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The
Risk of Being Outside: Britain and EMU
Economic and Monetary Union has arrived de facto. It will
start de iure on January 1, 1999. The UK will not participate in
EMU until further notice. In a lunchtime meeting organized by the Centre
for Economic Policy Research and hosted by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter,
Professor Willem Buiter (University of Cambridge, Bank of England and
CEPR) considered the following questions.
First, will EMU be a success? Second, will the UK join and if so,
when? Third, what are the costs of the UK not being in the first wave,
both to the UK and to the EMU members? Fourth, if the UK were to join
EMU in due course, should it (be required to) adopt an ERM-style narrow
exchange rate band for some period prior to joining?
Will EMU be a success?
- EMU will almost certainly survive. The only threat to its continued
existence will be the popular perception that the ECB lacks political
legitimacy. The lack of openness, transparency and accountability
written into the statutes of the ECB and apparently about to be
reinforced by the ECB’s own ‘common law’ operating procedures
could yet undermine the viability of the whole enterprise. It is to be
hoped that a culture of openness will nevertheless be established. The
‘17 year rule’ for the publication of the minutes of the ECB (as
close to ‘not now, not ever, never’ as one can get) does not bode
well, however. The ECB will have to learn that independence, far from
being inconsistent with openness and accountability, cannot, in a
democratic society, survive without these two awkward customers. The
UK arrangements for central bank independence, while far from perfect,
are far superior to those likely to be operated by the ECB.
- The ECB will deliver low inflation. The belief that a broad EMU
meant a weak euro was always a nonsense. Especially in the short run,
the ECB’s policies are likely to support a strong euro. In the
longer run, the fact the Euroland is as closed (as regards trade) as
the US, will encourage a policy of benign neglect of the external
value of the euro, not unlike the policy of the Fed and the US
Treasury towards the US$.
- Co-ordination between monetary and fiscal policy in Euroland is
likely to be a problem. The Germano-Dutch wing of the ECB mistrusts
EuroXI as an attempt to undermine the independence of the central
bank. While this concern is certainly not without merit, there appears
to be little awareness among the ECB top level that independent agents
can choose to co-ordinate and co-operate.
Professor Buiter argues that a key issue for the continental EMU
members is whether the impetus for structural reform of labour, product
and financial markets that was so noticeable in the run-up to EMU will
fizzle out now that the prize has been won.
EMU does not create a technical, economic case for a greater degree
of harmonisation of regulatory, tax and subsidy policies, nor for a
larger Federal European budget. The greater market integration due to
the gradual implementation of the Single European Act will force
national policy makers to harmonise taxation and regulation of highly
mobile factors of production. To the extent that EMU is indeed the next
step in the European Federalist agenda, it may create a political
momentum towards a greater degree of centralisation or harmonisation of
certain aspects of economic and social life.
Will the UK join?
Yes.
When?
As soon as a referendum on the issue can be won following the next
general election and as soon as the existing EMU members are willing to
let the UK join.
The famous five economic tests:
- Convergence of business cycles and economic structures
- Flexibility
- Long-term foreign investment in the UK
- The City
- Higher growth, stability and a lasting increase in jobs
have no real operational content. When the day comes, proponents of
EMU will argue that all five have been met. Opponents will assert that
the UK flunks all five.
Costs of the UK being out
To the UK:
- No UK voice in the ECB and EuroXI.
- Until the UK is a member of EMU, it will have second fiddle status
in the political concert of Europe.
- Transaction costs. Since the UK is going to join anyway, and will
therefore incur the transition costs in any case, the country will
lose out on the benefits of lower transaction costs for a number of
years.
- There is likely to be some damage to London’s position as an
international financial centre. This is likely to be minor at first
(TARGET irritations; the need to keep accounts in two currencies
rather than one) but could become more serious if the UK’s outsider
status were to be perceived as more persistent.
- International financial centres can be located just about anywhere.
Many financial transactions no longer require a physical market place.
The employment created by the financial services industries tends to
be geographically concentrated because of conglomeration and
face-to-face networking externalities. Other factors such as language,
infrastructure and quality of life also play a role. These locational
preferences are quite tenuous, however, and should not be taken for
granted.
