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Issue 4, July/August 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Five Years of the Euro: Successes and New Challenges
Europe embarked upon monetary
union much the way Columbus set out across the Atlantic
in 1492—full of hope
but without a map.
Nothing like economic and
monetary union (EMU) had ever been tried before its
launch in 1999. Eleven countries—with
a hodgepodge of languages, cultures and customs—tied
their economic futures to a common central bank and
single currency, the euro. Greece joined in 2001, expanding
the euro zone to 310 million people in 12 nations.
After five years voyaging into the unknown, the European
Union (EU) may not have discovered a new world of prosperity,
but it at least proved wrong the pessimists who doomed
EMU even before its launch. Bank of France Governor
Christian Noyer summed up what many had predicted for
EMU: It will never happen. If it does happen, it will
be a disaster.
EMU has confounded those
expectations by establishing itself without any major
breakdowns—in iffy times
for the global economy. The European Central Bank (ECB)
has built a reputation as an independent, credible
monetary authority. And the euro ranks as the world's
second most important international currency, after
the dollar.
Perhaps most important,
the new monetary arrangement has achieved its primary
goals—macroeconomic
stability and, more specifically, low inflation. The
ECB has defined price stability as consumer inflation
of less than 2 percent. And as Chart 1 shows, EMU has
largely delivered on that mandate. Tame inflation has
given most member countries both short- and long-term
interest rates lower than they would otherwise have
had.

Monetary union has not
been as successful in stimulating the economies of
continental Europe. Chart 2 shows that the euro area
has grown more slowly than the United States for
much of the past five years, with most of the poor
performance arising from structural rigidities in
product and labor markets. The first five years of
the euro also saw instability in the currency's
value. In 1999 and 2000, the euro fell against the
dollar, reaching a low of 82 cents in October 2000.
After 2002, the currency rose, peaking at $1.28 in
February 2004. Various explanations, including higher
U.S. productivity, do not fully account for the exchange
rate swings, which are no worse than the dollar's
earlier ups and downs against the German mark and Japanese
yen.

Twelve of the 25 EU member states
currently participate in EMU, whose framework was established
by the Maastricht Treaty of 1991. Some are not participants
because they choose not to be. Denmark and the United
Kingdom, for example, negotiated opt-out clauses to
the treaty, which obliges EU members to adopt the single
currency when they meet the qualifying criteria. Others
are not yet members because they only joined the EU
earlier this year. (See map.)

