Angela Merkel’s mania for austerity is destroying Europe

The German Chancellor is terminating growth and pushing us towards a new Depression.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Which world leader poses the biggest threat to global order and prosperity? The Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? Wrong. Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu? Nope. North Korea’s Kim Jong-un? Wrong again.

The answer is a mild-mannered opera fan and former chemist who has been in office for seven years. Yes, step forward, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, whose solution to Europe’s financial crisis – or lack thereof – has brought the continent, and perhaps the world, to the edge of a second Great Depression. “World Bank warns that euro collapse could spark global crisis”, read the headline on the front of the Observer on 17 June.

With apologies to Mike Godwin and his eponymous law, Merkel is the most dangerous German leader since Hitler. Her eight predecessors – from Konrad Adenauer to Gerhard Schröder – presided over a manufacturing miracle at home and the rehabilitation of Germany’s reputation abroad. Under Merkel, however, the country finds itself isolated once again, loathed and feared in equal measure.

Cartoons in the newspapers of Germany’s neighbours have depicted the chancellor with a Hitler moustache or wearing a spiked, Bismarck-era military helmet. Commenting on the phenomenon, the columnist Jakob Augstein observed: “Her abrasive pro-austerity policies threaten everything that previous German governments had accomplished since World War II.” Merkel, Augstein rightly noted, is “a radical politician, not a conservative one”.

Neighbourhood bully

Merkel did not cause the financial crisis; that (dis)honour still belongs to the world’s “top” bankers. But her deficit fetishism and obsession with spending cuts are exacerbating the continent-wide debt-and-growth crises that threaten to upset more than six decades of pan-European unity and stability.

Then there is her bullying tendency. The majority of Greeks voted on 17 June either to delay or to cancel the EU-imposed austerity plan; up popped Merkel the next day to warn: “No departures can be made from the reform measures . . . We have to count on Greece sticking to its commitments” – and to slap down her foreign minister, who had suggested that the EU might give Greece more time to do cuts.

Merkel prefers to fiddle as Athens burns – and Madrid and Rome, too. Youth unemployment in Spain and Greece is hovering around 50 per cent; in Italy, a third of 15-to-24-year-olds are out of work. Riots beckon as Europe’s far right attracts new supporters. It is ironic that the leader of a nation paranoid about and offended by any mention of its Nazi period seems so relaxed about the rise of anti-austerity, neo-Nazi parties across the EU, from Marine Le Pen’s National Front in France to Greece’s black-shirted Golden Dawn to the fascists of Jobbik, now the third-largest party in Hungary’s parliament.

Merkel’s supporters argue that this is unfair. She is, they say, standing up for hard-working Germans who are weary of bailing out their feckless southern European neighbours. This is nonsense. First, figures released by the OECD show that the “lazy” Greek worker labours for 2,017 hours per year, which is more than the average in any other EU nation – and more than 40 per cent longer than the average German works. So a little less Schadenfreude, please.

Second, it isn’t just southern Europeans who are revolting against fiscal sadism. In May, Mer­kel’s Christian Democrats suffered a humiliating defeat in an election in Germany’s most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia. It was the party’s worst result in the state since the Second World War. Ordinary Germans are starting to acknowledge that austerity isn’t working.

But Merkel won’t budge. She is a purveyor of the conventional wisdom which says that the economy is like a household that can’t borrow or spend more than it earns. But economies are not households – or credit cards! – and common sense tells us that the solution to a downturn caused by a prolonged drought in demand is not to reduce demand further (by slashing spending). History teaches us that the Great Depression wasn’t helped by Herbert Hoover’s cuts in the US and, in pre-war Germany, it was mass unemployment, not hyperinflation, that propelled Hitler to power in 1933.

Fiscal self-flagellation

In a study published in 2010, analysts at the International Monetary Fund found just two cases, out of 170 examples across 15 advanced economies between 1980 and 2009, in which cuts in government spending turned out to be expansionary for the economy overall. They concluded: “Fiscal consolidation typically has a contractionary effect on output.”

Merkel’s insistence on fiscal self-flagellation, her unwillingness to countenance any fiscal stimulus by Germany or an easy-money policy by the European Central Bank, have pushed depressed countries such as Greece further into depression. The recent announcement at the G20 summit in Mexico that Merkel may now be willing to allow eurozone institutions to buy up the debt of crisis-hit member countries is too little, too late.

This isn’t just about geopolitics or macro­economics. Europe’s austerians have blood on their hands. Suicide rates are up by 40 per cent in Greece; the birthplace of western democracy is being remorselessly reduced to the status of a developing country. Meanwhile, Merkel, as the US economist Robert Kuttner wrote earlier this month, “continues to pursue Germany’s narrow self-interest . . . [because] Germany benefits from the rest of Europe’s suf­fering in two ways – expanded exports and dirt-cheap money”.

