GFTU BGCM Minutes 2017
without there being serious debt relief. The second thing you could do to solve
the problems of Europe would be for the Germans, for whom the system works
and their trade surplus is a mirror image of ours, so while we run a huge trade
deficit, the German trade surplus is something like 8% of GDP, which is
essentially sucking demand out of the Eurozone, so if you want the rest of the
Eurozone to work a bit better, the Germans should spend more money,
increase consumer spending, invest more in their infrastructure and run down
their surplus, which would be to the great benefit of the rest of the Eurozone or
you can just wait for a country much bigger than Greece to have a crisis and
that would precipitate the breakup of the euro. That is what I think may well
happen with Italy. I just do not think it is sustainable. I think they have had 4%
increase in living standards over the last two decades. That is an economy
which is not going to sustain itself inside the Eurozone and Italy exemplifies the
problem of the overvalued lire against the undervalued mark. In the old days
the Italians would have regained their competitiveness by devaluing and now
they cannot do that, so essentially they are losing competitiveness to the
Germans year after year after year and their economy is suffering and sooner
or later a party is going to come to power in Italy and say, “You know what,
we’ve had enough. We’ve had enough, we’re going to leave” and they will hold
a referendum and the referendum will be won and that will precipitate a crisis in
the Eurozone, I think, which will be incredibly messy, because there are people
who would say that there is only one thing worse than creating the Eurozone,
which is to destroy the Eurozone. I am a long term critic and I really do not like
the single currency, as you have probably realised, but you have to realise that
the break-up of the Eurozone would be like the subprime crisis all over again
except probably worse.
Jane, I totally agree with you, for too long in this country economic policy has
been about how can we boost demand? If you think about what Osborne did in
2012/13, he came into power saying that he was going to recalibrate the
economy, we were going to have better balanced growth, but he killed off the
growth that was there by spending cuts and he got to 2012/13, two years away
from a General Election, and realised that the economy was barely growing, so
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