By Joel Kotkin
Saturday, February 21, 2015
In the years after the Cold War, much was written about
Europe’s emergence as the third great force in the global political economy,
alongside Asia and the United States. Some, such as former French President
Francois Mitterand’s eminence grise Jacques Attali, went even further: in his
1991 book Millenium Attali predicted that in the 21st century, “Japan and
Europe may supplant the United States as the chief superpowers.”
This notion of a fading America has been embraced among
some here as well, by authors such as Jeremy Rifkin who has written extensively
about a “European dream” supplanting the American one on a global scale. In
2008, CNN anchor Fareed Zakaria predicted the rise of what he called “the
post-American world,” with the U.S. still preeminent but losing ground,
particularly to emerging countries in Asia. This view is widely held in
American elite circles, including many people in or close to the Obama
administration.
Yet something funny happened on the road to a
post-American era: it didn’t happen. Even under two of the most incompetent
administrations in our country’s long history, we are headed not to a
“post-American” world, but more likely a “post-European” one.
The Fading of the “European Dream”
Fifty years ago, when Europe’s economy was growing faster
than America’s on a consistent basis, and Asia was just emerging, the case for
the continent’s ascendency seemed much stronger. But for the past 30 years
Europe’s economy has been generally performing worse than that of the U.S.,
not to mention rising Asian powers, including China and India.
The Great Recession hit all economies, but recently
American growth rates have consistently outperformed those on the continent. By
2013 Europe was still experiencing 12 percent unemployment—a rate that exceeds
ours at the height of the U.S. recession. European household debt, notes
analyst Morgan Housel, has been increasing while that of American households
has dropped.
The roots of Europe’s poor economy lies in large part in
the very welfare state so admired by some progressives. To be sure, generous
benefits have helped make Europe somewhat less unequal than the United States.
But in the process Europe has become a very expensive place to do business.
High taxes and welfare costs, tolerable in an efficient economy like Germany’s,
have caught up with weaker, less productive countries such as Italy, Greece,
and even France.
This weakness is most evident in two critical
sectors—energy and technology—critical to modern economies. Europe’s much
ballyhooed attempt to go “green” has raised energy costs throughout the
continent. Ultimately, the effects of high energy prices tend to fall on the
middle and working classes, as well as on manufacturing industries, which are
are now scouring the world, including the southern United States, for lower
cost alternatives.
Europe is also vastly underrepresented among the rising
players in the tech world . The continent still possesses some influential
industrial companies—Siemens, BMW, Volkswagen, Bayer, Royal Dutch Shell,
Daimler—but it has created no European equivalent to Google, Facebook, Apple,
Amazon, Microsoft, Intel, or even IBM. Not one of the world’s 14 largest tech
companies by revenue is based in Europe. Five are in Asia, nine in the United
States. European officials have tried to curb these often intrusive and
arrogant companies, but the problem lies not in overstrong American competition
but Europe’s inability to grow and nurture successful young companies.
The Barrel of the Gun
It’s understandable that a continent that almost
destroyed itself twice with wars in the 20th century would shy away from the
use of military force. This was reinforced by decades of reliance on U.S.
military might for security. This situation in turn nurtured a strong
anti-military, pacifistic streak that resulted in a region with a large economy
but with little to offer on the battlefield. England is the only European country
to possess one of the world’s top five military budgets. Besides the U.S., by
far the largest military power, the top four include China, Russia, and Saudi
Arabia. The three largest economies using the Euro—France, Germany, and
Italy—spend one third less on defense combined than the U.S. Increasingly the
only counterweight to U.S. power will be the emerging Sino-Russian alliance,
which matches Russia’s still prodigious arms production with China’s almost
limitless bankroll.
Demilitarization has its perils. As Chairman Mao once
noted, “political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.” Sure we should all
prefer, like President Obama, to employ “soft power” rather than going in with
guns blazing a la George Bush. Yet the world is still full of well-armed people
who don’t play by such civilized rules. A hard-baller like Vladimir Putin knows
a bluffer when he sees one and knows he can do what he wants, in the Ukraine or
elsewhere, without fear of European intervention or even fear that the E.U.
might help arm Kiev’s forces. Similarly, Jihadis have learned that you can do
what you want to Europeans, knowing that some countries—notably France,
Germany, Spain and Italy—will willingly pay ransoms to free their citizens.
