25 April 2025
Let’s talk imbalances
In our lead story this morning, we write about global imbalances, how and why they have arisen, and what it takes to eradicate them; we also have stories on the first signs of retreat by the EU starting in its religious war against high tech; on how capital markets union could turn into a campaign theme for the French elections; on older people in France trending towards Le Pen; on Pedro Sanchez overruling his interior minister on arms sales to Israel; and on a new paramilitary force in Italy – the Guardia di Finanza.
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Armies are not spreadsheets
Anyone who has ever heard of the Guardia di Finanza, Italy’s financial police, will know they are a force to be reckoned with. But they probably aren’t what most people had in mind when they thought about increasing Europe’s defence spending. Nevertheless, one of the ways the Italian government plans on boosting defence spending to the 2% Nato target is by including their outlay, as well as that of the Carabinieri and Coast Guard, in their calculations. Include these, plus some other accounting items, and, presto, you have met the target.
The government’s point is that these do fall within Nato’s accounting criteria for defence spending. Part of the reason why Italy has looked like poor performers relative to others is that those items have not been included in its own reckoning before. True as that may be, there are a couple of issues with this.
The first is that even if it is within the letter of the rules, it obviously misses the spirit of them. If there is a rationale for a defence spending push in Europe, then you need actual new capabilities. Hitting the target by including some things you were already spending money on is not adding anything you didn’t have the day, week, or year before. Collective defence is also not a football league season: you don’t get extra points for coming ahead of Canada or Luxembourg.
Or at least you shouldn’t. Part of the rationale is possibly to appease the US. But Nato’s upcoming summit in June could bring a new, higher, defence spending target of 3.5% of GDP. Alessandro Barbera, writing for La Stampa, recently pointed out that this would mean about €30bn more in defence spending compared to the current budget.
This is a lot of money for the Italian government. It is in the ballpark of a typical manovra, the annual discretionary budget increase in Italy. Boosting defence to this level could hypothetically mean foregoing tax cuts, a key pledge for Italy’s right-wing coalition, or slashing healthcare or other social spending.
It would, we think, not be something that would go down well with the Italian electorate. We are also sure that both Giorgia Meloni and Giancarlo Giorgetti realise this. Ultimately, this is a question of priorities. Some countries in Europe might be prepared to forego social spending, or accept higher taxes, for the sake of boosting their defence capabilities. Or take on more debt. For others, like Italy, it may not be worth the fiscal pain, or damage to credit ratings, which have begun to improve for Italy.
This is the point, we believe. If there was a noticeable sense amongst the Italian public that they faced a threat worth making sacrifices for, there'd be no need to try and reach the 2% target by changing accounting definitions. Instead, it would come through extra spending on more personnel, or things the military needs and uses. The consensus on the threat facing Europe, then, might not be as strong as it superficially looks.
24 April 2025
Felix Austria - revisited
In the old Habsburg days, they would describe Austria's strategy as follows: let others wage war, but you, happy Austria, marry. Today, Austria is equally caught in the crossfires of geopolitical wars over tariffs, and the marriage of its manufacturing sector to the German car industry no longer saves it from troubles. Quite the contrary.
Austria was the only industrialised country the IMF predicts a recession for in 2025. Austria’s economy is expected to shrink by 0.3% in GDP this year. Much has changed since last November, when the IMF still predicted a growth rate of 1.1%.
The 0.3% figure is also what the Wifo research institute predicts for this year. For Austria, 2025 would be the third year of recession after a negative GDP growth rate of 1% and 1.2% in 2023 and 2024.
The resilience of several industries will be severely tested this year, though Wifo expects a turnaround for the second half of the year. Construction and consumption are already trending upwards. The housing initiative adopted in 2024 will support demand in the second half of 2025 and shows its full effect in 2026.
Real investments are expected to continue declining amidst low-capacity utilisation and geopolitical uncertainty. There are structural reasons for low investment, as Austria’s manufacturing sector is closely linked to Germany’s, and the classic car industry is losing its role as a growth engine. The decline of the car industry in Germany hits Austria too. Another factor is the geopolitical uncertainty. How US tariffs and China’s exports affect the European market is also not yet clear, investments are thus put on hold or cancelled.
