Friday, December 9, 2011

The collapse of the European Articles of Confederation

In 1783, the Peace of Paris recognized the rebellious American Colonies as free and independent states.  The States banded together under the Articles of Confederation.

The problem is well known to anyone who studied history when the school system was still functioning: the central government was very weak, with the States having essentially veto power over the central government on most things of import.  The new government's script (paper money) soon came under considerable pressure from the George Soros types of the day.  The American solution was to replace the Articles with a new Constitution which, while flawed, has performed more or less adequately for a couple centuries.

Ignoring a vast unpleasantness in the 1860s, with lesser unpleasantnesses scattered elsewhere.

The European Union looks to have reached that point now.  Their "last chance" to solve the Euro crisis ended not with a plan, but with a plan to make a plan.  The reasons are interesting, but entirely unsurprising to a student of American history.

The E.U. is famously undemocratic, with repeated refusals to allow popular vote by the respective national populations, or by do-overs when those populations vote the "wrong" way.  This has been discussed everywhere, so I won't belabor this.  It's also not the source of their problem.

The problem is the European States.  The E.U. works under the principle of unanimity - all of the 27 member states have to ratify any decision of importance.  When times are good, and there's enough money going around to buy off the disgruntled, it worked tolerably well.  But now the ratchet has to go the other way, with everyone giving something up.

And so it's supposed to be a surprise that nobody can come up with a plan?

Of course they can't come up with a plan.  So the interesting question is: now what?  There really are only two alternatives:

1. The status quo ante option:  Europe worked tolerably well before financial integration, and would work tolerably well with everyone reverting to francs, lira, deutschemarks, etc.  Since more and more transactions are computerized (essentially everything from government transfers to cross border corporate purchases to Briton's vacation credit card charges in Tenerife), this would work much better than even a decade ago.  You don't have to give up the common market, just the common currency.

2. The American option:  Get a real constitution, a workable one.  That's what we did, where the States ceded real authority to the central government.

Option one is clearly workable, albeit with some pain.  It has the disadvantage of demolishing the vision of the European elite, but that's probably not seen as viable these days, even by those elite.

Option 2 has actually been floated during the crisis discussions.  All that talk of fiscal guarantees, where Germany can take over budgeting decisions for other countries is actually the "strong center, weak periphery" approach that we ourselves took - although it took until 1865 for us to realize it.

But here's the rub - they need unanimity.  They don't have it.  Clearly, the southern European countries don't want to run their economies like the northern Europeans run theirs.  Clearly the northern Europeans are no longer willing to subsidize their southern neighbors "for the greater good".

And so forget the lack of referenda - they were never in the cards anyway.  Watch the Finance Ministers who "need to have discussions with their governments" - away from the European summit.  That's the sign that the European States still view themselves as the original American States did, unwilling (for now) to cede authority to the center.

So get ready to party like it's 1784.  The song has a good rhythm, but I can't say that I care for the lyrics.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry but the EU is not the USA their is no common tongue, currency or democratic institutions. It is a fascistic dictatorship run by technocrats. If that is your idea of what's good for Europe then I say to you why don't you merge with Mexico because that would clearly be beneficial to both parties right? Or better still the North Koreans you have lots in common.
Europe is a powder keg waiting to explode the plebs want their freedom back.
Anyhow how would you like to be saddled with the French at least the Germans although humourless are punctual.

jetaz said...

I figure that it is going to fall to pieces and the Germans, and French are going to collect their debts from the Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, and Irish the same way governments have always collected debts. With tanks. And if they do, I hope that the US doesn't try to stop them.

Red said...

The american constitution only lasted till the 1860s when New England conquered and subjugated all the states. After which you really couldn't call nation a federation of states.

In the 1930s any real power and authority the states still had was subverted by FDR program of high taxes and funneling the money back to the states. This effectively made the federal government the commander and master of the states and destroyed the written version of the constitution.

Today we have an unwritten Constitution enforced by un-elected bureaucrats appointed by politicians in elections that don't even reach a 50% voter turn out. Less than 50% turn out is a strong indication that the voters do not view any of the candidates as legitimate.

So no, I don't wish this same thing on Europe.

Borepatch said...

Knottedprop, that's why I think it's going to go back to what it was in the 1990s. There isn't enough in common to hold it together, and convince people to cede power to the center.

NotClauswitz said...

The Germans are not entirely humorless, they have a lot of jokes about poop and athletic sex, and make fun of the Ost-Fresians (and lesser races). Euro-Plebs don't know what freedom is unless it includes two weeks in Majorca in the summer, they've been captive under a bureaucratic regime since before Napoleon (or Bismark), and the French didn't have an actual revolution, they had a brief rebellion and then a bloodthirsty civil war between the classes.
And what tanks? How many working tanks do the Germans have anymore - or are we going to let them use ours? And French tanks?? The main "French tank" is made by Cartier, it's a wristwatch. Hell, Vassar had a French tank for a while, one that fought at the battle of Chateau-Thierry in 1918...

Dave H said...

"It has the disadvantage of demolishing the vision of the European elite, but that's probably not seen as viable these days, even by those elite."

I'm curious to see if this is really true. A person with a vision is less susceptible to facts than the average shmoe. The response to "it's not working" is often "you're not trying hard enough." I don't doubt they -will- come to admit it's not working, I'm just not sure they're there yet. I may be mistaken.

I agree with you though - I think they'll go back to the devil they knew and split the Union rather than agree to central control.

Old NFO said...

The whole EU nonsense was put forward by and rammed down throats by Germany, in hopes of using the Euro to replace the dollar as the world standard. It was go along and get along till things started going South, NOW they are ALL in trouble...

SiGraybeard said...

Angela (Iron Balls) Merkel herself said that if the Euro fails, the European Union is dead. The Euro is like the recently dead in some bad horror movie, who's still moving around because he doesn't realize he's dead.

Interestingly, on Wednesday, one pundit, Stuart Varney, said there would be an announcement of some sort of plan by today that would make everyone feel all warm and runny inside, but that it would break down this weekend and by Monday, there would be more riots and streets afire in the European capitals. So far, he's right.

Anonymous said...

borepatch the problem is the absence of democratic accountability. If there truly was an elected assembly representing the peoples wishes not the show piece now then I think you might get most people on board with the whole EU thing. However unlike Ireland and the UK most of Europe is based around the Napoleonic law codes and can never be a truly free society. In such a society everything is forbidden unless specifically granted to you. The exact opposite of the Anglo spheres law codes where nothing is forbidden unless specifically mentioned by law. In the Napoleonic system you are guilty until proven innocent by a judge or panel of judges, in the anglo sphere you are innocent until proven guilty and will be judged by your peers.
Which s why my trigger finger itches when anyone mention the EU to me and I'm not a gun person myself, I have acute sensitive hearing.

Ken said...

Articles of Confederation. Liberum veto (and we should remember, I reckon, what happened to Poland in the 18th Century).

Never thought of it in those terms (and as one with Anti-Federalist/Whiskey Rebel sympathies, I confess to an instinctive resistance at some level), but maybe there's something to it.