Kidnap a German and get rich; do it to an American, Brit or, god forbid, an
Israeli, and there’s eventually hell to pay.
The Demographic Disaster
Europe’s biggest problem, however, happens inside the
boudoir. Along with Japan, Europe has pioneered low fertility. European
countries average a fertility rate of 1.5, well below the 2.1 children per
family needed to replace their population.
The problem is most acute in Italy, Spain, and, most
important, Germany. The number of German babies born annually has dropped below
the levels at the turn of the last century. Not surprisingly the U.N. expects
Germany’s population to drop 9 percent by 2050. Germany may have fewer children
than it did in 1900, but Spain’s total number of births has dropped well below
the rates of 1858, and may match those of the 18th century.
This reflects something of a hangover from the disasters
inflicted by Europeans on themselves in the last century. After decades of war
and conflict, notes historian Tony Judt, Europeans simply wanted peace and
quiet. In post-war Europe, every subsequent generation has been a “me
generation,” focusing less on family and religion and more on material goods
and financial security. Today Europe is one of the most irreligious places on
the planet; there are more atheists in Germany, by some counts, than in the
entire United States, a country with nearly four times as many people.
To maintain their workforces and create new consumers,
European countries have by necessity made a priority of bringing in more
immigrants. By 2025 Germany’s economy will need six million additional workers;
this means 200,000 new migrants every year to keep its economic engine humming,
according to government estimates . The situation gets worse from there, and by
2050 Germany’s overall workforce (PDF) is expected to drop 30 percent below
2010 levels, reducing it from 54 to 38 million. In the same time period the
American workforce is expected grow by an additional 35 million workers.
For years, Germany and other western European countries
have depended on newcomers from Turkey and other Islamic countries to drive
their economy. But Islamic migration is widely believed to have failed to
deliver workers with enough skills, not to mention creating ever more dire
cultural and social divisions. Concerned about Islamic immigration, Germans are
now relying, as they did back in the ’60s, on the diminishing pool of skilled
workers from rapidly aging states such as Spain and Italy, as well as from
eastern Europe. These economically beleaguered countries have become a major
source of new migrants to Germany, numbering roughly one million in 2011, a 20
percent increase from the previous year.
In the process, much of southern and eastern Europe is
gradually depopulating. By 2050, Bulgaria is expected to lose 27 percent of its
population, while Latvia, Lithuania, and Romania are expected to lose more than
10 percent of theirs. By 2050 the populations of almost the all of Eastern
Europe will fall, according to recent projections.
Then there is Europe’s rapidly aging population, a
natural product of low birth rates, which also imposes enormous burdens on the
region’s economy. A proposal by German Chancellor Angela Merkel would impose a
one percent income tax as a “demographic reserve” to make up for rising pension
costs. “We have to consider the time after 2030, when the baby boomers of the
’50s and ’60s are retired and costing us more in health and care costs,”
explained Gunter Krings, who drafted the new proposal for Germany’s ruling
Christian Democrats.
Ultimately the next generation will be the biggest losers
in Europe’s decline. Even though birthrates are very low, those young people
now entering the workforce face extraordinarily high levels of unemployment
ranging 20 percent and higher in countries such as Spain, Greece and France. No
surprise that Europe’s young are widely described as “the lost generation.”
Political Chaos
Europe’s current political crisis has spawned a new level
of political uncertainty most clearly seen in the rise of radical new
parties—such as Greece’s Syriza—on both right and left. Two forces driving this
shift in political balance have been immigration and a growing grassroots
rebellion, such as has emerged in Greece, over EU budget and regulatory
policies. In Spain, for example, the fastest rising party, Podemos, borrows
directly from Syriza’s brand of quasi-Marxist radicalism.