In denial and bent on austerity über alles, Merkel is destroying the European project, pauperising Germany’s neighbours and risking a new global depression.

She must be stopped. 

Mehdi Hasan is the author of the ebook “The Debt Delusion” (Vintage Digital, £3.74). For the New Statesman's position on the Eurozone crisis, read our leader here.

916 comments

John Bull's picture

This article is nonsense.
Besides the economic dispute about how to deal with the (more or less serious) crisis, it is absolutely intolerable for a (more or less serious) editor to write about a stateswoman in a way that is soley based on cultural prejudice.
BTW:I work in Germany and this country is nowadays one of the least (!) racist societies in the world. They put so much emphasis on dealing with the wrongs of the Third Reich. Nowhere in the world people are so sensetive to discrimination. Not in the US, not in France, not in Southern Europe and not us imperialists in the UK!!
They may be stiff, they may be humorless and they may worship austerity - but it the chain of argument and pictures of this article and some comments above are more than stupid.

FromGermany's picture

this is not true. germany is known for its mass deceptions. they manipulate on massive scale. the country is in mass hypnosis AGAIN. germans live in denial of truth. pride eyes prevent them to think. they are not honest. most germans are idiots defending buzzword ideologies without ever thinking about them. take "freedom of religion" for example. germans blindly defend ALL ideologies with this buzzword phrase. freedom of religion was introduced 313 with the edict of milan. it is based on genocide on jews and christians. and besides it is more than 1700 years old. evolution gone blind, ah? germans have a history against christians and jews. they defend fascistic ideologies like ISLAM with freedom of religion and other hypnotic goodfeel words. fact is: they are still into fascism. it's fascism evolved stupid! the EU is the fourth reich. look at the big picture and stop lying yourselves. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45D-t-8nWK8

Valdi's picture

I also live in Germany and I have experienced much more racism here, whether it be overt or covert, than I ever have in the UK. The national consciousness towards National Socialism is continually compounded and reignited by the presence of parties such as the NPD. The fact that anti-racism campaigners feel the need to take to the streets and hand out leaflets on public holidays, such as May Day, means, at least to me, that to some extent racism is ever present in German society. Moreover, a recent report, commissioned by the Bundestag, found that anti-Semitism has a 'significantly' hold in German society. Obviously this is to varying degrees and racism can never be truly eliminated, but Germany is, in my experience, much more racist on a daily basis than the UK. Please forgive any sweeping generalisations!

APS's picture

I assume you live there out of choice, and that your choice was influenced by the fact they have managed to build a more successful society and economy than both the Anglo Saxon model behind the financial crisis on the one and the PIIGS model of bloated state sectors,corruption, tax evasion and artificial housing booms on the other.

What people like you fail to understand is that everyone else is looking for Germany's help and not the other way round. When you rely on the help of others you have to accept its on their terms.

NLongJOhn's picture

no right wing party has ever made it into the Bundestag in the last 60 years. They have made it into a few State parliaments, but tend to disappear again. They are the expression of a few people who look for simple answers to their miserable status. Fascism is the expression of social problems.

Stephan Goldmann's picture

So, what exactly happend to you, when you lived here? That we meisure antisemitism and racism is one thing. Yes we do, because we have this history and are aware of it. Does Portugal meisure racism and antsemitism? Or the UK? Than we can compare the facts...

NPD is part of one (!) parliament in one state of germany. One! With a low percentage. It is not part of the Bundestag.

Are there no fascist in portugal? No friends of salazar? Or in Spain of franco? Has your country worked as well on your history as we did on ours? In Italia there is lega nord, in France le front national....

Racism and hate is everywhere - and there are even Nazi-Parties in the UK.

But to say, that we have roots of superiority and racism in us ... isn't that itself a kind of racism?

Valdi's picture

* 'significant'

Zenon's picture

Dear Mr. Mehdi Hasan,
I'm running short of money. If you don't want me to be ruined, please wire the money you got for this article on my account of the Berliner Commerzbank.

FromGermany's picture

They are up to building "The New Holy Roman Empire". Check this out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45D-t-8nWK8

bev41078's picture

The comment 'Suicide rates are up by 40 per cent in Greece; the birthplace of western democracy is being remorselessly reduced to the status of a developing country.' Maybe the Greeks should have been more responsible, democracy implies that citizens via the vote are accountable for the governace of their country. Greek citizens have accepted Goverments that cheated the books, did nothing regarding tax evasion or corruption. Now Greeks must pay the price. In Italy we pay Euro 16000 a month for a Goverment employee that got there because of her participation in sexual orgies with Mr Berlusconi.

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