earlier this month on a panel in Berlin.
"In the two to three years to come, if we
follow our classic agenda, we will be out of the market. I have
no doubt."
Those risks are starting to crystallize for the
EU already, as the bloc's dependence on the Chinese economy
increases even despite a growing number of disputes with Beijing.
Macron argues that the loss of cheap Russian fossil fuels since the
invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and
the advent of US President
Joe Biden's aggressive
subsidy-intense industrial policy, mark a rupture with the old model
that allowed Europe's export-based economies to flourish.
That adds to pre-existing challenges posed by the
rise of China and its own vast
manufacturing machine, and the global leap forward in technology
innovation that has largely bypassed the region.
"Europe is in danger," says David
Galbraith, a tech entrepreneur and investor who has spent
his career working on both sides of the Atlantic and perceives
the world economy to be in the midst of a transformation akin to
the industrial revolution.
"Look at what happened to countries that failed to
industrialize," he said.
"They didn't do very well."
The result threatens to cause damage that goes
beyond simply lagging in investment and productivity: the region's
leaders are losing faith in the European project.
It's not just euroskeptics like Hungary's
Viktor
Orban, a perennial thorn in the bloc's side.
Officials in core European countries are starting
to view the EU as an obstacle they need to get around - rather than
the source of prosperity and protection it has represented until
now.
French officials talk about forging deeper integration with a
smaller group of countries outside of the bloc's framework because
of Germany's longstanding opposition.
Polish officials cite similar initiatives on
defense.
The prime minister of Spain, traditionally one of
the most pro-EU states, is undermining its trade policy to court
Chinese investment.
"The geopolitics of division is really
working," says Jamie Rush, chief European economist at
Bloomberg Economics.
"China is directing Spanish policy to the EU
by throwing around a little bit of money. Orban is acting with
impunity. All of this undermines faith in the wider project -
not just for politicians, but also for investors."
EU Productivity Gap Allowed US to
Surge Ahead
Executives and investors are starting to show similar doubts about
Europe too, most prominently with recent decisions by Apple Inc. and
Meta Platforms Inc. to withhold their latest AI products from the EU
market - denting the bloc's claim to be the benchmark for global
standards.
Previously, most global corporations judged the single market as too
large and lucrative to forgo, despite burdensome regulation.
The US tech giants instead decided the EU's AI
rules were just too restrictive.
With that global political and corporate backdrop festering,
Draghi - the former European Central Bank president - set out a
blueprint for reviving the bloc in September, while chronicling in
minute detail the danger of the region's decay as an economic force.
Mario Draghi
following the
publication of his
European
competitiveness report in September.
Photographer: Simon
Wohlfahrt/Bloomberg
(Simon Wohlfahrt/Bloomberg)
The EU's relative decline has been unceasing over the quarter
century since monetary union.
An analysis by Bloomberg Economics shows
that the bloc's economy would be about €3 trillion ($3.3 trillion)
bigger if it had kept pace with the US - enough to boost the income
of the average worker by about €13,000 a year.
"The foundations on which we built are now
being shaken," Draghi said in the introduction to his report.
"This is an existential challenge."
His key recommendations for harnessing the EU's
financial power with more joint debt issuance were dismissed out of
hand by the Germans, leery of pooling more risk with other member
states.
Other priorities, such as the creation of a joint
capital market, have yet to gain momentum.
The report has largely fallen on deaf ears for now, leaving some
policymakers worrying that the region's window to act is closing
fast.
"It's obvious that Europe is falling behind
it's main trading partners, the US and China," Greek Finance
Minister Kostis Hatzidakis said in a Sept. 24 interview.
"If it doesn't take immediate action, the
decline will eventually become non reversible."
With assistance from Natalia Ojewska, Sylvia
Klimaki, Zoe Schneeweiss and Ania Nussbaum...
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