In all, the Bank lost an estimated £3.5
billion as a result of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Norman Lamont, deciding
to abruptly pull out of the European Monetary System (EMS) and its Exchange
Rate Mechanism (ERM I). The ensuing chaos drove the GBP to its lowest level of
exchange since 1985 and the resultant economic and financial imbalances plagued
the conservative government until it was
replaced in the landslide victory for
New Labour of 1997 . The consequent
more able direction by Gordon Brown of the UK´s
finances partly restored the country´s place in the hierarchy of EU but the joining in 1999 of ERM
II and the Eurozone was declined.
The Portuguese escudo
was also attacked on Black Wednesday but not to the same extent. Portugal had joined ERM I in April 1992 after the Bank of Portugal
(BoP) had spent a decade desperately combating soaring inflation and a failing
economy with a combination of high interest rates , taxation of foreign
capital, licencing property transactions and selling forward large values of a pegged escudo. In September 1992 interest rates temporarily went as high as 25% but the overnight rate settled to
around 15% due to the intervention of Germany and its neighbouring
economies. From then until the birth of
the Euro in 1999 there followed a gradual convergence of interest rates and a
reduction of inflation until the entry of the escudo at the depressed value of 200.482 to the
Euro.
Fast forward to an entirely different picture in
2022. Following Brexit the UK is on the
verge of recession while Germany and France are not so far behind due to
escalating closures of businesses and a forthcoming winter of forecast discontent. Portugal , however is growing in confidence
as it is without severe energy and
climate crises and is accepting a role as a
gateway to a digital Europe. The
present surge of foreign investment in Portuguese resources reflects the
underlying increased value of the escudo which is concealed within the Euro “snake” created by ERM II . Conversely the Mark and Franc have fallen by
as much as five percentage points in
their net worth. In effect, the
“vultures” of private equity are paying bargain
values which are well below the comparable parities of 1999.
The temptation to restore the escudo to legal tender
will be resisted by an impoverished EU but it could make sense if a parallel “invest-Euro”
was created similar to the petro-dollars
used for the trading of energy products. The alternative would be to
reintroduce the taxation of foreign capital at the point of entry . In 1992 this was a rate of 1% but thirty
years later would need to be higher if the nation is to be compensated socially
for the continuing loss of its assets to
the benefit of elite corporate entities and oligarchs.
Interestingly, the European Central Bank has agreed with Amazon and several other
mega-retailers to launch a pilot study for the introduction of a digital Euro
in 2025 to compete with Bitcoin and Ethereum in the burgeoning crypto currency
markets . Hopefully this may reduce the huge leaks of untaxed profits which often
result from criminal or dubious business activity and bring some much
needed relief to the lower echelons of
our great European society.
by email, Roberto
Cavaleiro, Tomar