Äîáðæàíñêèé Â.Î.
ã. Õìåëüíèöêèé
ECONOMIC AND MONETARY
UNION (EMU) AND THE EURO
The European monetary system
In 1971, the United States decided to abolish the fixed link between the
dollar and the official price of gold, which had ensured global monetary
stability after World War Two. This put an end to the system of fixed exchange
rates. With a view to setting up their own monetary union, EU countries decided
to prevent exchange fluctuations of more than 2.25 % between the European
currencies by means of concerted intervention on currency markets.
This led to the creation of the European monetary system (EMS) which
came into operation in March 1979. It had three main features:
·
a reference currency called the ecu:
this was a ‘basket’ made up of the currencies of all the member states;
·
an exchange rate mechanism: each
currency had an exchange rate linked to the ecu; bilateral exchange rates were
allowed to fluctuate within a band of 2.25 %;
·
a credit mechanism: each country
transferred 20 % of its currency and gold reserves to a joint fund.
From the EMS to EMU
The EMS had a chequered history. Following the reunification of Germany
and renewed currency pressures within Europe, the Italian lira and pound
sterling left the EMS in 1992. In August 1993, the EMS countries decided to
temporarily widen the bands to 15 %. Meanwhile, to prevent wide currency
fluctuations among EU currencies and to eliminate competitive devaluations, EU
governments had decided to relaunch the drive to full monetary union and to introduce
a single currency.
At the European Council in Madrid in June 1989, EU leaders adopted a
three-stage plan for economic and monetary union. This plan became part of the
Maastricht Treaty on European Union adopted by the European Council in December
1991.
Economic and monetary
union (EMU)
The first stage, which began on 1 July 1990, involved:
·
completely free movement of capital
within the EU (abolition of exchange controls);
·
increasing the amount of resources
devoted to removing inequalities between European regions (Structural Funds);
·
economic convergence, through
multilateral surveillance of member states’ economic policies.
The second stage began on 1 January 1994. It provided for:
·
establishing the European Monetary
Institute (EMI) in Frankfurt; the EMI was made up of the governors of the
central banks of the EU countries;
·
independence of national central
banks;
·
rules to curb national budget
deficits.
The third stage was the birth of the euro. On 1 January 1999, 11 countries
adopted the euro, which thus became the common currency of Austria, Belgium,
Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal
and Spain. (Greece joined them on 1 January 2001). From this point onwards, the
European Central Bank took over from the EMI and became responsible for
monetary policy, which is defined and implemented in euro.
Euro notes and coins were issued on 1 January 2002 in these 12 euro-area
countries. National currencies were withdrawn from circulation two months
later. Since then, only the euro has been legal tender for all cash and bank
transactions in the euro-area countries, which represent more than two thirds
of the EU population.
The convergence criteria
Each EU country must meet the five convergence criteria in order to go
to the third stage. They are:
·
price stability: the rate of inflation may not exceed the average rates of
inflation of the three member states with the lowest inflation by more than
1.5 %;
·
interest rates: long-term interest rates may not vary by more than 2 %
in relation to the average interest rates of the three member states with the
lowest interest rates;
·
deficits: national
budget deficits must be below 3 % of GDP;
·
public debt: this may not exceed 60 % of GDP;
·
exchange rate stability: exchange rates
must have remained within the authorised margin of fluctuation for the previous
two years.
The Stability and Growth
Pact
In June 1997, the European Council adopted a Stability and Growth Pact.
This was a permanent commitment to budgetary stability, and made it possible for
penalties to be imposed on any country in the euro area whose budget deficit
exceeded 3 %. The Pact was subsequently judged to be too strict and was
reformed in March 2005.
The Eurogroup
The Eurogroup is the informal body where the finance ministers of the
euro-area countries meet. The aim of these meetings is to ensure better
coordination of economic policies, monitor the budgetary and financial policies
of the euro-area countries and represent the euro in international monetary
forums.
The new member states
and EMU
New EU members are all due to adopt the euro, when they are able to meet
the criteria. Slovenia was the first of countries from the 2004 enlargement to
do so and it joined the euro area on 1 January 2007.