What's happening in Europe

 

Europe Trade Specialists 

 

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Sick man of Europe is the Eurozone with feckless Greece, thrifty
Finland suffering alike

 


WHILE North America appears to be in a state of hesistant, if not fitful recovery, the Sick man of Europe - the Eurozone itself - seems to languishing is a state of ennui unable to rouse itself from its slump.

To a great extent, its power to do that will determine the fate of shipping, and the mega-ships that now crowd the trade lanes between the Far East and Europe.

Neil Irwin, writing in the New York Times, raises interesting point about European problem, starting with Greece and its spendthrift ways, but quickly coming to focus on Finland, which despite its unquestioned thrifty virtues has suffered similar outcomes as its feckless southern neighbour.  

Finland is, in many ways, the anti-Greece, writes Mr Irwin. Like Greece, it is geographically far from the core Western European powers of Britain, France and Germany.

And like Greece, it uses the Euro. But unlike Greece, it is a model of sound governance and responsible use of debt.

Yet Finland's economy is also not doing so great, with an 11.8 per cent unemployment rate and with contracting GDP in each of the last three years.

A number of American commentators have looked at Finland's current economic troubles as a clear sign that what ails the Eurozone is far deeper than profligate spending by the Greeks.

Paul Krugman has made that case in The New York Times, Tim Worstall in Forbes and Matt O'Brien in The Washington Post.

Alexander Stubb, the Finnish finance minister, thinks they're wrong. That's what he said at a waterside restaurant in Espoo, the Helsinki suburb where he lives. His comments - a vigorous defence of what the euro has done for Finland - help explain why elite opinion about the euro is so different on the two sides of the Atlantic.

Mr Stubb says one must look at a longer time horizon to evaluate the euro. There are three main causes of Finland's economic weakness, he said.

Nokia has gone from the world's largest mobile phone maker to an afterthought, costing thousands of Finnish jobs and many more when its supply network is counted.

Demand for paper, another major export, has fallen. And the economy of neighboring Russia, with which Finland has deep trade ties, has collapsed because of plummeting oil prices and Western sanctions.

Because Finland has used the euro since its inception, the value of its currency cannot adjust in ways that would cushion the overall Finnish economy from those shocks.

If Finland still had its old currency, the markka, it would have fallen in value on international markets. Suddenly other Finnish industries would have had a huge cost advantage over, say, German competitors, and they would have grown and created the jobs to help make up for those lost because of Nokia and the paper industry and Russian trade.

To evaluate the euro, you can't just look at what he calls a current "rough patch" for the Finnish economy. You have to look at a longer time horizon. In his telling, the integration with Western Europe - deepened trade and diplomatic relations, making Finland both more powerful on the world stage and its industries better connected to the rest of the global economy. That made its people richer.

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