Economists and European
central bankers recently gathered at the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas to assess the first five years
of the euro. Presentations focused on the currency's
international role, its impact on global financial
markets, the lessons learned and the challenges ahead.
This article draws on conference presentations to
review EMU from the perspectives of various countries.[1]
Fringe Players: Ireland and Portugal
EMU gets its ballast
from core heavyweights France and Germany, but the
single currency involved leaps of faith for Ireland
and Portugal, two smaller countries on the EU's
periphery. They could have stayed out, like Britain,
Sweden and Denmark, but chose to join, becoming integral
parts of the European economy.
In its first five years
under EMU, Ireland achieved one of its primary goals— closing the credibility
gap that saddled its economy with borrowing costs above
Germany's. Had it not entered EMU, Ireland would
almost certainly have ended up with higher interest
rates than it has. They would have choked off the nation's
1990s growth spurt, a boom captured in the description
of Ireland as the "Celtic Tiger."
In other ways, EMU membership
hasn't turned
out as expected. Perhaps most significant, Irish inflation
accelerated following EMU's launch, rather than
retreating to the euro zone average. This was partly
due to the Irish market's heavy reliance on British
retailers, whose pricing decisions reflect economic
conditions outside EMU. With interest rates lower,
the Irish saw the EU's biggest building boom,
marked by double-digit increases in housing prices
and rising construction costs.
As an EMU member, Ireland
can no longer rely on monetary policy to cool inflation,
leaving the budget as the primary lever for keeping
excess demand from driving up prices. EMU membership
requires adherence to the so-called Stability and
Growth Pact, which limits governments' ability
to run budget deficits. Like several other EU nations,
Ireland has run afoul of the pact's guidelines
in recent years. The country's expansionary fiscal
policy helped stoke the fires under wages and asset
prices.
Entering EMU, Portugal
received the same credibility boost Ireland did,
bringing greater stability and lower interest rates.
Consumers' incomes, firms' cash
flows and the state's fiscal operations are all
in euros, the same currency those agents are borrowing
and lending in the domestic and foreign markets.
Operating in euros provides
Portugal with certainty in its economic relations
with the rest of the world. With a national currency,
jitters about trade imbalances and central bank reserves
fed into exchange rate and interest rate panics,
causing problems for Portugal's
solvent as well as its insolvent. When it comes to
creditworthiness, families, firms and government entities
are now judged on their own merits, not by conjectures
about the national economy. By giving Portuguese
companies greater access to international finance and
removing exchange rate risks, the single currency created
a surge in overseas investment for a nation once isolated
economically.
Fundamental to EMU's success in Portugal has
been widespread recognition that long-term changes
have been made to the economy. This allowed nominal
and real interest rates to fall to the EU average.
Families and firms could then borrow more without assuming
higher debt service. Households' total credit
increased from 46.4 percent of GDP in 1996 to 103.7
percent in 2002. At the same time, borrowing by nonfinancial
companies rose from 53.7 percent to 92.1 percent of
GDP.
As in Ireland, EMU has
raised questions about whether falling interest rates,
coupled with budget deficits, have produced too much
of a good thing. The signs are there—current
account deficits, inflation above the EU average,
rising asset prices. A more benign view of these
developments is that they reflect market-led responses
to the transition to EMU that will unwind without
causing many problems.
On the Sidelines: Great Britain and Sweden
While Ireland
and Portugal joined EMU, two other nations on Europe's
fringes geographically opted out, retaining control
of their own monetary policies and keeping their own
currencies.
Some British euroskeptics believe the United Kingdom
will never join the euro zone. Indeed, the UK Independence
Party, which favors withdrawal from the EU, gained
ground in recent European Parliament elections.
In its latest assessment
of EMU membership, issued in 2003, the British government
notes potential advances in growth, trade and incoming
investment, as well as a boost for financial services.
But the government continues to worry that UK business
cycles aren't
in sync with the EU's and that EMU rules lack
the flexibility needed to respond to the British economy's
ups and downs.
While the EMU nations spent
the 1990s preparing for the euro, the UK enjoyed
a decade of steady growth with tame inflation. Britain's economy continued
to outperform the euro area's during the past
five years, as Charts 3 and 4 show.


Economic models suggested
that signing onto EMU would have made for a far bumpier
ride, three-quarters of it tied to the exchange rate
of the euro and dollar. The last thing many skeptics
wanted was to risk the UK's stability. Joining the euro zone, moreover,
would not produce other tangible gains. Lower transaction
costs for changing money would be offset by the cost
of switching from pounds to euros. Fluctuating exchange
rates would remain a risk, given Britain's trade
patterns. The country divvies up its trade between
the blocs dominated by the euro and the dollar. Joining
EMU would eliminate risks with the former but increase
them against the latter.
Whereas Britain long opposed
entering EMU, Sweden's
political elite wanted the country to join. Swedish
voters rejected the idea in a September 2003 referendum,
unpersuaded that potential gains from adopting the
euro would outweigh the loss of independence in monetary
policy and the risk of economic shocks. Charts 5 and
6 compare Sweden's inflation and growth with
those of the euro area as a whole.


