THE EU CRISIS AND EUROPE’S DIVIDED MEMORIES
Excerpts from an
interview by C. Spagnolo (Univ. Bari) with Geoff ELEY, Univ. of Michigan (G.E.), Leonardo
PAGGI, Univ. of Modena (L.P.), and Wolfgang STREECK, Max-Planck-Institut
für Gesellschaftsforschung, Köln (W.S.), to be published in “Le memorie divise dell’Europa dal 1945”, monographic issue
of the Journal "Ricerche Storiche", n. 2/2017.
THE EU CRISIS AND EUROPE’S DIVIDED MEMORIES
1. Right from the beginning, European integration
encountered resistance and has experienced periods of stasis and regression but
today’s crisis is of a new, more extreme kind. Since the rejection of the
constitutional treaty in France and the Netherlands in 2005 we have seen the
growth of local “populist” movements opposed to immigration and the loss of
control over the employment market, a resurgence of nationalism in many
countries and the referendum vote in favour of Brexit on 23 June (2016). Is
this a crisis of rejection connected to the almost unnatural and
extraordinarily rapid expansion of the size and remit of the EU after the
1991-92 Maastricht Treaty? Are we now paying the price for the EU’s
over-ambition or for the "democratic deficit" on which it was built?
(W. S.) It is
almost conventional wisdom today to answer both your questions in the
affirmative: over-ambition and democratic deficit at the same time. Yes,
integration has crossed the threshold beyond which it makes itself felt in
everyday life, especially as member countries have become so much more
heterogeneous. “Nationalism”, as you call it, has always been there, except in
Germany and, perhaps, Italy – two countries whose citizens were for a long time
willing to exchange their national identity for a European one. Elsewhere it
was contained within national borders, which were still relevant. This has
changed with the simultaneous widening and deepening of the Union. Also, as to
nationalism, don’t forget that the Internal Market and monetary union and in particular
the “rescue operations” for governments and banks, pitch countries against each
other, making then compete for economic performance and fight over both
austerity and “solidarity”.
(G. E.) Each of
these explanations carries much weight, in my view. Of course, it’s important
to remember that popular identification with “Europe” has always been hugely
variable across regions, periods, and all of the many internal societal
divisions, member-country by member-country – whether “Europe” is taken to mean
the EU per se, the “European project” in some politically coherent sense, a set
of usually diffuse but nonetheless significant ideals, one kind of negatively
understood Eurocentrism or another, or the cumulative effect of an elaborate
range of practical conveniences and recognitions (i.e. the process of “growing
together” over time via collective encounters, circuits of communication,
structures of educational exchange, professional and administrative
inter-connectedness, integrated labor markets, increasingly prevalent patterns
of pan-European travel, the EU’s ramified regulative apparatuses, and last but
not least football). In the earliest phase (1957-1970s) the Common Market
subsisted on a hard-headed economic and geopolitical pragmatism (a kind of
bastard internationalism) that was ordered along the primary Franco-West German
axis while leavened by disproportionately influential elements of intellectual
Europeanism. It was really during the 1980s, with the “objective” consequences
of cumulative integrative processes, the coalescence of the institutional and
regulative machinery, and the emergence of a more coherent European project,
that “Europe” acquired over time a far stronger and genuinely popular material
actuality. In that sense, the Single Europe Act and Maastricht solidified a
European presence whose penetration downwards into the respective European
societies became impressively effective. In the meantime, major processes of
disruptive change have continuously undermined those potentials. Two of these
are the ones signalled in your question. First, the relentless drive for
enlargement has rendered the cohesion and political efficacy of the EU as such
unmanageable, whether as an institutional complex of political negotiation or
as an object of popular identification. Second, the hopelessly undemocratic
character of the EU’s institutional arrangements (everything summarized in the
banality of the “democratic deficit”), which were apparent from the outset, has
now been continuously exacerbated to the point of chronic dysfunctionality. I’d
then add the following. Third, despite the promising gestures during the 1980s
toward an operative politics of collective betterment and the promotion of
Europeanwide public goods (“social Europe”), anything resembling a social
democratic or even social-liberal commitment to a redistributive politics has long
been sacrificed in the interests of the reigning neoliberal economic agenda.
