Inevitability of EMU entry has begun to disintegrate How Britain has regained its place in the world economic league
The battle over British membership of the single currency has reached a decisive point. The European election on Thursday could, with luck, deal a serious blow against the doctrine of "inevitability" which is so influential with "practical" businessmen and politicians who pride themselves on their indifference to abstract ideas.
Membership of EMU, they maintain, is inevitable, irrespective of any arguments for or against. People who argue that a country such as Britain can keep its monetary independence are just idealistic dreamers with no understanding of economic realities. All opposition to EMU is futile because British involvement is pre-determined, driven by history's inexorable tides.
Dr Johnson said that patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. But today a naively deterministic doctrine of historical inevitability has become the last refuge of the business lobbyists who are unable to offer any better arguments for Britain to give up control of its economic affairs. In the past few weeks the British lobbyists for EMU have been shocked by the growing disparity between European and American economic performance. They have been embarrassed by the sight of the Italian finance mininster pleading with the new economic government of euroland, the shadowy Euro-X committee, for "permission" to implement his Government's new budgetary plans.
So much for the myth that the single currency is a purely monetary arrangement that would leave national parliaments in charge of public spending and tax.
The business arguments for EMU have been further weakened by the weakness of the euro against the dollar, and by Germany's emergence as the "sick man of Europe" - two problems that were perfectly predictable consequences of the EMU process, but which very few businessmen believed or understood.
Worst of all, from the point of view of the EMU lobby, has been the "unexpected" strength of the pound. This has terrified into silence most of the business community's EMU-boosters since it raises the awful possibility that joining the single currency, far from offering a respectable excuse for a profit-boosting devaluation, would actually lock British companies into a tough competitive regime that would force them to manage their businesses more efficiently, to improve services and products and to boost productivity to levels that prevail in America, Germany and France.
This column has often discussed the likelihood that the pound and the dollar would rise, that the euro would fall and that Germany would be transformed by EMU into the rustbelt of Europe. This week, however, I want to focus on some of the political developments that are changing the outlook for British membership of the eurozone.
First, there is Thursday's European election. A big swing to the Tories could well persuade Tony Blair to retreat from holding a referendum on EMU at the start of the next parliament, thereby shelving the whole issue until 2005 or beyond.
How could this happen? Since Thursday's election is not about the composition of the next British Government, it may not be much influenced by the utter ineffectiveness of the Tories as an opposition party, nor by the staggering contrast between the leadership qualities of William Hague and Mr Blair. If people behave rationally their votes on Thursday will be motivated primarily by their views on the one EMU issue. Thus, while Thursday's result will have no relevance at all for the outcome of the next general election, it may be an accurate indicator of voting behaviour if a referendum on the single currency were called. Thus, while a bad result for Labour on Thursday would scarcely alter the massive odds in favour of Mr Blair remaining Prime Minister after the next election, it could very substantially affect his own calculations about the risk of gambling his second term on a referendum the outcome of which he could neither predict nor control.
Another political event that could have a surprising impact on the EMU debate is the apparent victory in Kosovo. Mr Blair's starring role in the Kosovo drama should rebut one of the strongest political arguments for joining EMU, at least from Mr Blair's point of view. This is that Britain would "lose influence" in Europe if it insisted on continuing to manage its own economic affairs.
Mr Blair's key role in the Kosovo crisis should have demonstrated once and for all that a country's international influence has less to do with its membership of economic committees than with its leader's decisiveness, clarity of its purpose and strong democratic support. Of course, a nation's influence depends not only on its leadership, but also on its economic and military power. But on these grounds, there seems to be no reason to worry about Britain's world position, if it remains outside euoroland. Militarily, of course, Britain has long punched above its weight as the second most important member of Nato. What is less widely recognised is how far the country has recently advanced in its relative economic position. Enough time has now elapsed since the change in Britain's economic fortunes in the mid-1980s to conclude that a century of relative decline probably ended about a decade ago.
Consider the statistics on national output compiled by the OECD. These show how Britain was overtaken from 1960 onwards, first by Japan, then by France and then Italy. But in the late-1980s, this trend turned. By 1994 Britain had again passed Italy to become the world's fifth-largest economy, and in the past few years, the lead over Italy has widened to 15 per cent. If recent trends continued, even the 4 per cent gap between British and French national output could be closed within a year or two. This would restore Britain to its postwar position as the world's fourth-largest military and economic power.
To suggest that Britain has now almost certainly stabilised its position as a major world power is not to indulge in jingoism or yearning for imperial glory. It is simply a matter of recognising objective facts. Britain is almost certain to remain the world's fourth, fifth or sixth-largest economy for the rest of our lifetimes. The idea that such a country is too small to operate as an independent entity is, therefore, manifestly absurd. If a Britain outside EMU were really condemned to become a banana republic, then how should we describe the contemptible prospects for much smaller economies such as Canada, Australia, Switzerland and China?
The fact is that the world economy will consist for the forseeable future of hundreds of independent nations, operating with varying degrees of co-operation, plus one established superpower, America, and one experimental confederation, the newly created euroland. How far Britain should commit itself to this experiment is a huge political question and there is nothing inevitable about the answer. As long as Britain continues to enjoy a reasonable degree of success as an independent economy, voters will be unimpressed by warnings about the cold and loneliness of existence outside the eurozone.
This points to a troublesome paradox if Mr Blair calls a referendum on the heels of the next election. Just as his impressive leadership in Kosovo has undermined his own argument that Britain would lose its international role if it stayed outside EMU, Labour's successful management of the economy is steadily discrediting the claim that Britain will face an economic disaster if it opts for economic independence. The better the economy performs in the next few years, the harder it will be for Mr Blair to argue that the only alternative to giving up Britain's monetary and fiscal independence is economic ruin.
If he wants British voters to believe that they have no choice but to join EMU, Mr Blair will have to persuade them that his own Governement's economic success outside EMU has been a chimera.
Far from taking credit for the good times that are likely to prevail around the time of the next general election, Mr Blair will have to become a prophet of doom. He may boast in the election that Labour has made Britain prosperous, but then, in the referendum immediatley after, he will have to warn the voters that this prosperity is built on sand. He may boast of making the Bank of England independent, but then he will have to argue that the Bank cannot be trusted to manage the pound. He may boast of Labour's record on taxes and public spending, but then he will have to explain that British Budgets should in future be supervised by Euro-X.
Even for Mr Blair and his spin-doctors, this paradoxical message will be hard to sell. The only thing inevitable about Britain's membership of EMU will be the difficulty of persuading British voters. With luck, Mr Blair may start to understand this on Thursday.
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