In a new Occasional
Paper published by the Centre for Economic Policy Research, David
Begg (Birkbeck College, University of London), Francesco Giavazzi (Università
Bocconi) and Charles Wyplosz (Graduate Institute for International
Studies, Geneva) outline the options for the future exchange-rate policy
of EMU especially in relation to the dollar.. The authors conclude that
future exchange rate policies will have to be determined along
necessarily informal, yet supple lines which has implications for the
current Stability Pact as well as the way in which the European Central
Bank adopts exchange rate policies.
The authors argue that when thinking about the
exchange rate policy for EMU, the first step must be to throw away the
small-open economy spectacles. Past European experience will be largely
irrelevant to the authorities of a large and relatively closed economic
area. European policymakers thus have more to learn from the US
experience than from any European country’s own recent history. EMU
will be a relatively closed economic area. The incentive to learn from
the United States is reinforced by the recent success of the US economy
in achieving sustained growth with no inflation.
Because Europe will resemble the United States, the
ECB will behave much more like the Fed, devoting far less attention to
the exchange rate than has been the case with European central banks so
far. A flexible and ad-hoc approach to exchange rate management is the
only one that could be implemented
However, the authors warn that passive imitation of
the United States could be misguided, though, because EMU will differ
from the US in many important dimensions.
- Its monetary policy will be run by a new institution, endowed with
a strong legal design, but which initially will not have a track
record of its own.
- Contrary to the Fed which has developed a fairly good
understanding of how the US economy works, the ECB will face
substantial uncertainty, particularly in the way in which a common
monetary policy will affect prices and output throughout the region.
- Although standard measures of openness suggest that EMU will be as
closed as the US, the nature of exchanges in Europe is different
from the US, particularly as trade with the countries in central and
Eastern Europe expands.
- Fiscal policy in the EMU will be run by many independent
governments, under the coordination mechanism provided by the Growth
and Stability Pact.
- The ECB is likely to consider that it must take early action to
establish a track record. It is thus widely expected that initially
monetary policy will be tight, indeed tighter than normal, as the
new central bank attempts to secure its reputation.
EMU-wide monetary aggregates will, at least
initially, be quite unstable. The desirable monetary policy framework
for the ECB is an inflation target operated via an interest rate
instrument. An additional difficulty will initially arise from the
possibility that the cross-country effects of a common monetary policy
might be quite different, as a result of the differences that exist in
financial structures and thus in the transmission channels of monetary
policy from one EU state to another. It is important to understand that
the introduction of a single currency will automatically produce more
harmonization, and the extent to which this requires active policy
decisions.
There are important differences with respect to the
United States.
- Exchange rate fluctuations between the euro and other European
currencies (pre-ins, and the currencies of countries that have not
yet joined the EU) will continue to matter.
- Exchange rate fluctuations vis-a’-vis the countries in central
and Eastern Europe will deserve new attention. These exchange rates
will become increasingly important as trade relations between those
countries and EMU grow, and change in nature (more intra-industry
trade.)
- Fluctuations in the euro-dollar exchange rate will also affect
some regions and industries more than other, inducing the risk of a
call for protectionist measures.
Monetary policy discussions between Europe and the
United States will only be serious in the presence of very large
exchange rate misalignment – that is in the presence of fluctuations
in the euro-dollar exchange rate that are large and persistent enough to
threaten a trade war.
Therefore the only feasible exchange rate
arrangements between EMU and the United States will be informal. This
suggests that there will be a need for institutions that facilitate
international dialogue and co-operation among different authorities on
the two sides of the Atlantic.
There is a danger that Emu will disrupt the operation
of the two most important among these institutions (the IMF and the G7)
thus limiting the scope for international policy co-ordination. At this
stage, only national governments have effective fiscal policy power, a
situation that is likely to prevail for quite a while. This original
set-up implies a two-level co-ordination problem: between the ECB and
the governments taken together, and among governments. This analysis
suggests two conclusions and one policy implication.
- The ECB will be less able to rely on its own rules and credibility
to provide adequate discipline incentives to member governments than
in the case of one central bank-one government. The result is an
inefficient policy mix. The ECB may have to abandon its tendency to
offset lax fiscal policies, with the result that inflation is higher
than socially desirable.
- The lack of co-ordination among national fiscal authorities
complicates the relationship between the ECB and its member
governments. The policy implication is the emergence of a case for
some constraint on national fiscal policies even if the credibility
of the ECB is unquestioned.
One clear implication is that the Stability and
Growth Pact should apply to cyclically-adjusted budgets, not to
unadjusted budgets that are cyclically dependent. Although the Pact
agreed at the Dublin Summit goes a small and ad hoc step in this
direction, by itemising particular cyclical circumstances in which
exemptions to normal rules would apply, in our judgement this it is a
very incomplete solution. If the result were excessively tight fiscal
policies, the Pact will put the ECB under pressure to opt for a tight
fiscal-easy money policy mix. It will therefore impede rather than
assist the ECB. Eventually, therefore, the Pact will have to be replaced
by a more supple procedure which brings together the ECB and national
governments.