A NATO country has shot down a Russian plane. The refugee
influx is threatening to unravel the Schengen Treaty of free
movement. Germany's Merkel celebrated her tenth anniversary
as Chancellor this past weekend, but she faces one of the most serious
challenges of her tenure.
Portugal accounts for less than 2% of the eurozone GDP. We
argue, that like Greece, Portugal's importance is greater than the size of its
economy. Among the political challenges Europe faces, the Iberian
peninsula should not be under-estimated.
Portugal had been heralded as a success of the austerity regime.
When others in southern Europe whined about the counter-productiveness of
austerity during an economic downturn, the creditors would point to Portugal to
show what was possible. Portugal completed its assistance program
last year. It has been able to return to the capital markets.
Unemployment has fallen from around 17.5% to below 12%.
Portugal has begun growing. After contracting in 2011-2013, the
Portuguese economy expanded by almost 1% last year and is on track for a little
more than 1.5% this year. The official forecasts call for near 2%
growth next year and 2017.
Growth helps ease the debt burden. However, despite the
growth and decline in bond yields, Portugal's growth is less than the average
interest rate on its debt. This means that debt as a percentage of GDP is
still rising. It stands near 130% of GDP. The EU fiscal
rules require country's with debt in excess of 60% of GDP to run budget
surpluses to bring the debt levels down. Even if the fiscal rules are not
vigorously enforced, Portugal is facing demands for austerity for years to
come. This is untenable.
The majority center-right government lost its majority in the recent
election. As a minority government,t it could not win acceptance of
its budget, and the government collapsed. A loose alliance of the
Socialists, Communists and Left Bloc defeated the minority government, and
after a lot of back and forth, the president is allowing the head of the
Socialists Costa to form a new government.
Costa and the Socialists are not opposed to all austerity, but rather so
much austerity. And they are interested in redistributing the
pain. The Communists and Left Bloc are more extreme, and in the past have
also advocated the withdrawal from NATO. Costa's work is
arduous. He needs to forge a stable and durable
coalition. Among the government's first tasks is to submit a
draft of next year's budget.
Although Portugal is not on a multilateral assistance program, officials
still have leverage. There is the EU's budget approval process
itself. And at the extreme, is the ECB funding. Through the
national central bank, Portuguese banks borrowed almost 24 bln euros from the
ECB last month.
Portuguese politics is important because it is part of a growing wave
of a push back against austerity, which is not only limited to southern
Europe (Greece, Italy, France). Corbyn rise to the head of Labour in
the UK was partly predicated on his anti-austerity rhetoric. Canada's
Liberal Party promised to turn a small budget surplus into a small budget
deficit and against the odds won the recent election.
Disclaimer
Why Portuguese Politics Matter
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
November 24, 2015
Rating: