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Currency
Unions
Optimum areas
Plans for European monetary union, the break-up of monetary unions in
Central and Eastern Europe and German unification have renewed interest
in the literature on `optimum currency areas', which exhibit high
inter-regional factor mobility, trade relatively little with the rest of
the world and produce diverse ranges of products. In Discussion Paper
No. 968, Research Associate Tamim Bayoumi develops a formal model
in which regions with sticky nominal wages and producing different goods
choose whether to keep their own currencies or join together in currency
unions. Joining a union reduces the transaction costs of trade with its
other members but risks substantial output losses from the loss of the
exchange rate instrument to offset asymmetric disturbances. His model
embodies such criteria for optimum currency areas as the size of the
underlying disturbances, the degree of their correlation across regions,
the costs of transactions between different currencies and the level of
factor mobility and the interrelationship of demand across regions.
Bayoumi finds that a currency union may raise the welfare of its member
regions but unambiguously reduces the welfare of non-member regions:
while the gains from lower transaction costs are restricted to the
union's members, the losses from reduced output affect everybody, which
serves as a useful reminder that the a currency union's impact on
non-members need not be benign. A region's incentives to join an
existing currency union also contrast with the union's incentives to
admit it. While the entrant gains from reduced transaction costs with
the entire existing union, its incumbent regions only gain in their
trade with the potential entrant. A small region's incentive to join
will therefore always be greater than the union's incentive to admit it,
so even a region that would prefer a free float everywhere is likely to
join a currency union that others plan to form: it will incur most of
the welfare losses from the nascent union will occur whether it joins or
not. These findings may account for the concern of EU member countries
that remain sceptical about plans for monetary union not to be relegated
to the second division of a two-speed EMU.
A Formal Model of Optimum Currency Areas
Tamim Bayoumi
Discussion Paper No. 968, June 1994 (IM)
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