But most of the thunder in other parts of Europe comes
from the right. Many Europeans have come to see the EU not as a great unified
superstate but instead as an oppressive, unelected, despotic power. The “common
European home” dreamed of by Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev is becoming a
ramshackle collection of apartments, with neighbors who increasingly don’t get
along and look elsewhere for succor.
Another key driver of opposition from the right is the
EU’s generally lenient view about immigration. Despite their growing dependence
on immigrants, Europeans are increasingly resentful of the newcomers,
particularly those from Africa and the Middle East. Some two thirds of
Spaniards, Italians, and British citizens, according to an Ipsos poll, believe
there are already “too many immigrants,” while majorities in Germany, Russia,
and Turkey also hold negative views about newcomers in their midst.
In France the long-standing fear of losing control of
national destiny has combined with growing fear over immigration, stoked by the
recent terrorist incidents there. This has allowed the far right National
Front’s Marine Le Pen to emerge as an unlikely front runner in the next race
for president. The rise of the United Kingdom’s Independence Party stems from a
similar concern about threats to Britain’s sovereignty as well as angst over
immigration, particularly among working and middle class voters. Even countries
such as Denmark and the Netherlands, once considered paragons of liberalism,
have seen the rise of similarly minded rightist movements.
Back to Bipolarity
Buffeted by a weak economy and a welter of social ills,
the aforementioned visions of Jacques Attali and American Europhiles now seem
like wishful thinking, if not delusional. In reality in everything from culture
and high tech to military prowess, the continent is rapidly becoming a
peripheral global power at best. Only Russia, the most powerful military power
and the continent’s primary source of energy, seems to have seen the light.
President Putin has made this clear as he develops closer ties to China, with
whom he shares an authoritarian philosophy.
Other countries on the fringe of the continent, such as
Greece and Serbia, also are looking increasingly at Russia, and its emergent
Chinese alliance, rather than the E.U. Chinese plans for new bullet trains to
Central Asia and eastern Europe could further enhance the Middle Kingdom’s
linkage to Eurasia and central Asia.
“So what about us?” Anglo-Americans (culturally if not
ethnically) may ask. In a globalized world that speaks and writes in English,
the Anglosphere—comprising both the U.K. and its various colonial offspring,
including the United States—retains some natural advantages. This is where the
most elite colleges and universities are located, and where the top financial,
technology, and key business service firms are concentrated. Equally important,
the Anglosphere also controls much of what the developing countries will most
need in the future—food—through the unsurpassed fecundity of the United States,
Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Demographics and a unique ability to absorb a wide range
of immigrants make the Anglosphere economically and demographically more
vibrant than Europe. By 2050, the Anglosphere will be home to upwards of 550
million people, the largest population grouping outside China and India.
English-speakers may not straddle the world like the 19th century
empire-makers, but they are likely to remain first among equals well into the
current century.
Ultimately, the various countries of the world will have
to choose between the Anglosphere and the Chinese-led authoritarian alliance.
This will become something of a new version of the Cold War (but with China not
Russia in the lead position), with each bloc seeking to win influence across
the world. Anglophone India and Japan, for example, may choose the Anglosphere
due to democratic traditions and a feeling of foreboding about a future forged
by Chinese economic and, increasingly, military power.
On the other hand, Latin American nations like Brazil and
Argentina may consider “yankee imperialism” a greater threat to their autonomy
and choose instead to embrace the Middle Kingdom and its Russian ally. This may
also hold true for much of Africa, where China is making deep inroads. The
Chinese-led New Development Bank and its $40 billion “Marshall Plan” for
infrastructure in developing countries represents a bold move to secure ever
more influence in the emerging world order.
In this bipolar world forged in the context of U.S. vs
China competition, Europe will likely be a bit player, wooed by both but
essential to neither. In the 21st century, the road to power will not run
through Paris or Berlin but through Beijing and Washington. Like the great
leaders of the post-war era, American politicians and statesmen need to
acknowledge the new reality of the post-European world and begin to address its
implications.
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