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| Glossary
of EU Terms |
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| Comparative
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| RELATED
ARTICLES |
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| "The
European System of Central Banks," Economic
Review, First Quarter 1999 (Text
or PDF) |
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| "European
Economic and Monetary Union," Hot
Topics May 1998 (PDF) |
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| "Europe:
Risk and Reward Under Monetary Unification,"
Southwest Economy Nov./Dec. 1998 (Text
or PDF) |
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Global Economy
European
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)
Dallas
Fed Economist Mark Wynne explores the implications of this unprecedented
monetary union.
How
will EMU affect the United States?
Given
the degree of uncertainty about how monetary union will affect Europe,
it should not be too surprising that there is relatively little
that we can say with any precision about how EMU will affect the
United States. Ultimately, EMU may end up teaching us more about
economics than economics can currently teach us about EMU.
One of the most
immediate effects of EMU will be to accelerate the development of
the single market in Europe and make it a lot easier for U.S. corporations
to do business there. Instead of having to worry about 11 different
currencies, there will be only one currency for an area that will
account for about one-fifth of world output and about one-fifth
of world trade as well. The single market will be enhanced by greater
transparency in pricing, which some commentators believe will foster
greater competition across the EU and ultimately breed stronger
industrial and commercial enterprises. The creation of a single
capital market will also address one of the greatest problems small
companies in Europe have faced in trying to grow and develop.
How
will the euro affect the dollar's global role?
In
the longer run, the success of the euro may pose a challenge to
the international role of the dollar. A credible euro could be an
attractive alternative to the dollar as a vehicle currency for international
transactions and as a reserve currency, and this could create interesting
problems in the area of monetary control for the Federal Reserve
System. As with everything else in this debate, whether and how
soon the euro is likely to challenge the dollar as the world's major
reserve currency is subject to a lot of uncertainty. In one camp
there are those who argue that the forces of inertia favor continued
use of the dollar for a long time to come. On the other hand, there
are the euro-enthusiasts who believe that the euro could come to
rival or even replace the dollar in as little as five years. And
in the middle are those who argue that it is simply too soon to
tell whether the euro has this potential. A lot depends on how successful
the ECB is at managing the difficult first years. Perhaps the most
plausible scenario is that eventually the euro will come to play
Airbus to the dollar's Boeing.
Parenthetically,
I might note that one area where the euro may pose a serious challenge
to the dollar is as the currency of choice for the underground economy.
As you know, the highest denomination note issued by the Federal
Reserve System is the $100 bill. The planned denominations of euro
notes include a 500 euro note, worth about $550 at current exchange
rates. Some academic economists have drawn attention to the attractiveness
of the high-denomination euro notes for illicit transactions, and
argued that the existence of these denominations will make the euro
more attractive that the dollar for these purposes. Insofar as the
euro does succeed in this regard, there would be a loss of seigniorage
income for the United States, but the exact amount (or even the
order of magnitude) is anybody's guess.
How
does the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) differ from the
Federal Reserve System?
There
are two key differences between the ESCB and the Federal Reserve
System. First, the ESCB has a much stronger price stability mandate.
Second, power is much more diffusely distributed in the ESCB. The
strong mandate for price stability will enhance the euro's credibility.
But the diffuse power structure may make it difficult to resolve
conflicts, which will undermine credibility. The monetary union's
fate depends on which of these two features of the monetary policy
process dominates.
For a more detailed
comparison of the ESCB with the Federal Reserve System, see "The
European System of Central Banks" in Economic Review,
First Quarter 1999 (PDF).
Is
Europe an optimum currency area? A Texas analogy
Since
EMU was first proposed, there has been no shortage of academic critics
pointing out the dangers of such an undertaking. In the United States
two of the most prominent critics have been Martin Feldstein of
Harvard University and Milton Friedman of Stanford University. The
essential point made by most of the critics is that Europe as a
whole does not constitute what economists refer to as an optimum
currency area.
The theory of
optimum currency areas establishes the conditions under which a
group of countries (or regions within a country) may share a single
currency without incurring problems as a result. The reason sharing
a common currency may be costly is that it deprives states of the
ability to alter the nominal exchange rate of their currency in
response to a shock. The United States is often cited as an example
of an optimum currency area. There are many ways of dividing the
United States into regions, but one particularly relevant division
is into the 12 Federal Reserve Districts. The dollar bills bearing
the seals of the 12 regional banks can be viewed as 12 separate
currencies that exchange for one another at permanently fixed exchange
rates, much as the exchange rate between the French franc and the
Deutsche mark will be irrevocably fixed on January 1, 1999.
Consider what
the options were for Texas when oil prices collapsed in 1986.
One option would have been to simply devalue the Dallas or Texas
dollar, making Texas' exports cheaper, thereby mitigating the
adverse effects of the shock on the Texas economy. Of course,
this is not an option because Texas is bound irrevocably in a
monetary (and political) union with the rest of the United States.
Thus, the way the 1986 oil price shock was handled was through
out-migration and wage declines: unemployed workers simply upped
and went to where the jobs were, and those who remained saw their
wages grow less rapidly than in the rest of the United States.
This is how regions in the United States typically deal with shocks,
whether the rust belt of the Upper Midwest in the early 1980s,
Texas in the mid 1980s, or California and New England in the early
1990s. The other key mechanism whereby regional shocks are mitigated
in the United States is via transfers from the federal government
(in the form of unemployment benefits and lower income taxes).
It is the
fact that unemployed workers can so easily relocate to different
parts of the United States, and the fact that wages are flexible,
that makes many economists believe that the United States is an
optimum currency area. It is precisely because the migration option
is not so freely available in Europe, and wages are a lot less
flexible, that makes retention of the nominal exchange rate a
potentially important tool for handling shocks. There are a variety
of features of the labor and housing markets in Europe that make
migration difficult. In addition, there the barriers of language
and culture, which are more difficult to overcome. Nor is there
a large central government at the European level that can make
transfers to distressed regions to help them overcome transitory
shocks.
The theory of
optimum currency areas is one of the few tools available to economists
for assessing the viability of EMU. However, despite the magnitude
of the undertaking that EMU represents, the theory has evolved little
since its original articulation in the early 1960s. To start with,
the theory is predicated on the assumption that changes in the nominal
exchange rate have real effects, a notion that has been challenged
by some economists in recent years. More significantly, the architect
of the theory of optimum currency areas, Robert Mundell, recently
pointed out in a series of articles in the Wall Street Journal that
a policy of devaluation in response to adverse shocks cannot work
indefinitely. While a surprise devaluation may work once or twice,
as soon as workers and investors come to anticipate the use of devaluation
as a tool for dealing with shocks, the tool will lose its effectiveness.
There is also
the more substantive fact that the pre-monetary union behavior of
both the public and private sectors is a bad predictor of their
behavior once the monetary union is in place. EMU constitutes a
regime change for monetary policy in Europe, and one thing modern
macroeconomics teaches is that the behavior of workers and investors
will change when the policy regime changes. Just as we cannot expect
to be able to predict the behavior of a football player following
a change in the rules of the game by simply looking to his past
behavior, so too is it difficult to predict what will happen when
the monetary rules of the game change in Europe.
For more information,
read "European Economic and Monetary Union, In Depth, May 1998"
(PDF).
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Mark
Wynne is a senior economist and assistant vice president
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
SUGGESTED
CITATION:
Wynne,
Mark (1999), "European Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU)," Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Expand
Your Insight, February 1, http://www.dallasfed.org/eyi/global/9902emu.html
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