Fourth, the rigid post-2008 adherence to a politics of austerity has
disastrously negated whatever was left of the rhetoric of the common European
project per se. Finally, the EU’s political incapacity in face of the
permanence of the refugee crisis has not only placed the member-states and
societies under increasingly intolerable particularized strain, but has
continuously exposed the EU’s political ineffectuality too.
(L. P.) The
reasons of the ongoing crisis go much deeper and have to be traced in the
economic governance plan adopted when the single currency was created. I always
find particularly useful to re-read the way in which Guido Carli, the day after
the signing of the Maastricht Treaty (which he had taken part in as Minister of
the Treasury of the Italian government in February 1992) commented on the
meaning and the outcome of that choice in his personal notes: “the European
Union implies the notion of the ‘Minimal State’, the abandonment of mixed
economy and of economic planning, the redefinition of the ways the expenses are
arranged, a redistribution of responsibilities that reduces the power of
parliamentary assemblies and increases that of governments, fiscal autonomy for
local authorities, the rejection of the principle of widespread gratuitousness
of services (and the ensuing reform of healthcare and of social security), the
abolition of the wage indexation scale, the dramatic reduction of pockets of
privilege, the mobility of the factors of production, the reduction of the
State’s presence in the credit system and in industry, the abandonment of
inflationary behaviour not only by workers, but also by the producers of
services, the abolition of the norms that fixed administered prices and
tariffs. In a word: a new pact between States and citizens, to the latter’s
advantage.”
These words
provide a brutal, but extremely clear picture that summarizes the meaning and
direction of a political process that would soon involve the whole of Europe:
the dramatic reduction of State powers in terms of both economic and industrial
policies, the dismantling of the public sphere and of its power to reorient the
market, the breaking of the social security and of the pension system, the
collapse of trade unions’ bargaining power, the transfer of the effective decision power from parliaments to the
executive branch. Twenty-five years after, we are in such a position as to be
able to evaluate the outcome of a set of choices that have systematically, and
almost scientifically, eroded the economic and social foundations on which
democracy had been rebuilt in Europe after 1945.
(…)
6. The “end of history”, of which Fukuyama wrote in
1992, today seems applicable to Europe rather than to the United States, in the
sense that the phrase refers not only to a crisis affecting the idea of
progress but also to the belief that the EU is a stable solution to political
conflict. This can be seen, for example, in the metamorphosis of politics into
administration, and the illusion of the elimination of war and ending of
ideological conflict. Why does politics today seem to have such little need of
history and such great need of memories?
Are we in a period of transformation of the political
realm that tends to separate politics and economics from history, or is the
emerging discourse on memory merely a symptom of demographic aging, an
intellectual fever that extends even to the social sciences?
(G. E.) I agree
very much with the main thrust of the thinking in this question. But so far
from confirming any separation of politics and economics from history, don’t
the remarkably effective political appeals of the populist Right tend rather to
show the opposite? The idea that “we are in a period of transformation of the
political realm” is persuasive but needs a lot of unpacking.
(L. P.) With an
impressive analogy with what happened in the beginning of the XX century, when
the theory of imperialism was elaborated thanks to the contribution of
political analysts of various orientations (Hobson, Hilferding, Lenin, etc.),
the protagonists of globalization are once again the great Leviathans, the
nation-states rich not only in economic resources, but also in history and
identity. This is the meaning of the competition between the USA and China, not
to mention the resurgence of the geopolitical influence of post-Soviet Russia,
which many would like to exorcise by attributing its fault to Putin’s
wickedness; and isn’t the remarkable growth of the Indian economy also due to
the massive State structure inherited from British colonialism? Even the most
successful periods of South American economies always coincide with a
reinforcement of the State thanks to the emergence of a strong populist leadership.