The IMF writes that interest rates are still too high and that the planned budget consolidation will also affect growth negatively. Austria has one of the largest budget deficits, at 4.7% of GDP. The more the economy starts growing again, the more this ratio will come down by itself.
The poor economic performance does not help the new coalition government. The latest Insa poll suggests that the FPÖ gained over 5pp in the polls, now leading with 34% ahead of the SPÖ with 23% and ÖVP with 20%. The hard-right party thus regained in opposition what popularity they lost when coalition negotiations with the ÖVP collapsed. By contrast, the ÖVP, in coalition with the SPÖ and Neos, lost more than 6 percentage points.
23 April 2025
Another electric breakthrough in China
It has been almost 70 years since Giuseppe Tommasi di Lampedusa’s book, The Leopard, was published. In the novel, about a Sicilian noble family struggling with Italy’s changing social and political climate, the young reformist Tancredi has the book’s most famous line: that everything must change if everything is to stay the same. There is still a lot of truth in the truism. Like the conservative family patriarch that Tancredi says this too, we in Europe will end up re-learning this lesson, the hard way.
The latest example of this is a major problem for the European car industry. Electric cars are now advancing to the point where they can remove some of the last barriers to entry for consumers, and fully replace petrol-driven ones. But this isn’t happening here. Instead, it is happening in China.
CATL, a Chinese firm that is the world’s largest electric car battery-maker, has said that has developed a battery with 520km of range that can charge in five minutes. It is in a competition with BYD, the Chinese electric carmaker that’s also the second-largest battery-maker. Its most recent announcement was for a 400km-range battery that could charge in the same time. If CATL can deliver on it, this round goes to them.
Another breakthrough that CATL announced is perhaps as, or more, significant. It is a new brand of sodium-ion batteries. Sodium has similar chemical properties to lithium, being another member of the same family of elements. It is, however, much more abundant than lithium. Sodium-ion batteries would also help solve another barrier to entry: fire safety.
The issue has been getting them to a similar level of performance. But according to CATL, these batteries can perform almost on a par for energy-density with its current LFP lithium-ion batteries. Incidentally, CATL developed LFP battery technology to obviate the need for other metals, such as cobalt, in the battery manufacturing process. That was another barrier to entry, gone.
China’s electric car and battery industry is continuing to make cheaper, and better-performing, products. If you add in advances in automation, you can see a major problem coming for existing car companies that rely on internal combustion engines, like most of those in Europe. CATL and BYD are both very young companies. CATL was formed in 2011 as a spin-off from another battery-maker, Amperex, which was founded in 1999. BYD dates from 1995. This compares to the often century-old auto makers we have in Europe.
There are a lot of different ingredients to the Chinese electric car industry’s rise. These include financial repression elsewhere in the economy, and active industrial policy. But we think another factor that’s easy to overlook is how agnostic China seems to be to who exactly ends up making the next technology, as long as it is a Chinese firm.
22 April 2025
Daring greatly - EU edition
Is EU independence a dream or a new goal for EU member states? We live in a time when the US closes in on itself, China expands, and Russia stiffens. This raises strategic questions for the EU about its response and geopolitical positioning.
The EU has been operating in crisis management mode since the financial crisis in 2007. There was one crisis after the other: first the euro crisis, then Brexit, then the pandemic, Russia’s war in Ukraine, and now Donald Trump’s tariff war. At the same time our economies struggle and our political systems fragment. A Venn diagram that is circulating in social media shows that compared with the US and China, the EU is frontrunner in none of the new driving technologies but it is in regulation.
Emmanuel Macron has ambitions for Europe to go beyond its own limitations, to become an independent Europe and a geopolitical player in its own right. A dream, yes. An agenda? Not really.
But if we were to take this ambition more seriously, how could European independence be defined? It is certainly not a reflexive rise in tariffs in response to Trump’s tariffs. Nor can it be solely defined over the support for Ukraine. This is not independence.
Would the EU be ready to give up unity to allow an alliance of the willing to move ahead on defence, or further economic integration? What trading partners will the EU seek out to be aligned with? In the Cold War there were three zones, those aligned with the US, those around the Soviet Union, and a group of non-aligned states, with Egypt and India as its main members. Now we could see a similar tri-partition of the world emerging over tariffs, with the US and China as two poles and a non-aligned group of nations in the middle. Which camp does the EU want to be in?
