If the
Social Democrats win next year's general election in Germany , they will ask voters to
adopt a new constitution in a referendum. The new document, so they plan, would
remove the legal fetters that currently prevent Chancellor Angela Merkel
agreeing to eurobonds or joint deposit guarantees. Not only the Social
Democratic Party (SPD), also politicians from Merkel's ruling coalition are now
speaking out in favour of a referendum. Some analysts are rejoicing that Berlin is finally
preparing the ground for the fiscal union that will save the euro. But this is Germany , where
policymaking is complex and slow. The debate about a new constitution might sap
political energies without contributing much to the stability of the single
currency.
German politicians mean different things when they talk about a
euro-related referendum. Sigmar Gabriel and his fellow leaders of the SPD say
they want voters' consent to a eurozone fiscal union that involves not only
debt mutualisation but also joint budget-planning, harmonised tax rates and
tough financial regulation. Some pro-European MPs in Merkel's own Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) agree on the need for a new constitution. But many
others insist that the current document leaves enough leeway for euro rescue
measures. Some CDU politicians use talk about a referendum mainly as a warning
shot to the constitutional court: if you judges continue constraining Merkel's
euro policies, a new constitution will restore power to elected politicians. Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schäuble predicts that a constitutional referendum will
happen "quicker than I would have expected a couple of months ago". But
he does not say what it would entail.
Horst Seehofer, leader of the traditionally euro-wary Christian Social
Union (CSU), the CDU's smaller Bavarian sister party, wants a referendum each
time the EU assumes new powers, bails out a struggling member or admits new
countries. And he probably hopes voters will say no to these. Foreign Minister
Guido Westerwelle from the Free Democratic Party (FDP, another coalition
member), contemplates not a German but a Europe-wide referendum on euro rescue
measures. All parties are spooked by the recent successes of the Pirate party
which campaigns for more country-wide referendums.
Even if Germany 's
politicians could agree on a referendum strategy, this would not be a quick fix
to save the euro.
Germans are having this debate right now because the constitutional
court has indicated that EU integration could not go much further on the basis
of the current constitution. Stricter budgetary oversight from Brussels , as envisaged by the fiscal compact,
could be problematic. Eurobonds or any other kind of unlimited liability
involved in a fiscal or banking union would be incompatible with the constitution.
These would undermine Germany 's
statehood and democracy by constraining parliament. If politicians cannot
promise different fiscal policies, voters are deprived of a real choice and
democracy suffers.
These constraints cannot be removed easily because the German
constitution contains an 'eternity clause' (Article 79) that sets in stone
certain principles, notably democracy, federalism and the market economy. No
parliamentary majority and no referendum can alter these principles. Hence, the
only way for Germany
to accede to a fiscal union is to convene a constitutional assembly, work out a
new constitution and put it to a referendum.
Some lawyers say this could be done quickly: only the eternity clause
and the one detailing how Germany
transfers powers to international organisations (Article 23) need to be
tweaked. But more likely the constitutional assembly would be inundated with
calls for more extensive social rights, a reform of federalism and a new voting
system, to name but a few. "This would be an extremely long process",
predicts a constitutional expert.
Nor is it assured that Germans would vote yes in the ensuing referendum.
Eurosceptics will argue that the new constitution will lead Germany into the dreaded transfer union,
characterised by permanent money flows from Germany to the eurozone's South. And
even if a new constitution was adopted, who says there would be a political
majority for eurobonds? Most Germans are against debt mutualisation even if it
comes with tough budgetary oversight, according to a recent Emnid poll. Even
among SPD voters, less than 40 per cent are in favour. "It's not that if
we had a new constitutional clause we would just wave through debt
mutualisation", says one CDU advisor.
And there is a last hurdle: Germany
might adopt a plan for fiscal union only to be blocked by Austria , Finland
or the Netherlands .
After all, this is not really a debate about the German constitution but the
future shape of Europe .
Nevertheless, the constitutional debate will continue because it suits
both the opposition and the government. The SPD seeks to sharpen its political
profile ahead of the 2013 election. It has so far loyally supported Merkel's
euro policies in parliament. Now many voters complain that they no longer know
what the SDP stands for. The SDP is trying to change that, not by blocking
Merkel's policies but by going beyond them.
The CDU also gains from the constitutional debate. The opposition
accuses Merkel of lacking a blueprint for the euro, of reacting to market
panics, and of recklessly putting taxpayers' money at risk without delivering
more European integration. By talking about a new pro-European constitution,
the government looks like it has a plan while it can put off hard decisions
until after the 2013 election.
Now all eyes are on the constitutional court again. On September 12th
the judges will issue a preliminary verdict on the European Stability Mechanism
and the fiscal compact. They are unlikely to strike them down. But they will
define conditions for making the ESM and the compact compatible with the
constitution.
Some constitutional experts expect that the court will use the occasion
to pronounce on what a process of constitutional renewal might look like. Others
think that the court will shy away from encouraging such a process and instead
widen the government's room for manoeuvre within the current basic law.
Whatever the court does, the debate about a new, pro-European
constitution will hot up this autumn. But do not be fooled: Germany is still a very long way
from agreeing to eurobonds.
by Katinka Barysch
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