In the Middle East crisis, finally, the growing influence of strong States of
ancient tradition, such as Iran and Turkey, contrasts with a lasting political
fragmentation of the Arab people, which has not managed to go beyond the
Caliphate.
How singular the
contrast between such a global state of affairs and an EU defined by a
senseless and self-damaging system of “currency without state” (it seems that
such phrase was coined by our Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa!),
which is anyway kept together by Germany’s supremacy and arrogance. In order to
quit Maastricht’s hierarchic cosmopolitism and move back to an effective
federal perspective it will be necessary to get rid of a whole culture, a
subaltern culture that has handed over the destiny of a continent to financial
capital taking the risk to obliterate an entire civilization. Here is the main
reason of the great identity crisis that is currently haunting our Europe.
(W. S.) I find
this question so complex that I can only provide a number of more or less
unrelated facets of what might eventually be a sufficiently complex answer. Is
there in the Europe of today a need for memory as distinguished from history?
There clearly is a need for fabricated selective stories, or memories, dressing
up a post-democratic, consumerist, neoliberal, Hayekian political economy as a
legitimate society. Will they be believed by enough people to make them
sufficiently canonical? Hundreds of thousands of PR experts are working on this
and try to sell LBGTIQ rights, travel without borders and the synthetic
communities of Facebook and Twitter as historical progress. Politics turning
into administration was in fact a historical (Marxian) dream of progress – one
that has materialized in present-day Europe as the nightmare of a technocracy
shielded from politics, so as to protect electorates from the temptations of
“populism”. Will people recognize the farce, and the tragedy that comes with
taking it at face value? That war has allegedly disappeared is presented as
historical progress as well, but mostly in terms of young people no longer
having to serve in their countries’ military, further cutting back on the
obligations that used to come with the rights of citizenship (rights which in
the process turn into consumption goods, in the general context of progress
being reduced to, and conceived exclusively in terms of, an increase in
individual liberties). Warfare has long been delegated to the United States and
to highly professionalized Special Forces, maintained by all West European
countries but operating in complete secrecy, so almost nobody notices – and in
the absence of the traditional levée en masse, nobody really cares. The same
applies to modern killing technology, such as drones. Presently, of course,
history as warfare is coming back in new forms as failed states proliferate on
the capitalist periphery, with streams of refugees exporting their misery into
the European prosperity zone, and with religious fundamentalism carrying
violence into its cities.
The widespread
absence of a historical consciousness and the often successful efforts to fill
the gap with fictional “memories” – for example, how peace in Europe is
allegedly owed to the European Union – may be due to a perhaps unprecedented
phenomenon, which is revolutionary change proceeding slowly but steadily,
without major disruptions, over at least two political generations, with no end
in sight. That the historical dimension of what we call the neoliberal
revolution is so rarely noticed, and can be noticed only with special effort,
may be explained by the fact that it evolved over such a long time, without
dramatic ruptures or breakdowns. So each generation sees only a small section
of the momentous process of crisis and change that has been underway since the
1970s, and therefore may perceive only little or no difference between the
beginning and the end of its observed historical time. As the true historical
dynamic of our era is recognized only from a distance, it is not recognized at
all by those who cannot or will not distance themselves from their everyday
lives. This is why it is so urgent that social science today sheds its
system-theoretical habits and returns to an approach that affords the
historical nature of the social world proper recognition.
7. With the reunification of Germany and the opening
up of Eastern Europe, the dominant narrative focused on overcoming the Cold War
and on the idea that Vergangenheitsbewältigung
(struggle to overcome the negatives of the past) was now complete; every hidden
chapter in the history of the individual nations, beginning with Germany,
needed to be brought to light to illuminate the Holocaust as the basis for a
shared culture of human rights. As Walser pointed out in 1998, it is almost as
if Monumentalisierung der Schande (Monumentalising
the shame) is being invoked as a guarantor of the morality of modern-day
politics.
