Title: Chapter 4: Costs and Benefits Compared
1Chapter 4Costs and Benefits Compared
- De Grauwe
- Economics of Monetary Union
2Costs and benefits of a monetary union
Benefits
Costs and Benefits ( GDP)
Costs
Trade ( GDP)
3Two views about costs and benefits of MU
(a) The monetarist view
(b) The Keynesian view
Benefits
Benefits
Costs and benefits
Costs and benefits
Costs
Costs
T
T
Trade ( GDP)
Trade (GDP)
4Two views about costs of MU
- The 'monetarist view
- Monetary policies are ineffective as instruments
to correct for different developments between
countries - The cost curve is close to the origin
- Thus, many countries in the world would gain by
relinquishing their national currencies, and by
joining a monetary union
5- The 'Keynesian' view
- The world is full of rigidities
- Monetary policy (including exchange rate policy)
is a powerful instrument in eliminating
disequilibria - The cost curve is far away from the origin
- Relatively few countries should find it in their
interest to join a monetary union
6- Since the early 1980s the 'monetarist' view has
gained adherents, and has changed the view many
economists have about the desirability of a
monetary union - The popularity of monetarism helps to explain why
EMU became a reality in the 1990s
7 Costs and benefits with decreasing rigidities
- With decline in wage and price rigidities and an
increase in labour mobility - Cost curve shifts downwards
- Monetary union becomes more attractive
Benefits
Costs and benefits
Costs
T
T
Trade ( GDP)
8Is EMU an optimal currency area?
- In order to answer to this question there are
different parameters to evaluate - Intra-EU trade
- Degree of rigidities
- Degree of asymmetry of shocks
9Table 4.1Â Intra-union exports of EU countries (
of GDP) in 2005
- Large differences in openness of EU countries
with the rest of the Union - For countries with a small degree of openness (UK
and Greece), it is less clear that they belong to
an optimal currency area with the rest of the EU - Cost-benefit analysis is likely to show net
benefits of being in EMU for Benelux, and small
central European countries
10Asymmetric shocks and labour market flexibility
- Not only the degree of labour market flexibility
which matters for determining whether a monetary
union will be attractive to countries - Also asymmetry in demand and supply shocks
matters - There is a link between labour market flexibility
and asymmetric shocks in a monetary union
11Asymmetric shocks and labour market flexibility
in monetary unions
- Downward sloping OCA-line shows minimum
combinations of symmetry and flexibility that
countries must have in order for a monetary union
to provide more benefits than costs - Countries or regions located below the OCA line
do not have enough flexibility given the level of
symmetry they face - Countries to the right of the OCA line have a lot
of flexibility given the level of symmetry they
face - Evidence about how many countries in EU form OCA
is not clear-cut
Symmetry
OCA
Flexibility
12- The challenging task for the EU-25 is to move to
the other side of the OCA-line, i.e. to make a
monetary union less costly - How can this be achieved? There are essentially
two strategies - Reduce the degree of real divergence (political
union) - Increase the degree of flexibility of labour
markets
13Case-study
- During the early 1980s the industrial world was
hit by a severe recession - Two examples
- Michigan in the USA
- Belgium in Europe
- Both regions are of a comparable size
- Unemployment increased significantly more in
Michigan and Belgium than in the USA and in
Europe, respectively.
14- How did these two regions adjust?
- In Michigan mainly outward migration
- In Belgium mainly real depreciation
- This helped to restore competitiveness, and
started a process of gradual recovery leading to
a significant narrowing of the unemployment
differential between Belgium and the EC
15- Case-study suggests that even small countries
like Belgium, for which the benefits of being in
EMU probably outweigh the costs, have taken some
risk - When in the future they will be subject to large
shocks they will not have a national monetary and
exchange rate instrument to soften the blow - As a result, given the rigidity of their labour
markets, the adjustment to such large
disturbances is likely to be painful
16Costs and benefits in the long run
The European Commission view of monetary
integration
- Upward sloping line (TT) because as trade
integration increases the degree of symmetry
between the countries involved declines - Downward sloping line (OCA)
- Less symmetry makes a monetary union more costly.
