ACTIVTRADES: Europe on the brink

By Ricardo Evangelista

ActivTrades

Back in April, Emanuel Macron ominously said that Europe (referring to the European Union (EU) was mortal and could die. What the French president meant by this was that the EU, and its free circulation of goods, capital and citizens, was not guaranteed to last forever and requires nurturing.

The European project rests on several pillars, including varying degrees of economic, political and defence integration that, in turn, require trust and a levelled playing field between the various member countries. This integration between past rivals has allowed, since its inception, almost eight decades of prosperity and peace in a part of the world that has seen some of the deadliest conflicts in human history.

Since his April statement, Mr Macron has done his best to go against his own advice. Disappointed by the results of the EU parliamentary poll in France, which gave a resounding victory to the nationalistic RN party, and with the president’s own political force losing on a large scale, Mr Macron played an all-or-nothing move by calling a general election. At the time of writing this article, the first round of the vote was approaching, with polls pointing to an RN victory, with the left-wing alliance coming second. Both these forces are euro-sceptic and, in good populistic fashion, promise to increase public spending while cutting taxes.

If predictions are right and the RN wins the election, France could be on a collision course with the financial markets, the European institutions and the other major nation in the block, which is Germany.

Running a budget deficit of 5.5 per cent and public debt-to-GDP ratio of 110 percent, France is already in breach of the EU’s fiscal discipline rules. The proposed measures from the poll favourites, RN, entail increasing public spending even more while tax revenues could end up falling. This is a scenario likely to trigger a fiscal crisis.

Financial markets have already sounded the alarm, anticipating what threatens to be a new crisis at the heart of Europe. In the aftermath of the election announcement, the euro devalued against other major currencies, European stocks fell and the interest rate on French public debt increased considerably.

The institutions in Brussels are also likely to react negatively to a fiscally delinquent French state. The problem here is that France is not Greece. In the last eurozone crisis, Greece was forced by the EU to meet fiscal targets by adopting painful austerity measures under threat of being kicked out of the euro. France being expelled from the euro club is unthinkable. Such a scenario would almost certainly dictate the end of the single currency and, possibly, of the European Union - at least in its current form.

Finally, a France governed by Eurosceptics could empower similar movements elsewhere, further destabilising the EU’s balance and ability to act as a bridge and aggregator for the continent. Not to mention the likelihood of increasing the friction between Paris and Berlin. Opening up this geopolitical window could reawaken tensions between two nations that have not always been the best of friends.

In any case, Emmanuel Macron has played his gambit. All that can be done now is to await the results of a two-round election whose impact is likely to be felt beyond the nation’s borders, hoping that France and the EU avoid, or find - as they have done in the past -  the way out of a crisis that would not be good for anybody interested in global peace and prosperity. 

Comments

carltonr61 says...

Six EU countries — Italy, Finland, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia and the Czech Republic — have hard-right parties in government according to Politico. After Czeck Republic and Hingary, France had now joined the club. Populations across the Whole Europen board are against Left Wing issues of being childless, pro sexual-a-go-go, and Russia phobia through hybrid warfare and sanctions to colonize The Russian Federation as the Anglo-Saxons split then owned Africa. All in the EU NATO and Wall Street wet dreamed financially on the ownership then profiteering of Russian massive Natural Resources. The Left Wing EU invested 20 years of capital in defeating Russia using Ukraine, but they are at the brink of either nuclear war or still total collapse

Posted 1 July 2024, 5:20 p.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

Incompetent spend-spend-spend Macron ran France right into the ground. And to think Macron all along thought that Germany would be stupid enough to promote the EU financing his corrupt government's reckless financial behaviour that greatly enriched many of his favoured cronies in the French private sector.

Posted 1 July 2024, 6:49 p.m. Suggest removal

hrysippus says...

Russia must be investing huge amounts of money supporting and promoting extreme right wing political .parties in the EU. Russia successfully coerced the British electorate to, narrowly, vote to leave the EU. Russia does not want a united European opposition to its expansionist plans. The country is very active on social media spreading its nationalist rhetoric and some people just believe it all. Sad. Sigh.

Posted 2 July 2024, 9:23 a.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

Russia has an economy the size of Texas. The real financial power house here is Communist China which is using Russia, Iran and North Korea to outflank the US government on just about every front on the world stage today. Many nations and smart super-wealthy investors around the world know that the US is in serious financial trouble and has become almost as feeble as Biden himself as it continues to roll down hill at an increasing pace. Most Americans will never know what hit them until it's much too late to do anything about it. Sadly, all of this is going to have dire consequences for our small tourism dependent nation as it continues to unfold.

Posted 2 July 2024, 1:17 p.m. Suggest removal

hrysippus says...

Exposed2Fox writes that Russia has an economy the size of Texas. For those living in the real world the GDP of Russia was $2.0 trillion (nominal; 2023 est, The GDP of Texas in 2023 was 85,423 beef cattle, (my estimate)

Posted 2 July 2024, 5:41 p.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

And the link below shows the current annual GDP of Texas is $2.4 trillion which no doubt includes the shortfall in your cattle estimate.

The Great Russian Bear is nowhere near as big or as much of a global threat as the propagandists and disseminators of misinformation in the US government would have all of us believe.

https://comptroller.texas.gov/economy/f…

Posted 2 July 2024, 6:41 p.m. Suggest removal

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