📄 Extracted Text (1,298 words)
From: Peter Mandelson
To: [email protected] <jeevacanion4gmztil.com>
Subject: Re: FW: Guardian
Date: Sun, 13 May 2012 12:28:49 +0000
In current European argument, lines are clear.
Of course Britain has placed itself on sidelines - but it shouldn't.
This is for domestic audience...
From: Jeffrey Epstein [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2012 01:26 PM
To: Peter Mandelson
Subject: Re: FW: Guardian
cheerleading form the sidelines, no clear suggestion, broad policy arguments , and last but not least, no one is
inviting britain to the table. it seems arrogant to suggest you should be a part of a solution that europe has no
interest in having your participation. you.
On Sun, May 13, 2012 at 2:13 PM, Peter Mandelson wrote:
What do you think ?
From: Peter Mandelson <
Date: Sun, 13 May 2012 13:12:34 +0100
To: Ed Balls <[email protected]>
Subject: Guardian
Guardian Article
By Ed Balls & Peter Mandelson
The coming months are critical for the future of Europe. Jobs and
business investment - in Britain and across the Euro area - depend on
Europe's leaders choosing the right course. There is now a real danger
that Europe will get locked into a sterile argument between growth and
deficit reduction. The truth is that we need the right combination of
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both - action now to get Europe's economies growing and creating
jobs, tough medium-term action to get publicfinances back into shape
and a long term strategy for growing the continent's productivity and
skills base.
It is true that the two of us disagreed on the case for British
membership of the single currency. We agree however that the single
currency needs to survive and succeed and we are worried that
Europe has so far identified only half the solution. There is a real
danger that binding countries which are struggling to reduce their
deficits by ever larger cuts and tax rises to meet the new structural
deficit and debt targets will become self-defeating - economically and
politically. A collective strategy too focused on cutting away at the
demand created by public spending is compounding Europe's
problems just as it has Britain's. Markets are worrying that the policy
mix has become imbalanced, to the detriment of economic recovery.
It is vital that Europe's strategy permits a more sustainable approach
to debt reduction through growth and long term fiscal responsibility.
Growth needs the demand that comes with reviving confidence. Many
European corporates and consumers are struggling under a heavy
burden of debt and deleveraging. Butmany also lack the confidence to
spend and invest because they see only an uncertain future. Countries
cannot duck tough decisions on tax and spending. But nor can they
ignore the vital need for economic growth if deficits are to be brought
down successfully and done so in a fair way. Europe needs a plan for
growth.
At the heart of Europe's problems is the fact that the Eurozone does
not have the institutions or political machinery to project confidence in
its own future. So, first, it needs a new political settlement. It needs an
ECB willing explicitly to stand in the way of sovereign cost contagion
from the periphery. It needs an active European Stability Mechanism
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able meaningfully to support short term sovereign liquidity and the
recapitalising of a European bankingsystem that needs to deleverage
before it can start lending again.
It needs a system of collective economic governance among Eurozone
states thatensures everyone plays by the rules: some form of greater
fiscal union. Those rules need to recognise that Germany's persistent
current account surplus undermines the currency bloc as much as
Greece's fiscal imprudence or Spain's current account deficit. It needs
a clear acceptance in Germany that it faces a period of above-
Eurozone average wage rises and inflation in order to fix the
imbalance. This means challenging a basic view of the Eurozone in
Germany, but German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble is already
recognising this must happen.
Second, Europe needs to boost public investment in the demand that
will help drive growth, the European Commission is urging. A serious
capital list for the European Investment Bank is desirable in order to
help provide fresh sources of infrastructure investment, as are
infrastructure bonds that help counter a stalling private appetite for
large scale project finance. Unused structural funds must also be re-
cycled into fresh programmes for these funds' use, targeted in
investment projects in the weaker Eurozone states that help plug them
better into the large markets of northern Europe. A huge new wave of
European infrastructure investment would not only provide short term
demand, but leave us with a better networked, better integrated, more
energy efficient singlemarket.
Third, in the longer term, growth will depend on structural reforms so
that struggling Eurozone countries become more competitive. Europe
needs to raise economic participation rates, make it easier for
businesses to grow and take on workers, improving competition in
some product markets, and improve its skills base.These reforms were
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set out in the Europe 2020 plan. They need to be genuinely owned by
European governments, who like the best and most innovative of
theAmerican states, should be watching and learning from each other
in testing new approaches and defining best practice. The European
Commission's key role should be to help spur this informal race to the
top in public policy.
And Britain's role and place in this process? It should be at the centre:
bringing its own experience in banking reform and labour and product
market reform to the table, irrespective of the fact that it is not in the
Eurozone. The reality is that there is no bad outcome for the Eurozone
that is not a bad outcome for Britain, so this is a perilous time for
Britain to be increasingly isolated and politically disengaged. We are
not simply doing our European neighbours a favour by playing our part
in a revived European economy. We are securing our own economic
future.
842 WORDS
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