There are many aspirations. Writing in l’Opinion, Macron evokes the philosophers of the Enlightenment with their call for the audacity to know in a time when Europe was ravaged by wars and epidemics, and subject to religious and autocratic yokes. Daring to know is his new mantra, and a way to shake off dependencies. These are lofty words.
But Macron has one concrete audience, that of those researchers, who are limited either by cuts to funds or stifling freedom of speech. Macron tells them: choose France, choose Europe!
Last week France announced a new platform called Chose France for Science, which will enable universities, schools and research organisations to apply for co-funding from the government to host researchers. The initiative will be launched on 5 May by the French National Research Agency. The ANR writes that France is committed to standing up against attacks on academic freedom across the globe, and it prepares for a wave of mobile researchers whose funds have been cut. It invites universities to present projects in particular in areas such as health research, climate and biodiversity, artificial intelligence, space studies, agriculture, low-carbon energy and digital systems.
Aix Marseille University has seen a flood of applicants since it announced a programme in March to host researchers from the US threatened by cuts to funding. Their president is also advocating for the creation of a new status of refugee scientist.
But even if we had all those cutting edge researchers in the world, more needs to happen to turn this into concrete advantages for Europe. Past experiences with Erasmus and joint research programmes have been disappointing in this respect. More needs to be done to harvest what research comes up with and translate it into tangible outcomes for the European economies and societies. This is where the US and China continue to dominate with their competitive advantage. So for Europe, the challenge will be to move beyond the dare to think and deliver on the dare to act.
17 April 2025
How to work with the AfD
Gridlock is what happens in systems of proportional representation when the political system fragments. But political gridlock is also a cultural phenomenon. In Germany, Tagesschau had an article discussing Friedrich Merz’s suitability for the job of chancellor on a singular dimension: ability to compromise. It is an example of the centrist coalition mindset. The compromise is always more important than the thing that gets compromised. There can be no economic reform until that mindset changes.
The political device that keeps the centre locked in perma-coalitions in Germany is the political firewall against the far-right that precludes any form of co-operation. Jens Spahn, the former health minister, and potentially one of the next generation CDU leaders, advocated treating the AfD as a normal opposition party. This would involve co-operating with them in situations where their support is needed. One such example is a constitutional change. At the last election, the political centre lost the two-thirds majority. This a threshold required for much of parliamentary business, not only to change the constitution but also to appoint senior judges. Together with the Left Party, the AfD has a blocking minority in those areas.
Spahn got an immediate pushback against the idea from the SPD and the still-strong Merkel wing of his own party. His critics see it as step 1 in a long process to break down the firewall.
As so often, you just need to look at neighbouring countries to see what is going to happen in Berlin too. Coalitions with far-right parties have become normal in Northern Europe and in the Netherlands. A stint in government has more often than not taken the shine of these parties' appeal as they have to lead difficult ministries. Why not put in them in charge of housing and transportation, departments with a strong record of ending the political careers of incompetent ministers? One of the reasons why the AfD is so popular, and also so extreme, is the certainty for now that they do not have to implement their policies. We think Spahn has a point.
16 April 2025
Nein Danke
In the outgoing Scholz government, the ministry for economics was the power centre of the coalition. Robert Habeck was not only vice-chancellor but in charge of a ministry that co-ordinated all the important stuff, from the classic job of business regulation to energy and climate change polies, and digitalisation. In the new coalition under Friedrich Merz, it is the ministry that nobody wants to run. The person widely considered to be the next economics minister, Carsten Linnemann, said no yesterday. He wanted to remain in his current job as CDU general secretary, which is effectively the number two job in the party. Linnemann is a former leader of the CDU’s Mittelstand wing, which represents the interest of that sector of the economy, the mostly privately-owned medium-sized company sector.
FAZ cites two reasons. One is that the coalition agreement gives the new minister little chance to shine, since it prescribes a continuation of the status quo. The ministry will also lose responsibility for energy, climate and digitalisation. And, as the commentator pointed out, trade is done in Brussels.
Indeed it is. What surprises us is the idea that this ministry does not have much to do, considering what has been happening in the last few days. Germany will have to reorganise its external commercial relations. The country may be forced to decide whether it wants to be commercially part of the China zone, or the US, because the US will not allow Germany to be part of both as it used to be. For a creative minister with new ideas, this would have been an ideal job – the reinvention of an economic model. The fact that nobody wants that job tells us a lot about the state of the debate.
