Max Watson
In South East Europe, the impact of the
global and euro area crises has been particularly severe, with political
as well as economic implications. The crisis arrested the incomplete
progress made over the previous decade in overcoming a number of
historic vulnerabilities. If the decline in employment and living
standards is not soon reversed, there are risks that serious political-economic
tensions in the region could re-surface. These were among the key
messages from the fourth seminar in this term's core SEESOX series, which asked
whether the impact of the crisis on the region will prove reversible.
In this region, it was pointed
out, the crisis had affected particularly seriously the most
vulnerable groups in society. The response of governing elites had been
piecemeal and not very effective, and this had further undermined the
population's trust in public administrations. Moreover, the apparent failure of
the previous decade's growth model had raised questions about the EU as a
catalyst of economic convergence. So far, the impact of the crisis
had been cushioned to some degree by work in the informal sector, and by
family-based support mechanisms; but if today's recessionary conditions were
not soon reversed, the limits of such cushions might be reached.
As in the Greek elections of June 2012, much
of the population might still conclude that There Is No Alternative, given
fears of a backsliding into the economic and security hazards of the region's
Balkan past. But the credibility of the 'EU card' seemed to be much weaker with
the young: they had no direct memories of past disorder, but faced
the systematically high levels of youth unemployment prevailing across the
region. Thus demographics could be weakening the EU's command over
voter psychology.
The weakening of EU credibility was a
worrying backdrop, given the re-emergence of nationalist and populist
pressures. Protest had taken many forms across the region, and had been aimed
at different targets; but a notable feature politically was how the stress of
the crisis was leading mainstream parties to assimilate some viewpoints of
smaller, more nationalist or populist groups in their own agenda.
Reversing the economic effects of the crisis was seen as a key
element in restarting a favourable political dynamic in the region. The outlook
for such a reversal varied across countries, as did the policy challenges for
authorities in trying to restart growth and job creation. A common feature,
however, was a dependency on economic recovery getting underway in the
region's EU partners. There was also usually a need to re-energize structural
reforms, even though the specific priorities for action differed from
country to country. In most cases the priorities for action were clear,
but the leadership of political elites was much more in doubt.
Answers were not yet clear on the reversibility
of the crisis. But the serious political question posed by the present troubled
setting could already be defined. This was whether nationalist and
populist arguments would find a growingly receptive audience, and
thus threaten the integrationist pattern that the EU had been successfully
fostering in the region. The risks were evident, but so far their effects
had been contained. For the period ahead, restoring growth was seen as a
critical element in this equation.
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