Optimum Currency Areas and the Euro-zone Flashcards

1
Q

OCA definition

A

An Optimum Currency Area is an economic region which would maximise economic efficiency to have the entire region share a single currency.

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2
Q

EMU definition

A

An Economic Monetary Union is when two or more groups share a common currency, often having a main central bank which sets fiscal policies.

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3
Q

ECB (2008) - state of the Eurozone

A

the fundamentals of “The euro area
economy remain sound and the euro area does not suffer from major
imbalances”.

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4
Q

Optimum Currency Area Theory definition

A

Attempts to compare cost and benefits of countries forming an MU to judge whether they would loose or gain.

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5
Q

Outline the main OCA criteria

A
Trade Openness
Factor Mobility (labour and capital)
Risk sharing mechanisms
Product diversification
Homogenous preferences
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6
Q

Outline the OCA criteria labour mobility.

A

Mundell (1961)

Creates a single labour market by removing legal barriers and homogeneity of institutional contracts.

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7
Q

Labour Mobility effects

Brinke and Dittrich (2016)

A

Movement from areas of low unemployment to high unemployment areas.
Labour mobility shifts fiscal pressure such as benefits and welfare statistics.
Wages help the fiscal situation of individuals relatives in their native countries.
Two countries example.

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8
Q

Outline the OCA criteria capital mobility.

A

Mckinnon (1988)

Allows the allocation of resources across countries through supply and demand of market forces.

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9
Q

What are the effects of effective capital mobility on a MU?

A

Removes exchange rate premiums between member states.

Removes potential gain from asymmetric shocks.

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10
Q

Outline the OCA criteria risk sharing mechanism.

A

Redistributes wealth achieved through taxation by an EMU bank.

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11
Q

Outline the OCA criteria homogeneous preferences and similar business cycles.

A

Cyclical booms and busts must have a relationship throughout member states to ensure that a central bank can implement uniform monetary policies.

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12
Q

What are the effects of having greater specialisation in a MU?

A

Affected by a negative shock.

Countries become more product dependent.

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13
Q

Jager and Hafner (2013)

A

Product diversification and limited specialisation which will reduce the impact of negative asymmetric shocks.

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14
Q

Barslund et al (2015) - Labour mobility EU

A

Less than 3% of EU nationals reside in another EU member state

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15
Q

Kapoor and Coller (2014) - EU Debt

A

Some Southern EMU countries debt to double between 1980 and 2010

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16
Q

Baldwin and Giavazzi (2015)

A

Eurozone has been consistently higher when measuring exports and imports in percentage of GDP than the US

17
Q

Lane (2013)

A

5% fall in capital flows following the GFC.

18
Q

Outline the Maastricht criteria

A

Inflation rate not higher than 1.5% plus the lowest inflation rate in EU
Government budget deficient must not exceed 3%
Government debt to GDP ration must not exceed 60%.
No more than 2% than the average bond yields.

19
Q

Mogelli et al. (2016) - Specialisation EU

A

evidence for an overall Increasing specialisation across most member countries

20
Q

Outline the effects of devaluations to correct for asymmetric shocks.

A

Shifts demand and supply upwards.
Supply shift expansionary output effect of revaluation is reduced.
Increased inflation.
Open economies suffer more.
Effectiveness of exchange rate policy to correct for demand shocks is reduced.

21
Q

US labour mobility trends

A

A general reduction in interstate and same state migration.

22
Q

Gross migration EU compared to US (2000-2010)

A

Us is consistently higher migration rates.
2010 figures:
US 20 per 1000 residents
EU 3 per 1000 residents

23
Q

Degree of US interstate transfers (2004 to 2013)

A

Increase in net recipients in interstate transfers.

Reduction in net contributors.

24
Q

What is the SGP?

A

Stability and Growth Pact
An agreement, among the 28 member states of the European Union, to facilitate and maintain the stability of the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)

25
Q

What are the main principles of the SGP

A

Achieve balanced budgets
Budget deficit > 3% of GDP.
Drop in GDP is between 0.75 and 2% the
application of the fine

26
Q

Outline the SGP evaluation

A

ECB takes passive view on fiscal policy.
Unbalanced in enforcing rules in place.
Lack of budgetary flexibility to face recessions creates
a potential for tensions between national governments
and European institutions.
Lack of flexibility of national budgetary policies
in the EMU creates risks that could be larger than the
risks of default and bailouts stressed by the
proponents of rules.

27
Q

What are the possible imbalances in the Eurozone?

A

Current account (surplus in the north and deficit in the south)
Wages/labour cost divergence.
Inflation divergence.
Differences in labour market institutions.
Budget deficit and debt divergence.

28
Q

Outline the Lucas Paradox

A

Private capital flows from the higher regions to poorer regions.

29
Q

Trends of Lucas Paradox before the crisis

A

CA surpluses in North EU, deficits in South

and private capital flows North to South EZ

30
Q

Average current account balance (1999-2007)

A

Northern regions consistently running CA surplus of % of GDP.
Opposite in South.

31
Q

Nominal Unit Labour Costs trends (1995 to 2008)

A

Across all EZ countries unit labour costs increase. Exception is Germany where it stays stable

32
Q

What is the Taylor rule?

A

Suggests that interest rates should be increases when inflation is above target or when GDP growth is too high.

33
Q

Comparison of US and EZ trends to the Taylor rule.

A

US: general trend with FED Target Rate between all regions.
UZ: Divergence after 2008, southern regions well below target and northern regions above target.

34
Q

Outline the misallocation within sectors that can occur.

A
Politics: barriers to entry and constraints on growing firms without foreign competition.
Politicians are receptive to
small firms as entrepreneurship
is seen as income mobility and
small firms employ a large
share of the population.
Finance: underdeveloped
financial markets may lack
managerial talent and tools to
diversity their credit portfolio.
Give large loans to a few firms.
35
Q

Outline the misallocation across sectors that can occur.

A

Certain sectors protected by politicians.
Lack of competition form local cartels.
Certain sectors favoured by bankers.
In construction collateral is available and easy to price.

36
Q

Evidence for misallocation in the EZ pre crisis.

A

Pre-crisis low interest rates fuelled by capital inflows.
Southern European economies boomed.
Wages and prices rose – but often less in manufacturing.
Economic growth, but productivity
performance patchy

37
Q

GIPS borrowing trends

A

Total lending from core countries to GIPS increased by 495% from 1999 to 2009.

38
Q

What is the diabolic loop?

A

In a liquidity crisis investors raise their perceived risk of default of government bonds.
Increase interest rate, bond bonds are now worth less.
Loss amplied by liquidity spirals.
Less lending lowers economic activity which lowers tax rev and raises spending through automatic stabilisers.
Government finances deteriorate.