Abstract
The European Green Transition requires massive financing efforts, with estimates of EUR 620bn EUR annually, and the headwinds are substantial. Central banks seem overstretched and busy tightening to combat inflation; treasuries are subject to austerity-inducing fiscal rules; and banking systems are afflicted by non-performing loans, fragmentation, and risk aversion. We employ the Monetary Architecture framework to analyze the EU’s monetary and financial system as a constantly evolving hierarchical web of interlocking balance sheets and study its capacity to find “elasticity space” to meet the financing challenge. To this end, we draw on a four-step scheme for Green macro-financial governance along the financial cycle of balance sheet expansion, funding, and final contraction. We find that, first, Europe’s monetary architecture still has ample elasticity space to provide a green initial expansion due to its developed ecosystem of national, subnational, and supranational off-balance-sheet fiscal agencies. Second, as mechanisms to consciously organize the distribution of long-term debt instruments across different segments are absent, its capacity to provide long-term funding is limited. Third, institutional transformation in the last two decades has greatly improved the capacity of the European monetary architecture to counteract financial instability by providing emergency elasticity. Fourth, the capacity of the European monetary architecture to manage a final contraction of balance sheets is limited, which is a general quandary in modern credit money systems. Our analysis points to the need for further investigations into techniques for monetary architectures to manage long-term funding and balance sheet contractions.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Competition and Change |
Early online date | 17 Oct 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 17 Oct 2024 |
Acknowledgements
We have presented earlier versions of this article at the “Off-Balance-Sheet Fiscal Agencies and the Role of the State in Financing the Green Transition” workshop in Berlin in July 2023 and at the 35th Annual Conference of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE) at the University of Leeds. We wish to thank organisers and participants for constructive feedback. Special thanks go to Milan Babić and Sarah Sharma for editing the special issue, as well as to Elsa Clara Massoc, Dirk Bezemer, Vanessa Endrejat and other colleagues who have provided us with invaluable comments. We'd like to also thank the three anonymous reviewers who have helped us improve our manuscript. All remaining errors are our own.Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; (499921148).
Funders | Funder number |
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Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft | 499921148 |
Keywords
- Critical macro-finance
- European Central Bank
- balance sheets
- carbon bubble
- credit money
- endogenous money
- financial crisis
- financial cycle
- financial instability
- off-balance-sheet fiscal agency
- shadow banking
- systemic financing
- transition risk
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Business,Management and Accounting