The proposals set out in EMU:
Getting the End-Game Right (the seventh in CEPR’s influential
annual series, Monitoring European Integration) will be
officially adopted by ECOFIN on the weekend of 1 May 1998. The report
was published by CEPR, the pan-European research network, on 21 March
1997 and written by a group of distinguished European economists with an
established track record: they had been the first to analyse how German
unification would lead to irresistible pressures on the ERM in the early
1990s.
Their 1997 Report warned that extant proposals for conversion to the
euro risked another fiasco for two reasons: unnecessary commitment to
exchange rate bands during the remainder of 1998, and unnecessary
ambiguity about terminal conversion rates of national currencies at the
end of 1998.
The authors set out an alternative proposal, explaining how the
decision about bilateral conversion rates between Ins could be brought
forward to the date the Ins themselves were chosen, and how these
conversion rates could and should be based on existing ERM parities.
This will reduce uncertainty about conversion rates and the temptation
to manipulate them during the interim period; nor would there then be
any need for narrow exchange rate bands, potentially vulnerable to
speculators, during the interim period.
Publication of the 1997 Report quickly changed official strategy for
managing the transition to the euro, by revealing dangers inherent in
the strategies that had been floated up to that point and by providing a
concrete and reliable alternative. The report demonstrated that, Ireland
apart, existing central parities would serve as an excellent basis for
eventual conversion rates; the recent and unopposed revaluation of the
Irish punt, moving the official parity to a level more appropriate for
conversion to the euro, provided further evidence that official thinking
had taken the CEPR proposals fully on board. The formal decision to
adopt this strategy for transition is therefore no longer any surprise.
Details of the Begg, Giavazzi, von Hagen, Wyplosz proposal are as
follows:
- Pre-announce bilateral rates for Ins as soon as possible and then
use floating, failing which very wide bands, to proceed to these
fixed end points. Provided conversion rates are credible, market
rates will steadily converge on conversion rates without any need
for intervention while EMU is still some way off.
- Complete credibility of bilateral conversion rates requires, if
necessary, the prospect of substantial intervention on the last day
before EMU to enforce these rates. Any monetary effects can
automatically be undone as the first act of the new European Central
Bank. A national central bank faces no inflation risk in bailing out
other currencies on the last day; there will no time for its economy
to be affected before policies are reversed. Being credible, such
intervention is unlikely to be needed.
- The proposal goes further: it specifies how pre-announced
conversion rates between Ins should be determined: they should be
based on the central parities ruling when Ins are first confirmed.
The report shows that currently such rates pose surprisingly few
problems for the competitiveness of EU members.
- This in turn suggests a natural way in which to handle the fact
that some EU members will not be in the first wave of EMU. They
should be required to join at exchange rates, relative to the euro,
based on central parities at the time their EMU membership is
accepted. The Maastricht requirement of no devaluation for two years
prior to EMU entry would remain in force.
- This maintains the principle of equal treatment, reduces avoidable
uncertainty about future rules for admission, but recognises the
reality that countries deemed to have failed adequately to converge
may then face huge pressure for immediate depreciation. Requiring
their eventual entry at rates based on 1997 parities would impose
years of deflation and would therefore lack credibility.
Notes for Editors:
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. The views expressed in the
discussion meeting are the authors’ own.
Monitoring European Integration is an annual Report published by CEPR.
The seventh Report was prepared by a team of CEPR Research Fellows,
comprising Professor David Begg (Birkbeck College, University of London,
and CEPR), Professor Francesco Giavazzi (IGIER, Università Bocconi, and
CEPR), Professor Jürgen von Hagen (Zentrum für Europäische
Integrationsforschung, Unviersität Bonn and CEPR) and Professor Charles
Wyplosz (Graduate Institute for International Studies, Geneva, and CEPR).
The German Marshall Fund of the United States once
again supported the preparation of this Report. The underlying research
has benefited from support from the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
The views expressed in this Report are those of the authors, writing in
their personal capacities. Neither the funders nor CEPR take any
responsibility for these views, and CEPR takes no institutional policy
positions.
EMU:
GETTING THE END-GAME RIGHT
Monitoring European Integration No. 7
David Begg, Francesco Giavazzi, Jürgen von Hagen and Charles Wyplosz
ISBN 1 898128 26 X –– £10.00 / $14.95
Available from: CEPR,
90-98 Goswell Road, London EC1V 7RR, UK
Tel: (+ 44 20) 7878 2900 Fax: (+ 44 20) 7878 2999 Email: orders@cepr.org
And in North America from, The Brookings Institution, Dept. 029,
Washington DC 20042-0029, USA
Tel: (+ 1 800) 275 1447 Fax: (+1 202) 797 6004