It seems as though that project, which was perhaps
never properly managed, is running aground: paradoxically, the attempt to
create an inclusive memory, through the spread of memorial days for the victims
of “totalitarianism” has resulted not so much in a “European memory” as in
memories for groups or nations claiming victim status and vigorously contesting
previous “official truths”. Conversely, post-national historiographies take
refuge in a form of – on occasions smug – “moderate patriotism” which aims to
normalize the past of individual countries. Is a “European memory” possible and
what characteristics should it have in order to safeguard democracy from the
re-emergence of identities based on exclusion and conflict?
(G. E.) Again, I
agree strongly with the thrust of this question. “Trauma talk” has achieved
such pervasive dominance that the most reliable ground for the making of effective
political claims has now become the traumatic wound of a past injustice, and
indeed the grander-scale the better – slavery, colonial dispossession,
expulsions, genocide, any form of discrimination, collective suffering, or
violations of rights. This recourse to a memorial language of traumatized
identity not only replaces the appeal to more classical universalist ideals,
but also spectacularizes suffering and injustice, so that any dramatic
experience of exceptional violence becomes implicitly privileged as the main
ground from which legitimate and effective political claims now need to be
filed. In the process, other fundamental grounds of democratic action –
positive ideals of human self-realization and social emancipation, for example,
or the mundane suffering of everyday poverty and exploitation, can become much
harder to build. In that sense, a “memorial” politics does tend to constrain as
much as it helps. Memory work – the working-through of a difficult and
compromised past – has always been vital for the rebuilding of democratic
political culture in Europe since 1945, and nowhere more impressively than in
Germany (qua the process of Vergangenheitsbewältigung since the 1960s). And, as
contemporary German events continue to show, this necessarily remains a
work-in-progress, whose grounds will continue to settle and shift, sometimes in
dangerous and unexpected ways. But that political work of memory was always
moved by forward-looking and inevitably contested visions of the good society
too, whether in 1968, the mid-1980s, or the aftermath of unification. Without
some comparable vision of a desirable, generously conceived, and realistically
attainable democratic future – distressingly absent from the centerground of
current political discourse inside the EU – a “European memory” worth the name
will not be possible.
(W. S.) West
Germany was reorganized as a democratic-capitalist country in the 1950s and
1960s when the Holocaust was not nearly as present in public memory as it is
today. Here, again, NATO and the Americanization of social life were much more
important than history and memory. Today the Shoah and the Nazi crimes in
general are very much part of educated German consciousness, or of German
culture generally: as a German, you simply cannot subscribe to a “Right or
wrong, my country” sort of patriotism. In fact you are aware, or always likely
to be reminded, that an entire people, even one that prides itself of having
been at the forefront of human civilization, can be led, or can lead itself, to
relapse into the worst form of barbarism. But then, knowledge of history is not
easily taught to the Generation Twitter, not even in Germany, and for those
growing up now the first half of the twentieth century is almost as distant in
time as the Middle Ages. Moreover, collective memory, including the German one,
is not very instructive politically. For example, the fact of the German
genocide committed on the Jewish people does not tell us how many immigrants
today’s Germany must and can take in per year, and from which countries – not
to mention what kind of supranational European institutions Germany should help
build and sustain. It does not even entail precise instructions with regard to
German policy toward Israel: must Germany support whatever the Israeli
government does to secure the existence of Israel as a state, or must it be
rigorously committed to human rights and international law, which would mean
taking sides with the Palestinians in Gaza in their struggle against the
present Israeli government. Particularism or universalism?
