WEEK 9 - Optimum Currency Area and Euro Zone Flashcards
What are the dif bodies of the EU?
- European Parliament: elected by citizens of member countries
- Council of the European Union: appointed by governments of the
member countries - European Commission: executive body
- Court of Justice: interprets EU law
- European Central Bank, which conducts monetary policy through a system of member country banks called the European System of Central Banks
What is the EMS?
- > originally a system of Fixed exchange rates implemented in 1979 through an exchange rate mechanism (ERM).
- > Has developed to Econ and Monetary Union (EMU)
- Replacing exchange rate mechanism for common currency
- System of co-ordinated econ and monetary policies
What are the conditions of joining the EMU?
- adhere to the ERM: exchange rates were fixed in specified bands
around a target exchange rate. - follow restrained Fiscal and monetary policies as determined by Council of the European Union and the European Central Bank.
- replace the national currency with the euro,
What are some of the conditions for joining the EU?
- have low barriers that limit trade and Flows of Financial assets
2 adopt common rules for emigration and immigration to ease the movement of people
3 establish common workplace safety and consumer protection rules
4 establish certain political and legal institutions that are consistent with the EU definition of liberal democracy
What was the purpose of establishing the EU and the ERM/EMU?
- To enhance Europe power in international affairs
- To make Europe a unified market
- To make Europe politically stable and peaceful
Why did EU members adopt the Euro?
- Unified market: the belief that greater market integration and economic growth would occur.
- Political stability: the belief that a common currency would make political interests more uniform.
- The belief that German influence under the EMS would be moderated under a European System of Central Banks.
- Elimination of the possibility of devaluations/ revaluations:
What occurs when two countries form a monetary union an asymmetric shock in demand occurs?
Assume both Ger and Fr union
- > Decline in aggregate demand in France
- > Increase in aggregate demand in Germany.
- > assumed permanent
SEE GRAPH IN NOTES
What can we see with some of the downsides of the monetary union?
Using again Fr and Ger, can see that in union:
->France cannot stimulate demand using monetary policy; nor can Germany restrict aggregate demand using monetary policy.
What are some of the alternatives to stimulate demand in monetary union?
- Wage Flexibility
- Labour Mobility
What happens under Wage Flexibility?
- AS in Fr shifts downwards
- AS in Ger shifts upwards
SEE GRAPH IN NOTES
Why is Labour Mobility limited in Europe?
Due to social security systems
-> Especially for low skilled workers
When will a Monetary Union be costly?
- > Wages and Prcies are not flexible
- > Labour is not mobile
What happens if countries in a monetary union maintain their own currency and national central bank?
Then national interest rate and/or exchange rate can be used by the respective authorities to address the asymmetric shocks.
-> France can pursue an expansionary monetary policy while Germany
adopts a contractionary monetary policy.
SEE GRAPH IN NOTES
When does the OCA claim a monetary union is optimal?
If one of the following conditions satisfied:
- Sufficient Wage Flexibility
- Sufficient Mobility of Labour
What is another implication of losing monetary independence in joining a monetary union?
- > Fundamentally changes the capacity of governments to finance their budget deficits.
- > Members of monetary union issue debt in currency over which they have no control.
- > Financial markets acquire power to force default on these countries
This doesn’t happen in countries that are stand alone and issue debt in their own currency