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Slovakia Leaving EU? Newcomer Nation May Be Looking For Exit

Slovakia Tarnished Euro

KAREL JANICEK and GEORGE JAHN   12/30/10 10:17 AM ET   AP

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — Bells pealed and fireworks shot across midnight skies in Bratislava two years ago, as Slovaks celebrated not only the New Year but also their country's long-sought entry to the club of nations using the continent's common currency, the euro.

Fast forward to the dying days of 2010 – after the eurozone's debt crisis forced the bailouts of Greece and Ireland and painful austerity measures across the region_ and one thing is clear: while Slovaks will again turn out in droves on Dec. 31, the cheer will have nothing to do with belonging to the euro.

The pride felt back then at being the first in the former Soviet bloc to adopt the euro has been tempered by the responsibilities that come with sharing a common European currency.

Two years ago, the euro was viewed as a safe haven of financial stability, insurance against wild swings of national currencies that could throw national budgets out of kilter and threaten economic growth. For Slovakia, it also signaled arrival into the prosperous club of EU nations less than two decades after the fall of the Iron Curtain.

Now, as eurozone nations are asked to help bail out others overwhelmed by debt and the risk of contagion spreads beyond Ireland and Greece, adopting the common currency is no longer a top priority for former communist countries still outside the zone. And in newcomer countries, like Slovakia, some now see the euro as a burden, not a blessing.

"It seems that they allowed us to enter only to pay for their debts," said Petra Hargasova, a 22-year old economics student, her hands cupped around a glass of mulled wine to fight the chill while taking in a Bratislava Christmas market.

Some in the Slovak leadership are even looking for a way out.

In a recent commentary in the Hospodarske Noviny business daily, Parliament speaker Richard Sulik sent ripples across the already edgy eurozone by arguing that Slovakia should be ready to abandon the euro and switch to its former national currency.

The Finance Ministry was quick to dismiss his remarks and experts note that the quick fix proposed by Sulik would likely backfire. Economist Nicolas Veron of the Brussels-based think-tank Bruegel says that leaving the eurozone "would be economically disruptive" for the nation.

On the plus side, dropping the euro would allow a nation like Slovakia to devalue its national currency. That would help it boost its trade competitiveness against eurozone nations wrestling with the costs of the bailout and tightening their own belts.

At the same time investors are likely to punish defectors, pulling out in fear that their euro-denominated assets will be converted and devalued, to the point of possible financial collapse for the nation involved.

But anti-euro sentiment remains strong in a country that defied its partners earlier this year by refusing to provide its euro800 million ($1.05 billion) share of the euro110 billion ($145 billion) EU bailout loan for Greece.

"Everyone with common sense can see that the system is ill," said Matus Posvanc, an analyst from the F. A. Hayek Foundation, a conservative think tank in Bratislava. He called attempts to bail out Athens futile "because Greece's bankruptcy is inevitable."

With euro-skepticism extending into the top levels of government, Slovakia is among the most vocal of nations pressing for new rules that would force private investors, not only taxpayers, to pay their share. Under discussion is a so-called European Stability Mechanism, which would force private creditors to do just that by allotting them a share of the bailout burden if a nation is deemed insolvent.

In refusing to pay its share of the Greek bailout package, "our main objection was ... that it was only the taxpayers who have to pay," Slovak Finance Minister Ivan Miklos told The Associated Press. "But the banks, which contributed to the problem and made profit by providing loans to problematic countries in the past, didn't have to pay a single cent."

"To maintain such practice means to repeat the previous mistakes," he said.

Miklos argued that the current rules undermine a trust of people in the free market economy.

"The profits are privatized but the losses are socialized," Miklos said. "When it works, a few make money, but when it collapses because they take too big a risk, we all have to pay. That's a huge problem."

Nigel Rendell, an economist at RBC Capital Markets in London, said Slovak concerns were understandable.

"Slovakia worked incredibly hard to gain membership of the euro," he said. "Now they find themselves having to dip into their own pockets to finance foreign governments that spent too much and should have known better."

