The
eurozone banks are borrowing heavily from the European Central Bank. Current borrowing
amounts to €1,31 trillion. They take the money at negative interest rates,
which means that they are paid to borrow. The negative rates are now around
minus 1 per cent. By doing so, the ECB is telling us that the funding needs are
enormous and that the crisis resulting from the pandemic is very deep.
The picture shows me three more things.
One,
that we have too many private banks in the eurozone. Some countries, with small
economies, have an incredible number of banking players. Tiny banks are
particularly vulnerable to shocks. They represent an additional financial risk
at a time of many hazards.
Two, most of the borrowing has been applied by
the banks in the purchase of government bonds. That means the ECB is using the
commercial houses – and paying them a fee – to finance exceptional and current
government expenditures. Public debt is growing fast and in a non-productive
way. Its growth goes hand in hand with the tremendous levels of debt of the enterprises
and of the poorer segments of the population. Overall debt, in some countries
of the zone, is reaching unsustainable levels.
Then,
my third point. Conservatives and extreme right parties and movements in richer
eurozone States are getting ready to challenge the policy options of the ECB, particularly
their easy money funding programmes. These challenges will combine political
activism with legal proceedings. As an example, the ultra-nationalist and
extremist German party Alternative for Germany has announced today they will
move a legal action against the ECB’s emergency programme. It would be a
mistake to underestimate this decision. That goes along the recent ruling of
the country’s Constitutional Court on a comparable matter. And it must be seen
in conjunction with the position that The Netherlands, Finland, and a few
others have taken, asking for conditionalities to be added to the Von der Leyen
rescue plan.
As
I see it, all this contains the seeds for further divisions in Europe. This
time, the division might mean severe rupture. It is the future of the Union that is
at stake.
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