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EMU Economic and Monetary Union

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Flexible exchange rate often useful for states/economies. Joining ... Ancient EMUs. Roman Empire 3rd c. BC 5th c. AD. Charlemagne Monetary System From 8th c. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EMU Economic and Monetary Union


1
EMU(Economic and Monetary Union)
2
Optimal Currency Areas
  • Flexible exchange rate often useful for
    states/economies
  • Joining EMU implies lossesgains OCA
  • Factors determining whether Eurozone is an OCA
  • Inflation rates
  • Monetary policies
  • Exchange rates
  • Trade intensities
  • Labour market conditions
  • Institutional convergence

3
Eurozone 2001
Members of the Eurozone, 2001. UK, Denmark and
Sweden outside the zone
4
Eurozone 2009
  • 16 members
  • 8 obliged to join (ERM II)
  • UK Sweden still out
  • Denmark to hold referendum in 2010?

5
What makes a state sovereign?
  • Formally, recognition by other states
  • Three elements doctrine (G. Jellinek)
  • Territory (Borders)
  • People
  • Legitimate use of force
  • Normally Flag, anthem, army, money

6
History of Monetary Unions
  • Ancient EMUs
  • Roman Empire 3rd c. BC 5th c. AD
  • Charlemagne Monetary System From 8th c.
  • EMU with political union  
  • British monetary union England Scotland From
    1707
  • US Federal Reserve system From 1913
  • Italian monetary union 1861-2002
  • German unification 1990-2002
  • EMU without political union
  • Belgium-Luxembourg union 1923-2002
  • West African CFA franc zone From 1948

7
History of Monetary Unions II
  • Failed when political system collapsed
  • German monetary union 1857-WW1
  • The Soviet system 1917-1993
  • Temporary monetary unions
  • Latin MU (B, I, F, CH, Gr) 1865-WW1
  • Scandinavian currency union 1873-1920
  • Other currency events
  • Bretton Woods 1944-1973
  • ERM From 1979
  • Asian currency crisis 1997

8
Bretton Woods
  • Dollar backed by gold standard (35/ounce
  • Fixed exchange rates (re-alignment possible but
    complicated)
  • IMF could intervene to re-balance system
  • US monetary policies affected whole world
  • Inflation following Vietnam, gold production
  • Dollar made inconvertible to gold in 1971
  • 1973 the end

9
The beginning of European Monetary Policy
  • EMU and the foundation of EC
  • RIP Bretton Woods fixed rates within EC (CAP)
  • Divisions between the six on approach to Monetary
    Union
  • Two main strategies
  • Locomotive Monetarists (Chicago School),
    supported by Commission EMU leads to economic
    convergence
  • Coronation Economists, e.g. Germany economic
    convergence necessary prior to EMU

10
EMU First attempts
  • Werner plan (1970) proposes EMU in three steps
  • snake-in-the-tunnel established (1971),
    collapse of snake (1971), reconstituted (1972)
  • Roy Jenkins call for new attempt at EMU (1977)
  • taken up by Helmut Schmidt concerned about
    strong Deutschmark
  • Giscard in line with Schmidt
  • other states support as a means of combating
    inflation
  • EMS (ERM) established in 1979

11
EMS
  • ECU (weighted) basket of currencies
  • European Credit Facilities
  • European Monetary Co-operation Fund
  • Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM)
  • Grid
  • Bilateral parities /- 2.5 per cent (6 for Italy)
  • Central Bank intervention co-ordination

12
EMS in the 1980s
  • survived initially because Deutschmark weak
  • currency realignments in 1981, 82, 83
  • policy changes pressed on French Socialist
    government by Germans
  • Britain remained outside of the ERM (until 1990)
  • other states supportive of greater cohesion
    within EC, especially following collapse of
    communism

13
EMS and Germany
  • EMS de facto dominated by Bundesbank/Deutschmark
  • Germany biggest and strongest economy in EC
  • Deutschmark 2nd reserve currency ( 60 per cent,
    DM 16 per cent, Pound 2 per cent, Franc 2 per
    cent in 1995)
  • Bundesbank obsessed with price stability
  • EMU already existent but on German terms!