As a latecomer in deciding whether to join, Sweden
had the advantage of looking at the experiences of
other countries both inside and outside EMU. The evidence
suggests that joining the euro zone might increase
trade by 10 to 15 percent. Gains from lower transactions
costs are small. Like Britain, Sweden would face exchange
rate risks even inside EMU because of its significant
trade with countries outside the euro zone. Joining
EMU might produce lower inflation, cheaper credit and
stable exchange rates, but they can also be achieved
with sound domestic policies.
The big risk in joining
EMU lies in vulnerability to Europe-wide policies
that aren't appropriate
for an individual country's economic conditions.
Countries with higher inflation need tighter money—but
may get the opposite. Countries trying to climb out
of sluggish spots need looser policies—but may
get the opposite. If Sweden's economy were to
fall out of step with the rest of Europe, the common
interest and exchange rate would have a destabilizing
effect.
Outside EMU, Sweden can
use both monetary and fiscal policies to manage its
economy. Inside, fiscal policy becomes the primary
lever, and government spending isn't always
a good substitute for monetary policy.
Knocking on the Door: New EU Members
The EU's recent expansion brought into the fold
10 countries, most of which were part of the communist
bloc only 13 or 14 years ago. So even before they've
grown comfortable with capitalism, they face another
round of restructuring tied to joining EMU.
These newcomers can't
opt out of monetary union, so key issues boil down
to timing and preparation. Some economists recommend
entry into the euro zone as soon as possible to capture
the benefits of price stability and lower interest
rates. The newcomers are already integrated with
the rest of Europe, making them vulnerable to the
shocks and credibility premiums that once bedeviled
two other small nations, Ireland and Portugal. Euro
enthusiasts see national currencies as a luxury these
10 countries can no longer afford.
Joining will depend on
meeting EMU entry criteria. As Table 1 shows, all
the newcomers have work to do. The biggest hurdles
are getting inflation to a target within 1.5 percentage
points of the EU's three
best performers and reducing fiscal deficits to 3 percent
of GDP. Only Hungary fails to meet the standard for
long-term interest rates, a target that is within 2
percentage points of the EU members with the lowest
inflation. Only Malta has a public debt above the threshold
of 60 percent of GDP.

Rigid adherence to the targets may be unwise when
it comes to the 10 newcomers. These standards were
developed for established market economies, not countries
in transition. Flexibility aimed at hastening entry
could spare these countries some hard times. The EU
might, for example, alter the target inflation rate
from the average of the three best performers to the
euro zone average. In any case, experience suggests
prices stabilize quickly after entry. Getting the fiscal
house in order should be the primary concern, and all
the newcomers, save the Czech Republic, expect to do
that by next year.
The goal is to bring the
10 newcomers into EMU between 2007 and 2010, but
no dates have been fixed. As early as 2005, each
country will enter a transitional phase in which
the national currency is fixed against the euro.
A minimum of two years later, the countries will
fully adopt the euro. The strategies of the
newly admitted countries put Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
and Slovenia into transition in 2007. Poland, Hungary
and Slovakia may enter in 2008 or 2009; the Czech
Republic may be ready in 2009 or 2010.
Incorporation of the new
states will be among the important tasks facing EMU
now that it has established the euro zone. In its
first five years, EMU did not fall prey to pessimists' worst fears, and it
kept inflation under wraps. Ireland and Portugal did
benefit from lower interest rates, but EMU failed to
ignite growth in the larger member nations. Economic
disparities and impediments still plague the EU, and
the structural reforms to address them haven't
been achieved.
Perhaps most important,
the EU will continue to wrestle with the inherent
contradictions between a centralized monetary policy
and decentralized fiscal policies. Before the 2001
recession, nations did not get their budgets into
cyclical balance, and they ran into trouble when
times turned tougher. Germany's and France's
deficits now exceed the limit of 3 percent of GDP.
The deficits aren't as large as in previous downturns,
but EMU's only leverage under the Stability and
Growth Pact amounts to peer pressure, which hasn't
worked. The real danger of deficits lies in overheating
the economy, creating bubbles that will cause job losses
and falling asset prices when they burst.
Past attempts at currency
unions eventually faltered because of their failure
to enforce fiscal discipline. How EMU handles fiscal
policy might be just as important as how it directs
the continent's monetary affairs.
—Richard Alm
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| About
the Author
Alm is an economics writer in the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
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"Five Years of the Euro: Successes
and New Challenges" was held
May 14–16, 2004. The conference
was organized by the Dallas Fed and
the University of Texas at Austin and
sponsored by the Commission of the
European Communities. Information on
participants and their presentations
can be found at www.dallasfed.org/news/research/2004/04euro.html.
About Southwest Economy
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