Other newcomers are also having doubts, while outsiders are suddenly in no hurry to join the euro club, which Rendell says is no longer seen "as a final seal of approval for completing the transition from command to market economy."

"Timetables for membership right across the region are being pushed back, perhaps even delayed forever," he said.

Recent developments seem to back that view.

Although Slovene Prime Minister Borut Pahor has defended his country's loan guarantees for Ireland, a recent survey by the prominent polling agency Mediana indicated 67 percent of citizens were opposed.

While the Polish government has suggested 2015 as a target date, it's lagging commitment to meeting necessary criteria may speak louder than words. At a forecast 7.9 percent of gross domestic product this year, Poland's budget deficit – like those of some other former Soviet bloc nations – remains notably above the 3 percent benchmark needed for eurozone entry.

Polish skepticism of euro adoption has been growing since the country did relatively well during the global economic downturn while still using its currency, the zloty. In 2009, Poland's economy grew 1.7 percent, making it the only EU country to avoid recession.

The governor of Poland's central bank, Marek Belka, voiced the country's anxieties when he said earlier this month that Poland should not rush to adopt the euro until the EU reforms its institutions to support a stable common currency. He called European monetary union "an ambitious but unfinished project."

Monika Kurtek, an economist with the BPH Bank in Warsaw, said she believed the 2015 date was not a real goal and that in any case Poland will not be ready by then.

"Our government does not want to point to a concrete date," she says. "They are speaking about 2015 but it is not even a forecast."

Euro outsiders can now devalue their currencies against their eurozone partners and – like the Polish zloty – the weaker Czech koruna has helped Prague's export sector during the financial crisis gripping the eurozone.

The Czech Republic is yet to set a target date to join the euro, which President Vaclav Klaus has repeatedly described as a failure.

He scoffed last month – when visiting German President Christian Wulff called the joint currency a "success story" – that neither the government, parliament nor the Czech central bank were ready to push to join the eurozone in the foreseeable future. Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas said that adapting the euro now "would be economic and political foolishness."

Despite the chorus of disapproval, Estonia is bucking the trend and will become the 17th member of the eurozone on Jan 1. Finance Minister Jurgen Ligi recently said his country was willing to pitch in financially "to keep the eurozone stable and the European Union healthy."

But ordinary Estonians are dubious and wonder what they may be getting into as daily headlines trace the downfall of once-thriving economies like Ireland.

Just 54 percent of Estonians currently support eurozone entry, according to a November poll by the Faktum & Ariko polling organization.

As for Slovakia, Miklos, the finance minister, says his country still benefits from the euro, pointing to projected economic growth of 4.1 percent in 2010 – the eurozone's highest.

But he said Slovakia and all other euro nations must apply strict fiscal policies, reduce deficits and carry out necessary reforms to remain credible for the markets.

"It turned out the risk of (the euro's) sustainability is higher than we had expected," he said.

___

Jahn reported from Vienna. Vanessa Gera in Warsaw, Snjezana Vukic in Zagreb, Jari Tanner in Tallinn and Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this story.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects time reference to fall of the Iron Curtain in fourth paragraph.)

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BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — Bells pealed and fireworks shot across midnight skies in Bratislava two years ago, as Slovaks celebrated not only the New Year but also their country's long-sought entry t...
BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — Bells pealed and fireworks shot across midnight skies in Bratislava two years ago, as Slovaks celebrated not only the New Year but also their country's long-sought entry t...
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11:41 AM on 01/12/2011
HuffPost headline writer -- your bias towards the greenback and jealousy of anything European is revealed in your misleading headline. Slovakia will NEVER leave the European Union; the debate at the moment is whether a relatively poor country such as Slovakia should have to bear the burden of lending money to indebted EU members such as Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain, and thus whether it is wise for Slovakia to remain in the eurozone. My view? Slovakia is better off in the eurozone because its economy is so strongly linked to Germany. And let us not forget, when attacking the free-spending southern European states, that they took their example of putting everything on the credit card from the United States and its awful and greedy finance and banking people, whose only aim is to enrich themselves and get huge bonuses, and to hell with the rest of society and the world. My advice? Let's reexamine good old Protestant Christian values of thrift, hard work and living within your means, and reject the greed of bankers and financiers. Especially as without the Chinese and Russians buying US government bonds, the United States would also go bust however much money it printed. Best to keep the euro as a world currency reserve then, so that if the United States and its greedy bankers implode by printing trillions and trillions of dollars without earning those dollars with honest, hard labour, at least we have the euro the rely on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
structurequity
structurequity not oppression
04:58 PM on 01/02/2011
The legitimacy of lending institutions is without "question" as the banking entity is given individual rights to make a profit and social right to offset a loss. A social right defined by granting corporations the rights of individuals, should the reverse not also be true then? Individual gain should be saddled as social gain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allseeing
08:46 AM on 01/02/2011
What dummies.