15 April 2025
Safe countries for migrants?
The concept of safe third countries for migrants has been one that haunts the EU since it concluded its first pact with Turkey to keep migrants away from European shores. It is a foreign policy position based on fear and a strong desire to curb migration into Europe. It has completely shifted the debate away from migration as a counter-point of shrinking and ageing population. Any failure will be seized by far-right parties as yet another reason why to vote for them.
The safe-third-country concept allows asylum-seekers to be sent to a country where they can find protection, instead of staying in the country they applied to. But what exactly is a safe third country? There are also questions about what such a country would get in return, what are the safeguards to make sure the agreements are honoured and whether such a provision can it stand up in the courts. The UK had a terrible experience with its attempt to send migrants to Rwanda. Italy had also not been successful with its plans to send migrants to Albania.
In its latest move the European Commission is proposing seven countries to be considered as safe third countries. According to Euractiv these are Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, India, Kosovo, Morocco, and Tunisia. These are countries that all have their own economic difficulties or massive climate change challenges. These countries could then expect to get money in return for hosting migrants on the behalf of EU countries. How we can expect them to look after our migrants when their own population is suffering is a mystery to us.
It seems EU countries are determined to use this avenue under the migrant pact as a principle and deterrence of further migrant flows. The Commission's move will be followed by a fast-tracked review of the safe third country concept under EU law. The EU countries are also debating the latest rules for migrant returns the Commission proposed in March. If this all goes through, the final list of safe countries, expected to be published before June, would be added as an amendment to the EU’s asylum procedure regulation as part of the migration pact.
11 April 2025
A cold April for the Kremlin
Maybe Donald Trump really will get the Ukraine peace deal he wants. Just not in the way he necessarily planned to. The cliché is that trade wars have no winners. But they do have different degrees of losers, and one of the biggest so far from this war is Russia. A significant drop in oil prices has left the country vulnerable economically, both in fiscal and inflationary terms. It may end up being this, rather than international sanctions, that complicates its war effort, at least enough to seek a deal in good faith.
Although oil prices have pared back their losses a bit since Donald Trump’s announcement on Wednesday that he would pause most tariffs, they continue to remain relatively low. The Brent crude benchmark, for instance, is trading at below $64 a barrel. This is better than the sub-$60 it hit earlier this week. But it’s still far from close to $75 a barrel levels on 2 April.
Typically, there is a discount between Russian crude oil and global benchmark prices, though this varies. When global oil prices hit their lowest points earlier this week, Russian oil tanked even more. The Urals crude grade that Russia sells at the port of Primorsk was fetching less than $53 a barrel. Through most of 2024, it was somewhere in the range of $60-70.
These drops have a couple of different implications. One is budgetary, something Elvira Nabiullina, the Russian central bank governor, warned about earlier this week. As of last year, around 30% of Russia’s budget revenue comes from energy products, and 85% of that is from the sale of crude oil or refined products. Russia’s defence spending, on the other hand, has continued growing, providing a significant budgetary need. It went up by more than 40% from 2023-24. Defence spending in the country is now 6.7% of GDP.
Then there is inflation. A drop in Russian oil revenue would also contribute to a weakening of Russia’s current account balance and position. This is not what the country needs when the central bank is also trying to fight off high inflation, with interest rates at 21% currently. This makes it more expensive for the Kremlin to borrow. But it also creates difficulties for businesses and other borrowers.
If Putin does agree to a peace deal, the oil drop probably wouldn’t be the only thing that would influence this decision. But in the short term, it makes the war even more difficult to prosecute for the Kremlin, and compounds the damage a war economy will do if it’s sustained. It will make its fiscal choices to sustain military spending even more acute, and contribute to politically unpopular inflation, plus restrictive monetary policy, too.
10 April 2025
US brain drain as EU brain gain?
Will the US experience a brain drain? It is too early to tell. Could the brain drain become a brain gain for Europe?
The number of people seeking to leave the US has exploded, either because they are personally affected by the cuts in jobs or funding, or because they simply do not like to live in the current political climate.
US universities have to fear for their academic freedoms amid concerns over funding in universities and other research institutions as well as the financing of research jobs. Other countries hope to benefit from this exodus.
