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NAIRU economics and the Eurozone crisis

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  • Servaas Storm
  • C.W.M. Naastepad

Abstract

Intra-Eurozone current-account imbalances (and divergent external debt positions) cannot be attributed to the deterioration of cost (or price) competitiveness in Europe's periphery vis-�-vis its core. Imbalances were driven by high domestic demand growth in the periphery, which was financed by capital flows from the core. The external finance - following capitalist logic - ended up in non-traded medium-low-tech activities (e.g. construction). This points to a structural problem in pan-European financial integration - which we locate in the economic ideology guiding the EMU: NAIRU economics. We zoom in on the reasons why NAIRU-based monetary policy deepened the already existing structural heterogeneity in the Eurozone, locking the Southern-European economies up in low- and medium-technology activities often in direct competition with China. The only way out is a rethink of Eurozone macroeconomic and industrial policies which - going beyond often-made calls for broad-based fiscal stimulus or a clearing arrangement - fundamentally reconsiders the role of the ECB in light of what needs to be done to create Europe's non-price comparative advantage of tomorrow.

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  • Servaas Storm & C.W.M. Naastepad, 2015. "NAIRU economics and the Eurozone crisis," International Review of Applied Economics, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 29(6), pages 843-877, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:irapec:v:29:y:2015:i:6:p:843-877
    DOI: 10.1080/02692171.2015.1054367
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