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The Euro’s Final Countdown?

GoFlyKiteNow

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The Euro’s Final Countdown?
Sylvester Eijffinger and Edin Mujagic

2010-02-08

The introduction of the euro in 1999, it was claimed, would narrow the economic differences between the member countries of the monetary union. Unemployment rates would converge, as would other important macroeconomic variables, such as unit labor costs, productivity, and fiscal deficits and government debt. Ultimately, the differences in wealth, measured in terms of income per capita, would diminish as well.

After the common currency’s first decade, however, increased divergence, rather than rapid convergence, has become the norm within the euro area, and tensions can be expected to increase further.

The differences between member states were already large a decade ago. The euro became the common currency of very wealthy countries, such as Germany and the Netherlands, and much poorer countries, such as Greece and Portugal. It also became the currency of the Finns, runners-up in innovation and market flexibility, and of Italy, which lacked both, earning the apt moniker “the sick man of Europe.”

Such differences were a highly complicating factor for the newly established European Central Bank (ECB), which had to determine the appropriate interest rate for all members (the so-called “one size fits all” policy). The larger the differences have become during the euro’s first decade, the more the ECB’s policy could be described as “one size fits none.”

We have compared the performance of the best-performing and worst-performing euro-zone countries between 1999 and 2009. To avoid comparing apples and oranges, we have compared the data for the 11 countries that were included in the first wave in 1999, supplemented by Greece, which joined shortly thereafter. (All data are from Eurostat, the European statistics bureau.)

Because the ECB was given the sole task of achieving and maintaining price stability in the euro area, inflation rates seem the most logical starting point for comparison. In 1999, the difference between the euro-zone countries with the lowest and highest inflation rate was two percentage points. By the end of 2009, the difference had almost tripled, to 5.9 percentage points.

The implications of these increasing differences could be severe. Increasing tensions between the euro countries on economic policy are likely, as are growing rifts within the ECB governing council in the coming years. We might get a sneak preview this year and in 2011, when European leaders must select a new ECB president and vice-president. As always, those seats will be hotly contested, but, with more at stake than ever, the fight for them could be fiercer than it would otherwise.

Tensions at the ECB and between the euro-zone countries do not bode well for the stability of the common currency, both externally, vis-à-vis other currencies, and internally, in terms of inflation. The ECB will be scapegoated for that. If it keeps its interest rate too low for too long, countries like Germany and the Netherlands will protest. If it hikes the interest rate, the southern euro-zone countries will complain.

In any case, support for the euro, already fragile, will erode further, weakening the common currency and fueling even greater tensions.

In 1990, the Italian singer Toto Cutugno won the annual Eurovision song contest with his passionate call to Europeans to unite. The refrain of his winning song, “Together: 1992,” was “Unite, unite Europe.” Almost 20 years later, the Swedish band Europe’s hit song, “The Final Countdown,” seems more appropriate for the euro area with every passing day.
 
Dear GoFlyKiteNow,

May I know what would be the global implication when the EURO have failed.

And would the Existing EURO Currency Regions fall apart, and left to fend for itself, and use back their own unique CURRENCIES?

As we all know, during the last decade, the EURO seems to be a good Currency that unifies the EURO Region.

Goods move freely in the EURO Region, improving trade and business activities throughout...

When we talk about the break down of EURO Currency, does that mean that the entire EURO Region is crumbling? Borders re-written, causing a barriers of trades again?

From my little understanding, when the borders are re-written, this will give rise to importation taxes, custom duties, etc... and people could not move around easily? But is this going to be the case? From my understanding, the entire EURO region seems to already have removed all the borders around the countries...

Please do enlighten Sperminator :cool:
 
Dear GoFlyKiteNow,

May I know what would be the global implication when the EURO have failed.

And would the Existing EURO Currency Regions fall apart, and left to fend for itself, and use back their own unique CURRENCIES?

As we all know, during the last decade, the EURO seems to be a good Currency that unifies the EURO Region.

Goods move freely in the EURO Region, improving trade and business activities throughout...

When we talk about the break down of EURO Currency, does that mean that the entire EURO Region is crumbling? Borders re-written, causing a barriers of trades again?

From my little understanding, when the borders are re-written, this will give rise to importation taxes, custom duties, etc... and people could not move around easily? But is this going to be the case? From my understanding, the entire EURO region seems to already have removed all the borders around the countries...

Please do enlighten Sperminator :cool:

It would be global disaster if the Euro dissolves suddenly. It may not happen that fast. But if the member countries are not able to impose fiscal discipline due to lack of political will, then that possibility may arise..and start with talk of disbanding the Euro.

Well, if that happens, the Euro will be dissolved into its constituent parts, with Germany taking the lion share of the value burden, followed by France and Italy.

The question now hangs in the balance..as days go by.
As it is there is talk that the second half of 2010 will be very bad , globally. How much that will impact the Euro zone will have some say in the future of Euro.
 
It would be global disaster if the Euro dissolves suddenly. It may not happen that fast. But if the member countries are not able to impose fiscal discipline due to lack of political will, then that possibility may arise..and start with talk of disbanding the Euro.

Well, if that happens, the Euro will be dissolved into its constituent parts, with Germany taking the lion share of the value burden, followed by France and Italy.

The question now hangs in the balance..as days go by.
As it is there is talk that the second half of 2010 will be very bad , globally. How much that will impact the Euro zone will have some say in the future of Euro.

Dear GoFlyKiteNow,

Same sentiments. Personally, I don't see that the EURO could be so easy to be dissolved...

However, if the rest of the weaker nations in the EURO ZONE are playing punk with their economy, and generate un-sustainable deficits, and expect the rest of the richer nations to take over their debts and deficits, then we are talking about a possibility of dissolving....

However, to dissolve the EURO may really take some time...

Looking at the uncertain future of 2010, a double dip or not? escalating fuel prices... escalating gold pricing...

there are many question marks...

Apparently there are no alternative, compared to Dollars and Euros as the Global Currency... so... let's wait and see. :cool:
 
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