It's like the Mafia.

Once in you cant get out.

New World Order..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hdaryl01
03:36 AM on 01/02/2011
I was involved in the transition of the Czech Republic and Slovakia to join the EU in the mid to late 1990's, until their membership. It is a very gratifying, yet weird sensation to hear such principled capitalistic common sense and reason coming from officials, and the populations of these countries. It is absolutely remarkable. 15-20 years ago both were in the dark ages. Now, they seem to be the only countries that "get it". Ironically, what they are advocating is exactly what we had advocated they do-15-20 years ago when they didn't have basic property rights, or a legal system to establish and enforce them. Nor, did they have basic accounting principles, chinese walls between investment companies, insurance companies, banks, corporations, or even government institutions. We explained the virtues of all of these, and worked with them to impliment the changes necessary to establish them. Right before the U.S. repealed Glass Steagall...and implimented additional broad and sweeping deregulation...and de facto established a system very much like the self defeating system in the Czech Republic and Slovakia in their wild west crony oligarchy of before. Now, these infant states get the principles of capitalism better than their former teachers.......

"The profits are privatized but the losses are socialized," Miklos said. "When it works, a few make money, but when it collapses because they take too big a risk, we all have to pay. That's a huge problem."

Brilliant.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
09:52 PM on 01/01/2011
Today, Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France, spent his eight minutes of air time to praise the Euro currency, and urged Europeans to not give up on the European Union. That desperate-sounding plea alone had me worried. If you have to defend it/them, what's going on?
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
07:59 AM on 01/02/2011
NS defended the euro because has been under attack by largely American and British investors for the past two years and those attacks have been increasing in recent months with the illogical runs on the sovereign bonds of eurozone peripheral nations.

Despite all the belly-aching and name-calling, Europe is clearly moving toward a more unified and standardized economy, with EU member-states soon required to receive approval from EU overseers of national budgets and the economic forecasts on which they are based.

The key, and very much under-reported reality, is that the richer nations of Europe, starting with Germany and France, will be willing to provide aid to countries whose sovereign debt is under attack from bond vigilantes IN EXCHANGE FOR this reduction in their national sovereignty to the benefit of Europe.

Europe has also made its greatest strides in times of crisis!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ngonyama
Major prolation, perfect mode
11:50 AM on 01/03/2011
Thanks for the voice of reason Yank. Under-reported indeed! HuffPo's reporting is downright biased on this point. A whole page of inflammatory scaremongering about Slovakia and one sentence about Estonia "bucking the trend". What trend? The trend certain people in the US would like? The failure of the euro, so that they can stuff more green pieces of paper down the world's throat to 'pay off' their debts?

Europeans have not forgotten how that felt after the Vietnam War.

And dear HuffPO, if you censor this message, you are no different from Faux News.
03:59 PM on 01/01/2011
so ignorant this is offensive - hey headline writer - the EU and the Euro are two different things!! EU stands for the European Union - it's "common currency" is the Euro - you can be a member of the EU and not have the Euro. The headline reads that Slovakia is considering leaving the European Union - when the article is only about it considering to change its currency from the Euro! Two completely separate things! With media like this no wonder that Americans are so ignorant.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
02:15 PM on 01/01/2011
All else fails, we could always try dissolving all currencies and starting over from scratch.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
09:57 PM on 01/01/2011
LMPE -- here we could start with restoring our currency issuance to the US Treasury, taken away from them in 1913, and yanking away from the private "Federal Reserve", which is neither "Federal", nor has any "Reserves". It's a malevolent private banking cartel.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:32 AM on 01/01/2011
I fail to see how a nation can exist that does not have the power to control the monetary policy of its member states.

