Governing by Panic: The Politics of the Eurozone Crisis

62 Pages Posted: 24 Oct 2014 Last revised: 29 Oct 2014

See all articles by David Woodruff

David Woodruff

London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE)

Date Written: October 22, 2014

Abstract

The Eurozone’s reaction to the economic crisis beginning in late 2008 involved both efforts to mitigate the arbitrarily destructive effects of markets and vigorous pursuit of policies aimed at austerity and deflation. To explain this paradoxical outcome, this paper builds on Karl Polanyi’s account of how politics reached a similar deadlock in the 1930s. Polanyi argued that democratic impulses pushed for the protective response to malfunctioning markets. However, under the gold standard the prospect of currency panic afforded great political influence to bankers, who used it to push for austerity, deflationary policies, and the political marginalization of labor. Only with the achievement of this last would bankers and their political allies countenance surrendering the gold standard. The paper reconstructs Polanyi’s theory of “governing by panic” and uses it to explain the course of the Eurozone policy over three key episodes in the course of 2010-2012. The prospect of panic on sovereign debt markets served as a political weapon capable of limiting a protective response, wielded in this case by the European Central Bank (ECB). Committed to the neoliberal “Brussels-Frankfurt consensus,” the ECB used the threat of staying idle during panic episodes to push policies and institutional changes promoting austerity and deflation. Germany’s Ordoliberalism, and its weight in European affairs, contributed to the credibility of this threat. While in September 2012 the ECB did accept a lender-of-last-resort role for sovereign debt, it did so only after successfully promoting institutional changes that severely complicated any deviation from its preferred policies.

Keywords: Euro, European Central Bank (ECB), austerity, lender of last resort, Ordoliberalism, gold standard

Suggested Citation

Woodruff, David Marshall, Governing by Panic: The Politics of the Eurozone Crisis (October 22, 2014). LEQS Paper No. 81, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2513391 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2513391

David Marshall Woodruff (Contact Author)

London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) ( email )

Houghton Street
London, WC2A 2AE
United Kingdom

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