April 20, 2024

In Bond Case, German Court Debates Fate of Euro

Technically, the Federal Constitutional Court was merely considering whether measures by the central bank to contain the euro crisis infringed on German law. But the oral arguments, on suits brought by numerous citizen groups, inevitably turned into a debate on the future of the euro currency project itself.

The star witnesses at the hearings were two friends and former classmates who symbolize German ambivalence about the common currency.

Jörg Asmussen, a member of the European Central Bank’s executive board, defended the bank’s promise last year to buy bonds in any quantity necessary to eliminate fears of euro zone breakup.

Jens Weidmann, president of the German central bank, the Bundesbank, said the E.C.B. would violate European treaties if it bought bonds — which it has not yet had to do.

As the justices pointed out, the court does not have the power to block actions by the European Central Bank. But it might restrict participation by the German government or the Bundesbank in measures designed to address the crisis. As the euro zone’s paymaster, Germany plays a crucial role in any efforts to prop up the common currency.

Some complainants clearly hoped for a ruling that would effectively force Germany to leave the euro.

Karl Albrecht Schachtschneider, a retired law professor and well-known euro opponent, told the court he hoped that “the euro adventure will be brought to an end for the good of Germany and the good of Europe.”

Others did not go that far, but argued that the E.C.B. had bypassed elected officials when it declared itself ready to buy bonds of euro zone members.

“The price of the so-called euro rescue may not be to injure democracy,” said Dietrich Murswiek. He argued before the court on behalf of Peter Gauweiler, a member of the German Parliament who is one of the individuals and political groups that have filed suits against the central bank’s crisis measures.

On the opposite side, Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, warned that the cost to Germany would be incalculable if the country left the currency union. And he pointed out that under the European Central Bank, inflation has been lower than it was with the deutsche mark. “The E.C.B. is acting within its mandate,” he told the court.

Mr. Schäuble said the central bank could be put into an impossible position if it were faced with conflicting rulings by courts in different euro zone countries.

The hearing, in a fenced-off court and police complex in a wooded area outside Karlsruhe, a city in southwest Germany near the border with France, drew an eclectic group of Germans on both the left and right who deride the euro as a travesty and long to bring back the deutsche mark. Outside a security checkpoint, several dozen anti-euro protesters chanted and waved signs as witnesses and media arrived in the morning. One sign called for Mr. Asmussen, the central bank’s board member, to be thrown in jail, an indication of the emotion that some Germans attach to the issue.

During his appearance before the court, Mr. Asmussen sought to assuage concerns that German taxpayers could be left with bill if the E.C.B. suffers losses from buying government bonds. Unlike a commercial bank, the European Central Bank can operate at a loss, he said. That would mean it would not need to ask governments for money to cover short-term losses.

Answering accusations that the central bank is remote from the democratic process, Mr. Asmussen said its measures had in fact given elected officials time they needed to deal with the crisis.

“The risk of not acting would have been greater,” he told the high court.

Mr. Weidmann, who studied economics at the University of Bonn with Mr. Asmussen, argued a point of view widely held in Germany: that the E.C.B. is making it too easy for struggling members of the euro zone to continue their wayward ways.

“Interest rates have a central disciplinary function,” Mr. Weidmann said. “Monetary policy can’t solve the problems of the euro zone. Only political leaders can solve the problems.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/12/business/economy/german-court-weighs-bond-buying-by-european-central-bank.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Development Coalition Looks to Aid North Africa

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, long focused on promoting democracy in Central Europe and the former Soviet Union through loans to business, is likely to extend its mandate to North Africa as part of a push by Europe and the United States to help countries in the region.

The bank, based in London and financed by 61 nations including the United States, will begin amending its bylaws on Saturday to allow expansion across the Mediterranean, probably beginning with Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia. The bank’s board of governors is holding its annual meeting on Friday and Saturday in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.

The expansion of the bank’s operations follows a call in April by Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, for institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to do more to support a transition to democracy in the Middle East.

“The World Bank and other multilateral development banks will be essential, just as they were in support of Eastern and Central Europe’s transition two decades ago,” Mr. Geithner said on April 16. President Obama pledged on Thursday to provide debt relief and aid to the region in a speech on the Middle East delivered in Washington.

Marisa Lago, an assistant Treasury secretary and a member of the bank’s board of governors, said the development bank’s expertise in Eastern Europe could be useful in North Africa.

“In both instances authoritarian political systems limited the freedoms of the citizens of these countries,” Ms. Lago said in Astana, according to the text of her remarks. “And in both instances the economic systems were dominated by cronyism and state control that limited the regions’ economic potential.”

On Wednesday, Germany officially endorsed deploying the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in the Middle East. Jörg Asmussen, deputy finance minister of Germany, said a condition for aid would be that countries make “a firm commitment to the core principles of democracy, political pluralism and the market economy.”

But a coalition of 28 nongovernmental organizations and the Central and Eastern Europe Bankwatch Network, a regional group that is based in Prague and monitors international financial organizations, has urged the bank’s shareholders not to approve the expansion.

It is premature to make commitments for financing from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development for the Mediterranean region “when it is by no means clear what kind of governments will follow the recently overthrown regimes,” the coalition said. It also criticized the bank’s record in helping to establish democracy in Eastern and Central Europe.

The United States is the largest shareholder in the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, which was founded in 1991 to help countries trying to shift to market from planned economies. The bank typically supports small and midsize businesses and infrastructure projects by local governments like water and sewage systems.

Recent loans include $105 million to Metro Group, a large German retailer, to expand operations in Kazakhstan; and 3.7 million euros, or $5.3 million to Industrial Mecano, a maker of packaging for food and beverages in Romania. The bank valued its business volume in 2010 at 9 billion euros, $12.83 billion. The bank also helped support banks in Eastern Europe during the financial crisis, and has helped finance the continuing cleanup in Ukraine at the site of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

It has steadily expanded its territory, and operates as far east as Mongolia.

A person with knowledge of the plans, who was not authorized to speak publicly about them, said the bank would not need to raise more capital to expand into North Africa. The new loans there would not come at the expense of other countries the bank serves, the person said.

Whether other countries like Libya are added depends on political developments, the person said. Egypt is already a European Bank for Reconstruction and Development shareholder and asked to be considered for loans last year, before popular demonstrations toppled Hosni Mubarak as president.

Matthew Saltmarsh contributed reporting.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=ec78e7c271597bfc6c6b9b85035cafa4