On the other hand, we saw a somewhat similar failure in the United States. The individual states had to set their own banking and real estate rules, when the federal government stepped out of the picture, and those states which failed to implement oversight over the mortgage process saw the bankers ruin the banks. The real estate and mortgage collapse in the US has largely been due to the lack of oversight from either the individual states or the central government, and that same real estate collapse has been instrumental in the larger economic collapse. Meanwhile, the far-right still bangs the drums for less regulation.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
10:01 PM on 01/01/2011
North Dakota has had a state bank since 1914 or something. That state doesn't have the foreclosure and "manufactured debt" problems that other states have. Today, it has the lowest unemployment rate in the nation. I think it is an example to follow.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
03:39 AM on 01/02/2011
I agree with your criticism of the American right, but wonder if you did not confuse monetary and fiscal policies in your first sentence.

After all, Europe does indeed have a unified monetary policy, via the European Central Bank.

One of the many problems facing Europe today is that individual nation states carry out FISCAL POLICY that is totally decorrelated with monetary policy (the ECB).

Another problem is the validity of the economic projections issued by states to justify their future budget estimates.

European leaders, especially France and Germany, are pushing hard for European nations to agree to oversight of their national budget process by an EU budget authority, which would thoroughly audit national accounts before handing down a judgement as to the validity of govt GDP forecasts.

In effect, European nations will have to give up much of their sovereignty over budget policy to strengthen European construction.

Despite the naysayers in the US, Europeans have overcome crises of the past to become STRONGER. My prediction is that Europe will come out of this present crisis better, more united and more economically viable than ever!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Blackorpheus
the decisive blows are always struck left-handed
11:59 PM on 12/31/2010
The only way the EU may survive is by ejecting egomaniacal Germany and egomaniacal France.
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08:36 AM on 01/01/2011
Without Germany to support the rest of the countries, the whole EU would collapse. If anything, the EU should have expanded more slowly. The cultural differences are so extreme between some of these countries, I personally do not see how they could have put up with the culture shock of removing their borders and surrendering autonomy to what they still perceive as foreigners.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
02:12 PM on 01/01/2011
I get the feeling that every country suffers a little egomania
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
11:04 AM on 12/31/2010
2011 is going to make the current woes of the US and EU look like recess.

We have allowed to few to amass to much and then to make it worse, we allowed the to borrow and gamble on worthless debts.

The collapse of the global economy will be catastrophic and probably take 20 years to fix, that is if their is anyone left.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
roadwarrior09
Social Liberal, Fiscal Conservative. Deal with it.
10:32 AM on 12/31/2010
Well done, Slovakia!
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10:30 AM on 12/31/2010
Slovakia wants out of EURO not out of EU. There's a difference.
12:35 PM on 12/31/2010
Exactly. I think the headline is quite deceiving.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaine1776
Left is right; Right is wrong
04:22 AM on 12/31/2010
Hillbillies. Next time they assassinate an Archduke, let's all ignore it.
06:36 AM on 12/31/2010
I didn't know they killed an archduke in Slovakia too, I thought Yugoslavia (Bosnia&Herzegovina specifically) were the only ones so far ...
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10:32 AM on 12/31/2010
Archduke was killed in Bosnia&Herzegovina, but it was done by Serb terrorists.
12:33 PM on 12/31/2010
That was a Serbian Bosniak Einstein
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaine1776
Left is right; Right is wrong
04:16 AM on 12/31/2010
Slovakia? Who cares? let 'em go. Why do they want out? Not vampire-friendly enough?
03:06 AM on 12/31/2010
Here is the real story about it:
http://www.thedaily.sk/2010/12/15/top-news/is-the-euro-titanic-heading-for-an-iceberg/