14
Delors Report 1989
  • Stage I free capital movement and macroeconomic
    co-ordination from July 1990 on
  • Stage II Reform of the treaties, establishment
    of European system of central banks, restrict
    fluctuations in exchange rates (ERM)
  • Stage III Irrevocable fixing of exchange
    rates, establishment of European Central Bank,
    independent and responsible for price stability

15
Monetary Union in the 1990s
  • Maastricht timetable set for completion in
    1997/99
  • Britain allowed to opt-out
  • 1992 Denmark also given an opt-out
  • 1992 Britain and Italy forced out of ERM,
    currency crisis in 1993
  • widening of narrow bands to 15 

16
Monetary Union in the 1990s
  • German public scepticism strengthened negotiating
    hand of German government
  • Franco-German tensions over conditions for
    sustaining monetary union
  • ECU renamed 1995 EURO
  • Amsterdam 1997
  • Stability and Growth Pact (Germany)
  • Agreement by QMV on fines (France)
  • 1998 Duisenberg/Trichet ECB at Frankfurt

17
Convergence criteria
  • Inflation not more than 1.5 percentage points
    above average of lowest three
  • Deficit
  • Central Government budget deficit no more than 3
    of GDP
  • General government debt not more than 60 of GDP
  • Currency stability membership in narrow ERM band
    for two years with no devaluations
  • Long term Interest rates not more than 2
    percentage points above rates of lowest three

18
Convergence criteria problems
  • Huge debts in Belgium and Italy
  • Germany problems with 3.0 deficit threshold
  • Manipulated budgets new taxes (I), sell of state
    properties and industries (France, Portugal), new
    estimation of gold reserves (Germany), false
    information (Greece 2004)
  • Only 3 of 12 met all the Copenhagen Criteria (UK
    would have been fourth w/o ERM)
  • Ergo a political not an economic decision

19
Qualifications for Economic and Monetary Union
(in 1997 figures)
20
Long-term interest rates
7.8
21
Realisation of EMU
  • European Central Bank in Frankfurt
  • January 1999 launch of Euro with 11 member
    states participating
  • Sweden, Denmark and Britain eligible but outside
  • 2001 Greece 12th Euro group member
  • January 2002 coins and notes introduced to the
    EURO-zone

Rejected euro in 2000 referendum polls show
support but no new referendum yet
5 tests show UK not ready future referendum in
doubt
Referendum in September 2003 Nos won
22
Some Euro Coins
23
European Central Bank
  • Independence
  • Function
  • price stability (primary objective)
  • mechanism interest rates
  • No power to give credits to the public sector to
    finance deficits
  • Discussion about presidency (Greenspan
    PSYCHOLOGY) Duisenberg resigned after 5 years,
    now Trichet

24
Stability and Growth pact
  • Violated by Germany and France from 2003-2005
    (deficit criterion)
  • Commission urged EcoFin to censure GF in 2003,
    but EcoFin rejected
  • Stability and growth pact watered down
  • Formally re-negotiated in 2005
  • Operate close to reference values
  • peculiar circumstances

25
EMU evaluated (1)
  • Economic implications
  • Spill-over (taxes)
  • Reduction of exchange trade costs 30 billion
    (0.5 of present EU-GDP)
  • Increased competition
  • Even more trade within Eurozone
  • Price transparency
  • Consumer prices down 50 (1993-99)
  • EURO replaced Dollar as second currency in many
    regions
  • EU-Dollar parity EURO too strong?

26
vs. , Pound Yen
Yesterday 1.29, 0.9 , 116 Yen
27
EMU evaluated (2)
  • EUROZONE is far apart from being an optimum
    currency area (Robert Mundell 1961)
  • 1. labour mobility NOT
  • 2. flexible prices and wages NOT
  • 3. mechanism for fiscal redistribution (regional)
    NOT
  • 4. political will YES

28
EMU evaluated (3)
  • Political implications
  • Different effects of Europeanisation in member
    states
  • Spill-over EU towards Common Economic Policy
  • Relationship EU/USA
  • Flexibility/closer co-operation
  • Germany and France under pressure from Growth and
    Stability Pact
  • ECB/EcoFin relations somewhat tense

29
Conclusion
  • Best economic reason for EMU transaction costs
  • Alternative explanations
  • High degree of linkage between core economies
    (Germany, France, BeNeLux)
  • Deal between France Germany (Euro-11, political
    role of EcoFin, domestic and international
    concerns in Germany)
  • Commission Central Bankers
  • Dominance of monetarist ideas (vs. Keynesian)
    ideas

30
Class Questions
  • What lessons can be drawn from the experiences of
    the single currency so far?
  • Have there been significant changes in the EU
    since the introduction of the EURO?
  • What can be said about the future prospect of
    joining the common currency by Denmark, Sweden
    and the UK?
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