More integration reduces the costs of a monetary
union. Thus a reduction in symmetry must be
compensated by more integration to make a
monetary union worthwhile (in terms of costs and
benefits) - Points on OCA line are minimal combinations of
symmetry and integration for which monetary union
has zero net gain
T
Symmetry
EU-25
OCA
T
Trade integration
17Costs and benefits in the long run
The pessimistic view of monetary integration
T
T
EU-25
Symmetry
T
OCA
T
Trade integration
18- Two possibilities for the long-term prospects of
monetary union - One is represented by the TT line. In this case,
although today the EU-25 may not be an optimum
currency area, it will move into the OCA zone
over time (right side of OCA) - The second case is represented by the steep TT
line. Integration brings us increasingly farther
away from the OCA zone. The net gains of a
monetary union do not increase fast enough with
the degree of integration. Thus, the costs of
asymmetry overwhelm all the other benefits a
monetary union may have - Second case is implausible
19Endogeniety of monetary union
- A decision by an individual country to join EMU,
even if it does not satisfy the OCA criteria, can
have a self-fulfilling character - In this case the process of integration is sped
up by the very decision to join the monetary
union, so that this new country grouping moves
faster into the OCA zone - OCA becomes endogenous
20The challenge of enlargement of EMU
- Two challenges
- Enlargement poses problems for the 12 present
members - Enlargement poses problems for the newcomers
21Is Euro-25 OCA? Openness as a criterion
Figure 4.11Â Exports of goods and services
towards EU-25 as percentage of GDP (2005)
22- The central European countries are as open
towards the EU as the EU-countries themselves - The central European countries appear to be more
integrated with the EU than Denmark, Sweden and
the UK
23Is Euro-25 OCA? Asymmetry of shocks
- Each point represents correlation between demand
and supply shocks of particular country with
EU-average - Many CE-countries demand shocks negatively
correlated with EU demand shocks - Low correlation of supply shocks between
CE-countries and EU - Asymmetries in demand shocks may disappear partly
in MU, asymmetries in supply shocks more likely
to stay
24- Thus, not all CE-countries may be part of an
optimal currency area with the rest of the
European Union - Despite relatively large openness of the
CE-countries vis a vis the EU, many are subjected
to relatively large asymmetric shocks, so that it
is not obvious that they would gain from entering
EMU - However, for some of these countries entering EMU
might be the best possible way to import monetary
and price stability
25How will present members be affected by
enlargement to Euro-25?
symmetry
- Euro-25 more subject to asymmetric shocks than
Eurozone - Original members of Eurozone (who are also part
of Euro-25) are thrown out of OCA-zone - Some original members will perceive policies of
the ECB to be less receptive to their domestic
shocks than prior to enlargement
Eurozone
OCA
EU-25
Economic integration
26Should the UK join EMU?
- Costs of a monetary union
- Openness the UK has the lowest degree of
openness towards the rest of the EU - Asymmetry of shocks demand shocks in the UK are
negatively correlated with the demand shocks in
Euroland - Flexibility there is greater flexibility in the
UK labour markets than in the Eurozone (see the
inflation-unemployment of the UK, France and
Germany). Thus easier adjustment in UK than in
Eurozone - It is unclear whether costs of monetary union are
larger in UK than in Eurozone
27(No Transcript)
28Is Latin America an optimal currency area?
- Monetary instability has made the idea of forming
a monetary union in Latin America popular - Costs of monetary union in Latin America
- Latin American countries have very low levels of
trade with the rest of Latin America
29Figure 4.16Â Intraregional exports of goods and
services, EU and Latin America as a percentage of
GDP (2005)
30- Degree of synchronization of output movements is
low in Latin America, and asymmetric shocks are
relatively large - Very little empirical evidence has been
undertaken to measure the degree of flexibility
of labour markets - Main driving force for popularity of MU is the
hope to import price stability - If monetary union comes about it will have to
provide the right institutions guaranteeing price
stability
31Is East-Asia an optimal currency area?
Source IMF, IFS and Xu Ning(2004) Note the
exports of the East-Asian countries is to ASEAN
plus China, Korea and Japan. The data for China
relate to 2001.
32Shocks are not more asymmetric in Asia than in
Eurozone
Eurozone
Asia
33- Economic conditions for monetary union in East
Asia seem to be satisfied - Main stumbling block is political
- Desire for political unification is weak
- Contrast with Europe is great process of
political unification in Europe has been going on
since 1960
34Monetary Unions in Africa
- There is a history of monetary union in West- and
Central Africa - Legacy of colonization CFA-zone
- New initiative to extend existing monetary
unions The Economic Community of West-African
States (ECOWAS) - This is a grouping of 15 states
- Do these form an OCA?
35Figure 4.20 Intraregional exports of goods and
services in West-Africa (2003) and the Eurozone
(2005)
36- When using the Eurozone as a benchmark, the
evidence on whether West Africa forms an optimal
currency area is mixed - The degree of integration among West African
countries is low, yielding relatively few
benefits of a monetary union - Labour mobility is substantially stronger
- The degree of asymmetry does not seem to be
larger in West Africa than it is in the Eurozone - West African countries (the members of WAEMU)
have already set into place a series of
institutions, such as a common central bank
facilitating further steps towards a monetary
union
37Conclusion
- It is unlikely that the EU as a whole constitutes
an optimal monetary union - As integration moves on, the number of countries
that are likely to benefit from monetary union
will increase - Enlargement of the Eurozone to 25 countries
creates serious challenges - Euro-25 is probably not an OCA, but may become
one - Enlargement will change the cost benefit calculus
of existing members of the Eurozone. Some of
these member countries may find out that the
enlargement makes the monetary union less
attractive
38- It is unlikely that Latin America and East Asia
will come to monetary union soon, although
reasons are different - Evidence about West-Africa as an OCA is mixed
- Our analysis has been based on an economic
cost-benefit analysis. Countries may also decide
to adopt a common currency for political reasons - The economic cost-benefit analysis remains
useful, because it gives an idea of the price
some countries will have to pay to achieve these
political objectives