Universities in Canada and Europe already launched or are considering to launch initiatives for US researchers. It comes with a hubris of hope. The president of the Berlin-based Max Planck institute describes the US as a new talent pool for the institute. The society will use additional funds to create more positions with the prospect that it would benefit the institute in the future. There are already warnings in the US that it could use its leadership role in certain scientific fields like biopharmaceutical innovations. Young scientists saw their research grant cancelled with no other option than to look elsewhere for a job.
There are also people considering leaving jobs in various other industries. Services that specialise in helping US citizens to relocate to Europe have seen demand rising ever since Donald Trump was elected. In their dealings with customers, countries like Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, and Germany emerged as a popular choice for digital nomads, venture capitalists, and those planning their retirement, Euronews reports.
But the biggest obstacle are salaries. Salaries in Paris, for example, are a third of what they may get in LA. It can also be complicated for US citizens to move abroad as the US tax structure makes it complicated for the banks to work with them. For example, if an American wants to save with a non-US pension, there are often punitive US tax implications that need to be taken into account.
Those plans are also not likely to be implemented over night. On Reddit, people discuss their exit plans with destinations including Australia, Europe, and Latin America. They plan to relocate within the coming years. A lot can happen within the next couple of years. Will the urge still be so strong for people to act on their wish to leave the US? Some have no choice but those who do?
It also does not mean that European universities will be at the frontier of breakthrough science any time soon. Lab facilities and working conditions need to be in place for those researchers to be able to succeed. These are long term investments and need financing, usually with long administrative hurdles attached. This scientist exodus, if it does happen, would challenge what Europe can offer. We may only see how this exodus affects science itself in ten years’ time.
9 April 2025
Could Le Pen count on the courts?
Marine Le Pen did not get the public support she was hoping for against the first court ruling that bans her from running for public office. Neither the polls nor the rally on the streets match her outrage over a ruling that takes her of out the presidential election. The news cycle also quickly turned towards Donald Trump’s tariffs, unfortunate timing for her and the case.
The party now has to decide how to proceed without knowing the final verdict in this court case. This is a strategic decision that has consequences for the party itself and the presidential elections. If their assumption is that the ban will most likely be confirmed, then it makes sense for them to insist that courts are politicised and trying to block her. If their assumption is that the ban is eventually overturned or suspended, then by attacking the courts the RN would itself risk politicising the courts.
Le Pen promised to use the all legal options available to her through which she could challenge the ruling. L’Express explains the time line and scenarios, including several that would allow her to run in the presidential elections in 2027:
- The Court of Appeals is to decide next whether to confirm the verdict of the court of first instance or not. The court promised to deliver a verdict in the summer of 2026. Usually it takes two years to get through the appeals process. If she is acquitted in this verdict, or if the court decides to reduce the ban of ineligibility, she could run as presidential candidate in 2027. If the appeals court confirms the verdict, the ban would no longer be provisional.
- At a next stage Le Pen could call on the Supreme court, the so-called Cour de Cassation. If her case is accepted, the judges will rule on whether to apply the presumption of innocence. In other words, Le Pen may still be able to run under the assumption of innocence if the verdict were to be expected after the 2027 elections. The court could also choose to confirm the previous verdict or acquit Le Pen. It is the last instance for an appeal and thus the legal recourse for Le Pen.
So in four out of five scenarios Le Pen could still be allowed to run in the 2027 presidential elections. How this plays out politically is a different matter. It seems that Le Pen’s role as a political victim is not credible enough to mobilise at this stage, however.
It also comes in a decisive moment for courts judging those in power. Shortly before Le Pen’s verdict, Nicolas Sarkozy became the first French president to have to actually serve a prison sentence as the courts found him guilty of corruption and misuse of influence. Jacques Chirac had been condemned too, but his sentence was suspended. In the eyes of the people, Le Pen is less of a victim, but a representative of the powerful elites. Polls suggest that a majority of voters believe the provisional ban on Le Pen is justified. And her supporters would be happy with Jordan Bardella as an alternative candidate. Bardella and Le Pen both poll at the same rates of 34% for first-round voting preference. In reality, however, the presidential elections will be a completely different game, where history and personality count. Le Pen knows this, but do her voters?