As to
“patriotism”, its contents differ between countries and individuals, and they
change over time. Watch how the Italian football team sings its national anthem
before games, and compare this to the way the Germans sing if at all. On the
one hand, as sociologists know, people do identify as members of groups and
develop loyalty to the groups with which they identify. Germans are not
categorically different in this respect, although their attachment to their
country still tends to be moderated by the memory of Nazism and genocide, as
pointed out. Will this last? It certainly will be different among the large
numbers of immigrants now settling in Germany: Germans with Turkish,
Palestinian or Eritrean roots will hardly see themselves sharing in whatever
kind of historical responsibility for the Holocaust. It is also true that young
Germans today, when traveling abroad, are less likely than the generation that
preceded them to keep silent when being personally reprimanded for the German
Nazi past. In short, I think a legitimate European order of peace and
cooperation cannot be built on historical memories, or on German acceptance of
historical responsibility for the worst crime against humanity in the twentieth
century if not in history. And I also think that a “European memory”,
encompassing the historical experience from Norway to Sicily and from Ireland
to Rumania, is no more than a chimera.
(L. P.) Until the
1970s European historical awareness was characterized as a sum of national
memories that to a certain extent all ignored, in their discreteness, the
geopolitical demotion that had struck the continent as a whole at the end of
World War II. These memories were divided, often even opposed to each other,
but all equally anti-German. And they were also memories marked by phenomena of
omission and self-exaltation. English memory celebrated the hard defeat
inflicted on Nazi Germany, but forgot the end of the Empire. French memory put
between brackets Vichy in order to exalt the uninterrupted continuity of the
republican tradition. Italian memory stretched beyond measure the consensus
enjoyed by the Resistance in order to support a program of democratic renewal
and modernization of the country that clashed with the persistence of elements
of feudalism. However, it cannot be neglected that precisely because of their
being partial (but has memory ever been an exact copy of what Leopardi called
the “arid truth”?), these memories were marked by an unequivocal democratic and
anti-fascist will, that same will expressed by the post-war constitutions (with
the exception of Germany), which not only preached freedom and equality, but
also defined conditions and instruments for their fulfilment.
Anti-fascist
culture, welfare state and Keynesian policies were the three distinguishing
features of the ideological and political balance of European nation-states
before the huge storm of neoliberal culture imposed by force the new horizon of
globalization, with its economic policies harnessed to budgetary equilibrium
and a growing limitation of national sovereignties imposed by free-to-move
financial capitals. It was in such new context, made official by the Maastricht
Treaty, that emerged the EU project for a European memory which, dropping the traditional
and somehow mandatory reference to World War II, assumed the Holocaust as a
common theme that overlapped the multiplicity and the variety of national
context. It was a bureaucratic operation that had the same abstract and
categorical character of all the legislation of European governance. It took
the form of a memory/device, detached from any actual historical experience and
imposed through the proliferation of laws (in 2009 it was even made mandatory
to remember the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact), with the attendant sanctions for the
transgressors.
Hence the memory
of the Holocaust, isolated from the context of World War II in which it
developed, becomes the symbol of an absolute Evil, obliterates the memory of
Stalingrad and the role played by the Soviet Union in determining the defeat of
Nazism, and finally comes to the full affirmation of a theory of two
totalitarianisms that, especially in Eastern Europe, ends up fuelling the
revival of openly fascist memories.
8. The handling of debt in Greece and the other PIGS
countries, the tension in Ukraine, the emergence of the refugee problem, and
the relationship with Turkey all indicate a lack of shared political
preparedness in the EU, which has led to member States, notably Germany,
stepping up a weight. Germany has occasionally attempted to mediate and is
ready to bear some of the costs but does not appear able to provide a political
vision that can prevent a relapse into the nationalist memories evoked by the
conflicts across European states. Why do the ruling classes of the big
countries show such a lack of interest in seeking a common EU growth and social
policy based upon common standards? Is the culture of the most important
country, namely Germany, perhaps significantly influenced by a kind of
self-referentiality after the successes of reunification and expansion on the
world market? And do the other Western European countries look backwards out of
nostalgia for their achievements during the Cold War? Is the lack of vision
perhaps connected to the fact that Europe’s ruling classes now have an
impoverished knowledge of history and that they have lost their cultural
capability to conceive of conflict as a permanent dimension of politics?
