A London Cabbie investigates "Toytown Money" yesterday |
Yes campaigners
will be happy that Carney did not come north to say there would be no “Sterling-zone”. Indeed Carney echoed many of Salmond &
Swinney’s arguments in favour of going down this particular route. “Sharing
a currency can promote investment by reducing uncertainty about currency
movements and giving businesses access to deeper, more liquid financial
markets. It can also reduce borrowing costs for countries with a history of
high inflation and currency devaluation. By tying themselves to the mast of the
monetary policy of others they can import credibility”
By some curious
twist of fate, these passages somehow passed the Better Together side by. As if there were no benefits of a shared
currency. Of course, a large amount of
the politicians speaking for “Better Together” would have taken us into the disastrous
Euro project… so no disingenuousness there.
Just an awful lot of re-writing of history. In a similar fashion, the passages outlining
the cons of “Sterling-zone” seem to be absent from the minds of “Yes Scotland”
backers.
“As the Presidents of the European Council,
European Commission, Eurogroup and European Central Bank argued in their
report, European monetary union, which has so far relied on fiscal rules, will
not be complete until it builds mechanisms to share fiscal sovereignty… Whatever is ultimately chosen, the degree of
fiscal risk sharing will likely have to be significant.
Similarly,
in a monetary union between an independent Scotland and the rest of the UK the
two parliaments would have to agree on whether fiscal rules were sufficient or
whether similar risk-sharing mechanisms were necessary. …a
durable, successful currency union requires some ceding of national sovereignty. It is likely that similar institutional
arrangements would be necessary to support a monetary union between an
independent Scotland and the rest of the UK.”
What this means
is that there would have to be some sort of fiscal pact, with rules potentially
governing tax, government spending, borrowing and debt. The SNP’s “flagship” policy of a 10% Corporation
Tax rate would be destined to remain in the launch silo for as long as this
arrangement was in force. As for other possibilities,
Osborne’s liking for a Eurozone fiscal
treaty (which would not apply to the non-Eurozone UK) could be seen as a sort
of dry run for Sterling-zone negotiations.
Much of the “Better
Together” campaigners have claimed that Carney’s speech torpedoes any chance of
there being a “Sterling-zone”. I don’t
think it does, but this policy – daft as it is – is being diminished by a
thousand cuts. It might be in the best
interests for the post “yes vote” British Isles, but I don’t think it’s in the
best interests for post Indy Scotland.
Except when “Better Together” unfurl this argument, they somehow miss
this point.
This illustrates perfectly
the problem with Salmond’s campaign. There
are common sense & credible policy positions on the EU – that it is an
aspiration to join the EU but that we would not be joining until the Scottish
people consent to it. The equivalent
currency position would be to continue to use the Scottish Pound – tacked to
the Pound Sterling – and to seek to establish a lender of last resort at the
earliest possibility. All of the “yes”
camp’s troubles come from the bad policy decisions taken over these issues. For Better Together, these issues are the
gift that keeps giving.
What is symbolic
is that Carney has somehow managed, among all the heat and bluster, give a
sober assessment of the pros and cons of Salmond’s Sterling-zone wheeze. Yet without really trying, Carney has shown
up the inherent prejudices and preferences we all have on the subject of
Scottish Independence – supporters, politicians and of course the Media. He’s also shown what a blinkered lot the
zealots on both sides are. No wonder the undecided’s – like myself – are growing. In short, in nearly three years of
campaigning, Carney’s speech was the first sensible contribution to the debate.