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European
Monetary Union
A German model?
European monetary
union is expected to bring major economic benefits by reducing
transactions costs and eliminating risk premiums on exchange rates. Its
main cost is the loss of nominal exchange rate flexibility as a means of
adjustment to changes to real exchange rates (RERs) among member
countries. In Discussion Paper No. 660, Research Fellow Jürgen von
Hagen and Manfred Neumann argue that earlier studies based on
observed inter- regional exchange rate variances in Canada and the US
are unsatisfactory comparators, since their economies are structurally
very different from Europe and have probably been exposed to quite
different shocks in the past. They instead compare variations in RERs
during 1973-89 for six West German Länder, measured by differences in
the movements of their price indices, and for their aggregate and eight
other European countries, which also reflect nominal exchange rate
changes. Calculating standard deviations for monthly, quarterly, semi-
annual, and annual changes for 1973-8, 1979-82, 1983-6 and 1987- 9, they
find that the standard deviations between Germany and Austria/Benelux
were 2.5-6.0 times greater than the intra-German deviations during
1973-8, while those for France, Italy and the UK were 9-13 times larger.
By the late 1980s, Austrian/Benelux standard deviations had declined to
the levels found within Germany in the 1970s, while those for France,
Denmark and Italy were comparable to those of Austria/Benelux in the
mid-1980s. For the UK, which did not participate in the ERM in the
1980s, RER variability with Germany increased at high and low
frequencies during the early 1980s, declined at monthly and annual
frequencies, but increased at intermediate frequencies during the
mid-1980s; it exhibited a general decline in the late 1980s, which may
reflect Britain's period of `shadowing the Mark'.
Von Hagen and Neumann conclude that a common currency area could be
viable for Austria, Benelux and Germany, but that it should not include
Denmark, France, Italy or the UK. The greater variability of their RERs
relative to Germany seems to result from asymmetric real shocks, rather
than imperfect monetary coordination (except for the UK), so a premature
monetary union including these countries would experience large regional
imbalances requiring a regional stabilization mechanism. Von Hagen and
Neumann therefore favour a `two-speed Europe', with Austria, Benelux and
Germany forming the initial `core', which the remaining countries could
join once they achieve comparable RER variability. If this is deemed
politically unattractive, a large EMU should be postponed until further
economic adjustment and convergence have occurred within the current
arrangements of the EMS.
Real Exchange Rates Within and Between Currency Areas: How Far
Away is EMU?
Jürgen von Hagen and Manfred J M Neumann
Discussion Paper No. 660, June 1992 (IM)
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