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SPAIN’S PARADOX OF PLENTY

In 1934, early in his fa­mous Study of His­tory, Arnold Toyn­bee hy­poth­e­sised that it is not abun­dance but the chal­lenge of scarcity that, by elic­it­ing an ap­pro­pri­ate re­sponse, leads human so­ci­eties to progress. In fair­ness, some of Toyn­bee’s ideas have found lit­tle sup­port in sub­se­quent so­cial stud­ies, yet this chal­lenge-and-re­sponse con­cept aligns neatly to the well-es­tab­lished phe­nom­e­non we know today as the Para­dox of Plenty.

Priv­i­leged sources of wealth (such as nat­ural re­sources) favour those who con­trol them – for ex­am­ple through the state’s co­er­cive power– while crowd­ing out other eco­nomic ac­tiv­i­ties. There­fore, par­tic­u­larly where in­sti­tu­tional qual­ity is low (ie, where pub­lic in­sti­tu­tions are dom­i­nated by spe­cific elites and pres­sure groups), easy money fuels wide­spread graft and di­verts to po­lit­i­cal in­fight­ing ef­forts that oth­er­wise would be de­voted to pro­duc­tive ac­tiv­i­ties. Hence, the eco­nomic per­for­mance of re­source-rich coun­tries is often worse than that of oth­er­wise com­pa­ra­ble, re­source-poor economies – es­pe­cially when their in­sti­tu­tions are of low qual­ity.

Eu­ro­pean sol­i­dar­ity mech­a­nisms have ar­ti­fi­cially brought abun­dance to coun­tries that op­er­ate within the sin­gle mar­ket but are sub­ject to local in­sti­tu­tions of very dif­fer­ent qual­i­ties – thus cre­at­ing a sort of nat­ural ex­per­i­ment. For many years the EU has been re­mark­ably gen­er­ous to its poor­est mem­bers, first through its co­he­sion funds (eg, it has been es­ti­mated that just the co­he­sion funds Spain re­ceived since join­ing the EU in 1986 al­ready more than triple the en­tire Mar­shall Plan) and then via ECB debt pur­chases. Sadly, in coun­tries whose in­sti­tu­tions were al­ready of low qual­ity – pri­mar­ily in South­ern (Por­tu­gal, Spain, Italy, Greece…) and East­ern Eu­rope (Bul­garia, Ro­ma­nia, Hun­gary, Poland…) – this money has all-too-often been wasted in un­pro­duc­tive in­vest­ments and cor­rupt prac­tices fi­nanc­ing fast-grow­ing pa­tron­age net­works. Hence, these coun­tries’ in­sti­tu­tional qual­ity and pro­duc­tive ef­fi­ciency re­spec­tive to north­west­ern Eu­ro­pean stan­dards have not only failed to im­prove but grad­u­ally de­cayed since they joined the EU.

Spain’s econ­omy, for ex­am­ple, is ut­terly de­pen­dent on ECB’s cheap credit while its in­ef­fi­ciency is such that it still suf­fers the high­est un­em­ploy­ment level in Eu­rope bar Greece. Mean­while, the EU’s gen­eros­ity has in­ten­si­fied over time, par­tially to smooth out con­flict, par­tially out of con­cern about the con­se­quences of re­mov­ing this eco­nomic dope. Thus, EU sub­si­dies fuel South­ern and East­ern Eu­rope’s in­sti­tu­tional cor­rup­tion just as, under other cir­cum­stances, oil wells would.

It is largely thanks to Eu­ro­pean gen­eros­ity that Spain’s in­sti­tu­tions can af­ford, against every mar­ket im­per­a­tive, to bleed dry its Cata­lan Coun­tries (Cat­alo­nia, Va­len­cia, Mal­lorca) through huge fis­cal deficits in order to fi­nance pork-bar­rel pol­i­tics in other re­gions. The rea­son is ob­vi­ous. Cli­mate, ge­og­ra­phy and en­tre­pre­neur­ial tra­di­tion make the Cata­lan Coun­tries, on Spain’s Mediter­ranean shore, es­pe­cially at­trac­tive to mar­ket forces so, left to their own de­vices, they would log­i­cally at­tract most of Iberia’s eco­nomic ac­tiv­ity while the penin­sula’s cen­tre and west de­pop­u­late. Since po­lit­i­cal power often fol­lows eco­nomic growth, clip­ping these re­gions’ wings is the price to pre­serve Spain’s statu quo; yet these poli­cies’ cost in terms of in­ef­fi­ciency and wel­fare loss is huge… And would be­come un­bear­able if Eu­ro­pean aid were not avail­able.

Now, how­ever, dark clouds are gath­er­ing on the hori­zon. For years Eu­ro­pean aid seemed cost­less since, no mat­ter how much money the ECB printed, no in­fla­tion en­sued… But the mi­rage is now over, and in­fla­tion has re­turned with a vengeance. It is just a mat­ter of time be­fore tax­pay­ers in the most pro­duc­tive EU coun­tries start to won­der why they are fi­nanc­ing their in­creas­ingly cor­rupt south­ern (and east­ern) neigh­bours… Then, per­haps, scarcity will teach Spain how self-de­feat­ing it is to clip the wings of its most dy­namic re­gions: Toyn­bee might have smiled.

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