Entretien | 25/10/2010 
image

On the eve of the European Council of 28th and 29th of October, Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa expresses his view on the way the EU has handled the crisis since the 2009 Spring European Council, on the existing proposals to reform the EU economic governance framework, on the priority areas in which the EU needs to take action and on the broader global G20 debate.

Where do we stand on the eve of the October European Council?

2010 is the year in which the crisis has come to Europe. This happened not because the causes of it were primarily European: on the contrary, Europe did not have big external imbalances, did not have a lack of domestic savings and had less extreme forms of speculative finance. It became European because, at a certain point in time, markets started to perceive that Europe lacked the instruments to manage it; that the Union, in a way, was not a union. Hence a collapse of confidence in the Economic and Monetary Union’s capacity to survive the storm. The immediate targets of speculation were the solvency of some member countries and the ability of some sovereign debtors to sustain themselves, but the ultimate target was the Union itself.

2010 is thus the year in which the EU and the EMU are called to contradict this sentiment and restore confidence by showing ability to act as a Union in front of a major challenge threatening its survival. In my June conversation I observed that, with its May-June decisions, the EU acted forcefully against the crisis: in May, by obtaining from Greece a serious adjustment package, by offering a very substantial financial support to Greece and by creating new instruments such as the European Financial Stability Fund; in June, by agreeing on a program of fiscal consolidation for all the member countries. These decisions refuted the critics of EU impotence. Yet, they were just emergency actions to stop the loss of confidence, not structural measures improving the crisis management and the crisis prevention ability of the EMU in a permanent way.

So, the risks are still there and the challenge is to move from emergency to structural corrections. The yardstick against which the Council’s deliberations will have to be judged is the needed structural reforms in the EU economic policy framework as compared to the emergency mechanisms of May-June...




Creative Commons License
This document is made available under a Creative Commons license.

Articles by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa :
    Send to a friend     Archives of this axis
The author
Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa died on 18th December 2010 in Rome. He was 70 years old. He was President of Notre Europe and Chairman of Promontory Europe. He was appointed by Greek Prime Minister Counsel for issues related to management of the economic crisis and public debt in the financial system on August 3, 2010. He was Chairman of the Trustees of the IFRS Foundation & International Financial Reporting Standards. He was Italian Minister of Economy and Finance (2006-08) and Chairman of the Ministerial Committee of the International Monetary Fund (IMFC, 2007-2008). He was a former Chairman of the Trustees of the IASC Foundation (International Accounting Standard Committee, 2005-2006). In 1998-2005 he was member of the first Executive Board of the European Central Bank. Previously he was Chairman of Commissione Nazionale per le Società e la Borsa (CONSOB, 1997-98), Deputy Director General of the Banca d'Italia (1984-97) and Director General for Economic and Financial Affairs at the Commission of the European Communities (1979-83). He has been Joint Secretary to the Delors Committee (1988-89), Chairman of the Banking Advisory Committee of the EC (1988-91) , Chairman of the Basle Committee on Banking Supervision (1993-97) and Chairman of the Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (2000-05). He graduated from the Luigi Bocconi University and has a M.Sc. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In view
Policy brief by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa | 21/05/2010
We could pretend to be unaware that the crisis threatened the European Union itself as long as only a bank, an area of industry, or a neighboring country were affected. However, when it hit a country like Greece, a member of the euro group, it became self-evident that while Europe may not be to blame, it could well become the great global crisis' main victim. [...] Thus Europe is once again facing both an opportunity and a risk at the same time. The Union today needs to complete its project, and thus it has an opportunity to do so.
See also
Interview by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa | 16/06/2010
On the eve of the June 2010 European Council, Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa expresses his opinion on the way the EU has handled the crisis since the Spring European Council, on the priority areas in which the EU needs to take action and on the definition of a European economic strategy.
Interview by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa | 24/03/2010
On the eve of the Spring European Council, Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa expresses his opinion on the EU response to the Greek crisis, the IMF role, the lessons to be learned from the crisis, the possibility to exclude a country from the eurozone and the EU economic governance. Document only available in French
Project
Research project