(L. P.) The 2008
crisis has shed full light on the de facto leading position achieved by Germany
in Maastricht Europe. Behind the veil of the impersonal government of rules, an
open politicization of all inter-state relations has been produced. The crises
that shook Greece in 2010 and once again in 2015 witnessed in a spectacular way
the existence of a rigidly oligarchic structure which exercises a strict
control not only over economic policies, but also over political stability. In
Italy the government led by Mario Monti in November 2011 saw a strong
limitation of the power of control over the state budget by the prime minister,
a measure that continued with the following governments.
Starting from this
fact, it has gained currency a representation of Germany as a “reluctant
hegemon” (…). German economy is today structurally unable to play that driving
role that has often been invoked. The history of capitalistic development has
already fully shown the features of a model of supranational hegemony in the
form of the driving role played by the US domestic market for the whole Western
system until the 1970s. The German model, based instead on the dramatic
increase of exports and the ensuing containment of internal demand, not only
does not provide any possibility of expansion to the other European countries,
but it even requires from them to pursue the same goal of accruing their
competitiveness by lowering workers’ salaries and dismantling their social
security and pension systems. The password of this economic model is: growth
without equality. In his book Buying
Time: The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism Wolfgang Streeck has
usefully highlighted the sense of the “domestic reforms” imposed by Germany and
the massive losses in purchasing power caused by them, which today are jeopardizing any attempt at reviving
European economies.
Yet, I do not
intend here to demonize the role of Germany, which is undoubtedly supported by
the consensus of a large “coalition of the willing”. It is time though to
realize that the German line on austerity can perpetuate itself only insofar as
it gathers a large consensus in Europe, not only among the conservative ruling
elites (which have gained absolute supremacy after the suicidal of
social-democracy), but also among the business elite. Austerity policies
certainly hamper growth, and therefore the occasion for profitable investments.
And yet, in the
prostration in
which now trade union representation and labour politics are, it is now
possible to appropriate more and more of the cake. Profits can increase without
the political risk of a redistributive conflict that would inevitably break out
in a situation of economic growth. Germany is nowadays the point of reference
of a vast range of openly conservative European forces that support a
neo-Malthusian economic and political model. Not by chance Macron's immediate request
after his elections for a Euro budget to finance investments and stimulate
growth has been already rejected. He has been accused, as usual, to try to
turn the currency union into a trasfer union, against Germany's interest. Germany is once
again contending for primacy in Europe on the basis of a model of hierarchy and
coercion.
(G. E.) Each of
the major problems you’ve mentioned has occasioned a recrudescence of the national
particularisms the EU has been charged historically with transcending, or at
least finding the means of constructively mediating and containing. Indeed,
those respective crises, not least because of their convergence and
interpenetration, have acquired forms of severity that aggregate to a running
general crisis of the “European project” per se. It’s true that Germany has
occasionally provided a forward-looking lead. But Merkel’s surprisingly bold if
arbitrary initiative on the refugee question has been more than matched by
Schäuble’s ruthless adherence to the austerity measures required by the
reigning neoliberal orthodoxies. A “kind of self-referentiality” describes the
German policy-making mindset very well. But exactly Schäuble’s political obduracy
even suggests a kind of latter-day hankering after non-military but nonetheless
classical early-20th century German conceptions of Mitteleuropa, a suspicion
for which the political arrogance accompanying the Greek debt crisis provides
distressingly ample confirmation. That crisis has exposed the diminishing
moral-political efficacy of any remaining “Europeanist” ideals, because if
those ideals retained any reliably instituted, practically efficacious,
convincingly internationalist meaning then the Greek predicament would surely
have been the occasion for a more constructive debate and a spur to genuinely
European intervention. Precisely the extreme vulnerability of Greece inside the
overall power relations of the EU and the wider global economy (in common with
the other PIGS countries) should surely have been a compelling call to
moral-political action and strategically helpful and constructive
