24小时热门版块排行榜    

Znn3bq.jpeg
查看: 377  |  回复: 2

gongtianyu

铁杆木虫 (正式写手)

[交流] Eurobonds without Fear

The day of the Eurobond may be near. What was once a quack’s idea for resolving Europe’s financial crisis is now the only reliable way to save the euro. Having their bonds purchased by the European Central Bank did not keep Greece, Ireland, and Portugal from needing a bailout. It will not save Spain and Italy, either.

But Spain and Italy are too large to be bailed out. The new European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) is not up to the task. And enlarging the EFSF to an appropriate size would require massive additional French borrowing, which could well place France itself at the receiving end of a speculative attack.

This is where Eurobonds come in. The five countries in trouble will need to place tens of billions of euros in new debt and roll over even larger amounts of old debt. Markets long ago stopped buying bonds issued by Greece, Ireland, and Portugal, and might soon stop buying paper issued by Italy and Spain – or do so only at prohibitive interest rates. But markets would happily gorge on bonds backed by the full faith and credit of the eurozone.

Eurobonds would cut borrowing costs for the European Union’s two large troubled members. And it would spare German and other taxpayers from the EU’s solvent northern countries from having to fund yet another bailout of a southern member state.

The debate about whether and how to introduce Eurobonds has focused on the appropriate limits on issuance. With no limit, profligate countries could go on a spending spree at the expense of thriftier ones. After the advent of the euro, the eurozone’s Mediterranean members enjoyed a lending boom while piggybacking on Germany’s low interest rates. There is understandable reluctance to allow that to happen again.

But arguments about whether the limit should be 60% of GDP or more miss a larger point. Nineteen years of experience with the Maastricht Treaty, which created both the EU and the euro, has shown convincingly that such limits are unenforceable. Countries with the clout to flaunt the limits will do so whenever it is politically convenient. And, if a debt crisis is near, exceptions will be found, waivers will be issued, and buyers for the additional debt will be lined up.

So the question is not what to do when debt gets near its limit, however high or low. It is how to prevent debt from getting near that limit in the first place, except in very extreme and unusual circumstances. And for that, you need fiscal rules.

A fiscal rule is any pre-specified mechanism that constrains spending or the deficit. According to a study by the International Monetary Fund, 80 countries around the world use some kind of fiscal rule.

But not all fiscal rules are created equal. If too loose, a rule is merely ornamental. If too tight – a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget, for example – the rule could create rather than solve problems: think of the economic and political chaos that would ensue if Spain, with unemployment at 21%, were forced to eliminate its huge fiscal deficit overnight.

Sweden and Chile are almost poles apart geographically, but both have used sophisticated fiscal rules successfully. Chile sets a target for its cyclically-adjusted fiscal balance – that is, the balance that emerges after accounting for the deviations in commodity prices and domestic output from their trends.

When commodity prices boomed in the middle of the last decade, the rule called for huge budget surpluses – which Chile achieved, repaying almost all of its public debt and accumulating a sizable rainy-day fund. When the financial crisis came, Chile was able to mount an aggressive fiscal stimulus without so much as a hiccup from financial markets.

Of course, no fiscal rule can account for all contingencies. That is why you need an independent fiscal council to administer it, just as you need an independent central bank to pursue an inflation-targeting monetary rule. Agreeing on the composition of such a council for Europe would be hard, but no harder than it was to agree on the makeup of the ECB’s board.

Eurobonds plus fiscal rules: this formula is the euro’s best hope for salvation. Unfortunately, another crisis or two might be necessary before European leaders consider it seriously.
回复此楼

» 猜你喜欢

已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

小木虫(沙发+1,金币+0.5):恭喜抢个沙发,再给个红包
2楼2011-08-21 23:04:34
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

小木虫(金币+0.2):抢了个小板凳,给个红包
3楼2011-08-21 23:09:10
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖
相关版块跳转 我要订阅楼主 gongtianyu 的主题更新
普通表情 高级回复 (可上传附件)
最具人气热帖推荐 [查看全部] 作者 回/看 最后发表
[考研] 中药学调剂 初试324 +3 洋甘菊、 2026-04-10 5/250 2026-04-10 23:59 by 洋甘菊、
[考研] 263能源动力专硕求调剂 +3 加大号饭盒袋 2026-04-10 3/150 2026-04-10 22:23 by 286640313
[考研] 368求调剂 +3 17385968172 2026-04-10 3/150 2026-04-10 20:12 by 电子奥德彪
[考研] 求调剂 +5 不会飞的鱼@ 2026-04-10 5/250 2026-04-10 19:07 by chemisry
[考研] 材料专业344求调剂 +16 hualkop 2026-04-10 21/1050 2026-04-10 17:28 by laoshidan
[考研] 289求调剂 +4 L1ttleTiger 2026-04-04 4/200 2026-04-09 19:53 by xiayizhi
[考研] 085400 328分 求调剂 +8 喂你一个大橙子 2026-04-09 12/600 2026-04-09 19:20 by zl8213662
[考研] 材料专硕初试分332一志愿西北工业大学, +12 故人?? 2026-04-09 12/600 2026-04-09 18:34 by Ccclqqq
[考研] 367求调剂 +10 hffQAQ 2026-04-09 10/500 2026-04-09 18:06 by lijunpoly
[硕博家园] 有没有学校材料专业收跨调(一志愿085410) +5 momo(上岸版) 2026-04-06 8/400 2026-04-09 15:07 by only周
[考研] 化学工程与技术专业一志愿哈工程 291分B区 国家级大创负责人 有一作论文 +13 Emmy~ 2026-04-09 13/650 2026-04-09 14:47 by only周
[考研] 275 求调剂 +8 Lei812514 2026-04-07 8/400 2026-04-08 12:46 by chemisry
[考研] 318求调剂 +5 李青山山山 2026-04-07 5/250 2026-04-07 18:24 by 蓝云思雨
[考研] 285求调剂 +15 哦呦呼o 2026-04-04 17/850 2026-04-06 23:02 by chenzhimin
[考研] 346分的生物与医药08600求调剂 +6 常雨阳上岸 2026-04-05 7/350 2026-04-06 12:36 by lys0704
[考研] 377求调剂 +6 by.ovo 2026-04-05 6/300 2026-04-05 22:18 by dongzh2009
[考研] 308求调剂 +3 终不似从前 2026-04-05 3/150 2026-04-05 20:07 by 啵啵啵0119
[考研] 考研调剂 +3 mcbbc 2026-04-04 3/150 2026-04-05 10:03 by barlinike
[考研] 320求调剂 +3 一样圆 2026-04-04 3/150 2026-04-04 22:29 by 啵啵啵0119
[考研] 可跨专业调剂 +3 周的得地 2026-04-04 6/300 2026-04-04 22:21 by barlinike
信息提示
请填处理意见