OP:7. Agenda for Stage Two: Preparing
the Monetary Platform
Author(s): Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa and Fabrizio Saccomanni
Publication Date: December 1991
Abstract: These pages are being written on November 1991 on the
eve of the European Council's meeting in Maastricht at which a
constitution for monetary union is expected to be approved in the form
of an amendment to the Treaty of Rome; this will subsequently be
submitted for ratification to each of the signatory nations'
parliaments. As this deadline approaches, a number of aspects of the new
Treaty will await definition. Some, not unimportant, are of a legal and
institutional nature and do not concern us here. Our attention focuses
rather on the functional and operational issues that will have to be
tackled in order to prepare the final stage of union. we are thus taking
a 'post-Treaty' view, even though the nature of the solutions the Treaty
supplies to those outstanding legal and institutional aspects of
transition will either facilitate or handicap the resolution of the
functional and operational problems under discussion.
The building of Europe does not consist only of actions; it is also
an intellectual exercise. It is not just a question of applying an
existing model of political, economic or monetary order. For economists
, the creation first of the single market and then of economic and
monetary union (EMU) implies a rethinking of the very foundations of
economic management, the relations between the market economy and market
institutions, the allocation to different levels of government of
responsibility for economic policy, the aims and distribution of central
bank functions. The present paper is intended as a contribution to this
intellectual process.
Implementation of the Treaty involves the creation of a European
Central Bank, just as implementation of the Treaty of Rome and of the
Single European Act subtends the creation of a single European market.
The treaty will embody a concept of a central bank; but the task of
defining the functions and instruments of the European Central Bank will
not end there. During the implementation phase the elaboration and
discussion of ideas will continue, within the confines agreed in the
texts, and will reach a much deeper level of analysis than is possible
in a constitutional document. Our starting-point must therefore be a
detailed conceptual view of the functions and instruments of the central
bank.
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