- The threat of a gradual demonetisation of sterling and the
complications this creates for monetary management in the UK. Both the
numeraire and invoicing function of sterling and its means of payment
or medium of exchange function will be nibbled away at gradually.
- The risk that when the UK will want to join, the existing EMU
members won’t let it (or at any rate not without delays and other
aggravation).
To the existing EMU members:
- The adoption of an ECB model and modus operandi that perpetuates
some of the worst continental features of central bank secrecy, lack
of openness and absence of collective and individual accountability.
The statute law of the Treaty of Maastricht and the Treaty of
Amsterdam could have been refined and improved with a healthy dose of
British ‘real-time constitutional design’. By the time the UK gets
on board, the operating practices, conventions and procedures of the
ECB are likely to be much harder to change in a direction of greater
openness and accountability.
- Britain’s outsider status weakens the liberal, market-oriented
coalition in the EU at the expense of the dirigiste front.
Will the UK have to participate in a ‘narrow-band ERM II’-type
arrangement prior to joining EMU? Should it?
- The letter of the law is ambiguous. The old criterion (2-year ERM
participation with good behaviour prior to EMU) applied to the
first-wave decision, but not necessarily to the late-comers. The
UK’s EMU derogation creates further ambiguity. The old criterion was
violated by Italy and Finland. If it were to be extended to the
late-comers, it is unclear what the relevant ERM bands would be (2.25%
or 15%).
- The lawyers can discuss the constitutional niceties. From the point
of view of sensible macroeconomic management in the UK, it is
important that any move to re-impose a narrow-bands ERM regime should
be resisted. A fixed-but-adjustable peg under free international
capital mobility is an accident waiting to happen. The story of the
collapse of the ERM in 1992-3 can be re-read with profit.
- If an ERM II-type arrangement were adopted for the UK, the inflation
target set for the Bank of England by the UK government would have to
be abandoned, to be replaced by an exchange rate target. Only if the
defence of the currency peg (or narrow band) is given absolute
priority over all domestic objectives, can the defence of such a peg
be credible. The benefit from credibility is that a given impact on
the exchange rate can be achieved with a smaller change in interest
rates.
- An alternative, and superior, strategy would be to maintain the
existing inflation objective until the date that the UK government
decides it wishes to join EMU and the existing EMU members decide to
let the UK in.
- This decision involves two key elements: a date and a rate.
Once these have been decided, they will be irrevocable and credible.
When a date and a rate have been set, the priority of an independently
chosen UK inflation target will inevitably become compromised. The
closer the accession date is (and the closer the spot rate to the
accession rate), the more UK interest rate management will be
constrained by the post-accession interest parity condition with the
other EMU members. One option for a relatively painless accession
would be to adopt the inflation target of the EMU members (assuming
the ECB decides to have one) as soon as the date and the rate are
chosen.
Notes for Editors:
We are extremely grateful to Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter for hosting this lunchtime meeting. The meeting was chaired by
Kevin Gardiner, Senior Economist, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
The research underlying this presentation was
supported by a ROPAs grant from the ESRC.
CEPR is a network of over 450 Research Fellows based throughout
Europe, who collaborate through the Centre in research and its
dissemination. CEPR helps its Research Fellows to develop projects,
obtain their funding, administer them and disseminate their results. The
Centre’s research ranges from open economy macroeconomics to trade
policy, from the economic transformation of Central and Eastern Europe
to regionalism in the world economy. CEPR is an ESRC Resource Centre.
For further information about CEPR, please contact Rita Gilbert,
External Relations Officer, Tel 44 20 7878 2917, Fax 44 20 7878 2999 or
by email on rgilbert@cepr.org
Willem Buiter is Professor of Economics at
Cambridge University, a Member of the Monetary Policy Committee and a
Research Fellow in CEPR’s International Macroeconomics programme. The
views expressed in this presentation are those of Professor Buiter and
not those of the Monetary Policy Committee, the funding organizations,
nor of CEPR which takes no institutional policy positions.
Research by Professor Buiter:
‘Transition Issues for the European Monetary
Union’
Willem H Buiter and Anne C Sibert
CEPR
Discussion Paper No. 1728
‘Notes on ‘A Code for Fiscal Stability’’
Willem H Buiter
CEPR
Discussion Paper No. 1831
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