Why Germany is not a model for the eurozone

Why Germany is not a model for the eurozone

Essay
Philip Whyte
22 October 2010

Many Europeans believe that confidence in the eurozone is best restored by turning the region into a larger version of present-day Germany. However, Germany is not the world-beating economy of current myth. Its vast trade and current-account surpluses are not evidence of ‘competitiveness’, but of structural weaknesses that depress consumption and investment at home. Germany is not exempt from the need to reform. An unreformed Germany would be a poor model for the eurozone to follow. Internally, it risks producing a region suffering from chronically weak demand, debilitating cycles of competitive wage cuts and prolonged slumps in the indebted periphery. Externally, it could weaken the world economy and strain the international trading system.

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