Economic history
Germany, Greece and the Marshall Plan
Jun 15th 2012, by Albrecht Ritschl, LSE
http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/economic-history

OLD myths die hard, and the Marshall Plan is one of them. In the New York Times
of June 12th German economist Hans-Werner Sinn invokes comparisons with the
Marshall Plan to defend Germany's position against Eurobonds, the pooling of
sovereign debt within the euro zone. His worries are understandable, but the
historical analogy is mistaken, and the numbers mean little. All this
unnecessarily weakens his case.

Mr Sinn argues against Germany's detractors that Marshall Aid to postwar West
Germany was low compared to Germany's recent assistance, debt guarantees etc. to
Greece. While Marshall Aid cumulatively amounted to 4% of West German GDP around
1950 (his figure of 2% is too low but that doesn't matter), recent German aid
has exceeded 60% of Greece's GDP, and total European assistance to Greece is now
above 200% of Greek GDP. That makes the Marshall Plan look like a pittance. And
it strips all the calls for German gratitude in memory of the Marshall Plan off
their legitimacy. Or does it?

What Mr Sinn is invoking is just the outer shell of the Marshall Plan, the
sweetener that was added to make a large political package containing bitter
pills more palatable to the public in Paris and London. The financial core of
the Marshall Plan was something much, bigger, an enormous sovereign debt relief
programme. Its main beneficiary was a state that did not even exist when the
Marshall Plan was started, and that was itself a creation of that plan: West
Germany.

At the end of World War II, Germany nominally owed almost 40% of its 1938 GDP in
short-term clearing debt to Europe. Not entirely unlike the ECB's Target-2
clearing mechanism, this system had been set up at Germany's central bank, the
Reichsbank, as a mere clearing device. But during World War II, almost all of
Germany's trade deficits with Europe were financed through this system, just as
most of Southern Europe's payments deficits towards Germany since 2008 have been
financed through Target-2. Incidentally, the amount now is the same, fast
approaching 40% of German GDP. Just the signs are reversed. Bad karma, that,
isn't it.

Germany's deficits during World War II were mostly robbery at gunpoint, usually
at heavily distorted exchange rates. German internal wartime statistics suggest
that when calculated at more realistic rates, transfers from Europe on clearing
account were actually closer to 90% of Germany's 1938 GDP. To this adds
Germany's official public debt, which internal wartime statistics put at some
300% of German 1938 GDP.

What happened to this debt after World War II? Here is where the Marshall Plan
comes in. Recipients of Marshall Aid were (politely) asked to sign a waiver that
made U.S. Marshall Aid a first charge on Germany. No claims against Germany
could be brought unless the Germans had fully repaid Marshall Aid. This meant
that by 1947, all foreign claims on Germany were blocked, including the 90% of
1938 GDP in wartime clearing debt.

Currency reform in 1948 - the U.S. Army put an occupation currency into
circulation, and gave it the neutral name of Deutsche Mark, as no emitting
authority existed yet - wiped out domestic public debt, the largest part of the
300% of 1938 GDP mentioned above.

But given that Germany's debt was blocked, the countries of Europe would not
trade with post-war Germany except on a barter basis. Also to mitigate this,
Europe was temporarily taken out of the Bretton Woods currency system and put
together in a multilateral trade and clearing agreement dubbed the European
Payments Union. Trade credit within this clearing system was underwritten by,
again, the Marshall Plan.

In 1953, the London Agreement on German Debt perpetuated these arrangements, and
thus waterproofed them for the days when Marshall Aid would be repaid and the
European Payments Union would be dissolved. German pre-1933 debt was to be
repaid at much reduced interest rates, while settlement of post-1933 debts was
postponed to a reparations conference to be held after a future German
unification. No such conference has been held after the reunification of 1990.
The German position is that these debts have ceased to exist.

Let's recap. The Marshall Plan had an outer shell, the European Recovery
Programme, and an inner core, the economic reconstruction of Europe on the basis
of debt forgiveness to and trade integration with Germany. The effects of its
implementation were huge. While Western Europe in the 1950s struggled with
debt/GDP ratios close to 200%, the new West German state enjoyed debt/GDP
ratios of less than 20%. This and its forced re-entry into Europe's markets was
Germany's true benefit from the Marshall Plan, not just the 2-4% pump priming
effect of Marshall Aid. As a long term effect, Germany effortlessly embarked on
a policy of macroeconomic orthodoxy that it has seen no reason to deviate from
ever since.

But why did the Americans do all this, and why did anyone in Europe consent to
it? America's trauma was German reparations after World War I and the financial
mess they created, with the U.S. picking up the bill. Under the Dawes Plan of
1924, Germany's currency had been put back on gold but Germany went on a
borrowing binge. In a nutshell, Germany was like Greece on steroids. To stop
this, the Young Plan of 1929 made it riskier to lend to Germany, but the ensuing
deflation and recession soon became self-defeating, ending in political chaos
and German debt default. A repetition of this the Marshall Planners were
determined to avoid. And the U.S. led reconstructions of Germany and Japan have
become the classical showcases of successful liberal intervention.

So does Greece, does Southern Europe need a Marshall Plan? Is Sinn right to say
that Greece has already received one - or a 115-fold one, as he argues? The
answer to first question may be yes, in the limited sense that a sweeping debt
relief programme is needed. The answer to the second question is a resounding
no. Greece has clearly not received a Marshall Plan, and certainly not 115 of
them. Nor has anyone else. As far as historical analogies go, what Southern
Europe received when included in the euro zone was closer to a Dawes Plan. And
just like in Germany in the 1920s, the Southern Europeans responded with a
borrowing spree. In 2010 we didn't serve them a Marshall Plan either, but a
deflationary Young Plan instead.

This latter-day Young Plan is not even fully implemented yet. But we see the
same debilitating consequences its precursor had around 1930: technocratic
governments, loss of democratic legitimacy, the rise of political fringe
parties, and no end in sight to the financial and economic crisis engulfing
these states, no matter how many additional aid packages are negotiated. Woe if
those historical analogies bear out.

Europe should learn from history. But it needs to learn fast. There might be no
recovery unless debts are reduced to manageable proportions. That is what ended
the Great Depression in Europe in the 1930s, and that is what in all likelihood
is needed again. Professor Sinn is right to resolutely ask for action on this,
even if his take on the Marshall Plan is wrong.
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