social-political remediation as opposed to fiscal-disciplinary correction. Yet
not only have “the Greeks” been demeaned and penalized (inside a shamefully
contemptuous and near-racialized public discourse), but their structural
predicament of indebtedness and dependency was originally engineered by the
EU’s fiscal machinery and dominant capitalist interests in the first place. The
political crisis would be dire even without the increasingly rigidified and
unbendingly punitive regulatory regime of the EU. But the effect of that
actually existing EU policy regime is to maximize the harshness of the
austerity measures so consistently demanded and applied by Germany
policy-makers and their eastern and northern European allies. Inside this
dominant political context, where is the ground for cooperative action based in
explicitly internationalist (i.e. collective-European) principles? Routinized
invocations of Europe’s pre-1945 past and the ending of the Cold War divisions
are no basis for building that ground. There is indeed a lamentable political
failure at the center of the EU’s policy-making institutional complex: it’s impossible
to detect any operative vision of the future that’s capable of mobilizing
genuinely popular enthusiasm or enunciating a popular political appeal that’s
larger-than-pragmatic and other than economistically self-interested. Instead
the ground of emotionally satisfying political campaigning has been ceded
almost entirely to the populist Right and its consistently effective if
specious appeals to the nation and its purported sovereignties, quite apart
from their xenophobic, racialist, and Islamophobic aspects. The diminishing
purchase of the arguments from economics alone inside a prevailing
political-economic climate of austerity was made calamitously clear by the
debacle of the UK referendum, after all. Yet, unfortunately, the officially
constituted European leadership still shows depressingly little sign of being
able to leave its well-tried complacency behind. Any renewal of the European
project will require venturing out from the existing, doggedly reiterated,
administrative, regulatory, and technocratic ground.
(W. S.) Germany is
not the only country without a “political vision”. There are sleepwalkers everywhere in the Europe of today, and
the question seems appropriate if by demanding such a vision we may not be
asking too much of our political leaders. Why no common EU growth policy? Rather
than explaining its absence with reference to German culture, German
unification or German self-referentiality following the end
of the Cold War, one might remind oneself that we live in a world of a decaying
capitalism in fundamental crisis that has long grown out of control. Why assume
that there is or can be a common, unified growth strategy for a group of highly
heterogeneous countries, in social structures, political cultures,
socio-economic institutions, levels of development etc. etc., if only Germany
was willing to think one up? Why expect Germany of all countries to feel an
obligation to behave as though capitalism had already been overcome, i.e.,
“altruistically”? I do not think that the cluelessness of our leaders needs to
be explained by their loss of historical culture, or by intellectual deficits.
Both may be independently present, the loss as well as the deficits. But more
important, I believe, is the fact that the growth capacity of contemporary
capitalism is running out, and has been running out for some time – and that
the institutional structures European elites have forged for their common
house, the European Union, is particularly deficient when it comes to
developing common solutions. Strangely enough, even people on the left who are
highly skeptical on capitalism in general, when speaking about Europe often
seem to believe that the present malaise is essentially a cognitive problem, if
not just a German cognitive problem.
My hunch is that the
time of big, internally diverse states, and even more so of potential
supranational superstates, is over – and that the future may be on the side of
small countries, like Sweden, Denmark, Switzerland and, perhaps, Scotland and
Catalonia, with a capacity to use the toolkit of national sovereignty to define
for themselves a niche in global markets where their peoples can prosper, more
or less. Unlike a united Europe, they may be able to combine strategic
intelligence and democratic participation, and respond nimbly and flexibly to
changes in their – international – environment. For this Germany would have to
give up the Euro, and countries like France and Italy would have to
decentralize and empower their regions, who in turn would have to empower their
citizens, casting aside pre-modern, oligarchic, rent-seeking social structures
that stand in the way of equitable economic prosperity – the revolution that we
all were too lazy or too faint-hearted or too shortsighted to complete in the
1970s.
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