Nordicum - Real Estate Annual Finland 2011 | Page 8

THE AGENDA Decision Time for Europe by Paavo Lipponen The writer is former Prime Minister and Speaker of Parliament of Finland. t was a refreshing experience to observe world events from Asia during a twoweek vacation in Thailand. This Asian Tiger is booming, while trying to keep internal pressures under the lid. India is rising and catching up with China. Although Japan is stagnant, Asia is the engine of world economy. China is spreading its influence to its neighbors, building up its navy. A naval dimension has been added to the ChinaMyanmar axis, creating suspicions not only in Bangkok but also in Delhi. A naval rearmament is starting in the Indian Ocean. How far will China extend the perimeter of its sphere of influence is the question asked from Washington to Tokyo and Moscow, from Hanoi to Jedda. The economy, however, is the main concern. Signs of rising inflation are not only an Asian but a global concern, too. The recovery in the world economy is seriously threatened by rising commodity prices – not only of oil and other energy essentials, but also of food. The expansion of cultivated area for products of grain, keeping livestock and producing palm oil for energy is putting an ever bigger strain on the environment. China is the case in point in the efforts to curb inflation. China is systematically trying to secure access to natural resources everywhere in the world where possible. Growth in the Chinese economy might I 6 Nordicum suffer because of the necessity to curb inflation. Interest rates are going up, but it is not enough. China will be forced to revalue its currency. This, in turn, would rebalance world trade flows. Unemployment stays high in the United States, because it is to a great extent structural. The housing sector must recover to employ the construction workers who lost their jobs when the bubble burst. An equally big structural problem is below-standard education. American schools must become better for greater competitiveness of the country. The Finnish lesson has not been understood: you must educate the whole nation, not just the elite. Europe is bracing for decisions to get the crisis of the euro under control. Much better financial discipline is necessary, but it is not enough. Structural reforms and a policy for growth are needed to create confidence in the euro. The euro was the right ch