The experience of recent decades in Europe will be largely irrelevant
to the large and relatively closed economic area of EMU. So European
policy-makers probably have more to learn from the United States –
another large and closed economy – than from any individual EMU
member, especially given the US economy’s recent success in achieving
sustained growth with low inflation.
Since Europe resembles the United States, it is natural to expect the
ECB to behave more like the Fed, devoting far less attention to the
exchange rate than national central banks in Europe have done in the
past, perhaps even pursuing a policy of ‘benign neglect’. Inside
EMU, as in the United States, policies will be mainly set with a view to
domestic objectives while the exchange rate is left to float. There will
only be concern when swings in competitiveness become ‘excessive’,
like the sharp dollar appreciation of 1984–5.
But the ECB cannot merely imitate the Fed’s policy: Europe’s
monetary union differs from the United States in many important
dimensions:
- Monetary policy will be run by a new institution, one endowed with
a strong legal design but without a track record.
- In contrast with the Fed, which has developed a fairly good
understanding of how the US economy works, the ECB will face
substantial uncertainty, particularly over how a common monetary
policy will affect prices and output across the euro zone.
- Fiscal policies under EMU will be run by independent governments,
though with some coordination via the Stability Pact.
Despite the careful monetary architecture built along the road from
Maastricht, and despite the inheritance of low inflation and some
continuity of personnel, it is likely that the ECB will consider early
action to establish a track record. Initially, monetary policy may well
be tighter than would otherwise be the case as the ECB attempts to
establish its reputation for anti-inflationary rigour.
Greater precision in the specification of the implicit contract under
which the ECB operates would reduce ambiguity, and make
reputation-building easier while avoiding the risk of creating a deep
recession. As an important corollary, if the ECB operates primarily in
the light of expected inflation, its operating procedures for
forecasting inflation should be transparent.
Early on, the ECB will have to be more cautious than the Fed in
running monetary policy, since the response of the EMU-wide economy to
its actions will be largely unknown. In particular, the impact of the
common monetary policy will vary greatly across countries. To the extent
that these variations result from differences in financial structure,
financial integration and harmonization across the EMU members will be a
vital complement to the single monetary policy.
Regulatory changes should be made to facilitate such integration. For
example, if different financial structures are the result of different
tax structures, tax rules should be harmonized during the transition to
EMU. This provides an additional rationale for fiscal harmonization
inside EMU, which goes beyond the traditional argument that differences
in fiscal rules can distort the allocation of savings.
The ECB will also need to be concerned with exchange rate
fluctuations between the euro and other European currencies, notably
those of Eastern Europe. These exchange rates will become increasingly
important as intra-European trade relations grow and shift towards
intra-industry trade. Fluctuations in the euro-dollar exchange rate will
also affect some European regions and industries more than others. There
is a risk that such fluctuations will lead to calls for protectionist
measures.
Of course, monetary policy discussions between Europe and the United
States will only be serious when currency fluctuations are large and
persistent enough to threaten a trade war. How should such discussions
be organized? Past experience suggests that the only viable arrangements
will be informal, resembling those already in place between the existing
European currencies, the dollar and the yen.
But precisely because the only feasible exchange rate arrangements
between EMU and the United States are informal, institutions are needed
that facilitate international dialogue and cooperation among different
authorities on the two sides of the Atlantic. There is a danger that EMU
will disrupt the operation of the two key institutions – the IMF and
the G-7 – thus limiting the scope for international policy
coordination.
EMU will be a moving target for those who aspire to coordinate
macroeconomic policies internationally. Monetary policy-making authority
will be centralized in the ECB, but authority over fiscal policy will
remain significantly decentralized, which will make representing
European interests and engineering mutually advantageous policy
adjustments considerably more complex. Making explicit provision for
representation of the euro zone in IMF and G-7 deliberations is
therefore essential. Inevitably this will require increasing the number
of parties around the table, both because the degree of centralization
will differ for different policies and because the membership of EMU
will continue to evolve.
What will make Europe unique is that one monetary authority will face
as many fiscal authorities as there are EMU members. At this stage, only
national governments have effective control of fiscal policy and this is
unlikely to change for quite a while. This implies a two-level
coordination problem – between the ECB and the governments taken
together, and among governments – which has three implications.
First, in facing multiple fiscal authorities, the ECB will be less
able to rely on its own rules and credibility to provide adequate
discipline incentives to governments than a central bank facing a single
government. The result is likely to be an inefficient policy mix. What
is worse, if the ECB shares the public blame for the inefficient
outcome, it may have to abandon its tendency to offset lax fiscal
policies, with the result that inflation is higher than is socially
desirable.
Second, the lack of coordination among national fiscal authorities
complicates the relationship between the ECB and those authorities.
Third, there is a case for some constraint on national fiscal
policies even if the credibility of the ECB is unquestioned – a
rationale for the Stability Pact. The purpose of tighter fiscal polices
is on average to allow looser monetary policy than would otherwise have
been undertaken at an unchanged rate of inflation. But there is no more
reason to believe that responsible fiscal policy should be defined in
terms of a rigid fiscal straitjacket than there is to believe that
responsible monetary policy should entail a rigid monetary straitjacket.
One clear implication is that the Pact should apply to
cyclically-adjusted budgets, not to unadjusted budgets, which vary
across the business cycle.
Although the agreement at the EU’s Dublin summit goes a small ad
hoc step in this direction, by itemising particular cyclical
circumstances in which exemptions to normal rules would apply, this is a
very incomplete solution. If the result is excessively tight fiscal
policies, the Pact will put the ECB under pressure to opt for a tight
fiscal-easy money policy mix, hence impeding rather than assisting the
ECB. Eventually, therefore, the Pact will have to be replaced by a more
supple procedure that brings together the ECB and national governments.
This article summarizes ‘Options for the Future Exchange Rate
Policy of the EMU’ by David Begg, Francesco Giavazzi and Charles
Wyplosz, CEPR Occasional Paper No. 17 (December 1997). Begg is at
Birkbeck College, London; Wyplosz at the Graduate Institute of
International Studies, Geneva; and Giavazzi at IGIER, Università
Bocconi, Milano. They are all researchers in CEPR’s International
Macroeconomics programme.