1 ECONOMICS 3150B Fall 2015 Professor Lazar Office: N205J, Schulich 736-5068.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
 First, I’ll read the slides  Second, I’ll check understanding and vocabulary  Finally, you’ll do some exercises in your notebook.
Advertisements

EMU and the euro... (for dummies?) Presentation by Nigel Nagarajan Faculty Orientation for the 2009 Euro Challenge New York, November 25 th 2008 The 2009.
Economic Experience and Crisis in the Euro Zone Carlos Hurtado* The Restructuring and Resolution of External Sovereign Debt World Bank. Annual Law, Justice.
60% Gross Domestic Product 40% EU signed Maastricht Treaty, under which EDP was defined in article 104. According to the treaty, fiscal surveillance.
Macroeconomics Basics.
Past, Present, and Future
Regional Trade Agreements
The Euro CGG3O. The Euro The euro is the official currency of the eurozone –17 of the 27 member states of the European Union –Austria, Belgium, Cyprus,
An emerging political system?
Doing Business In…. The European Union EU European Union 15 Countries Original –Austria –Belgium –DenmarkAbstain –Finland –France –Germany –Greece –Ireland.
Multilateral trade arrangements [GATT  WTO] Nondiscrimination: bilateral liberalization extended to all members. “Most favored nation” BUT Complex negotiations:
Timeline of the European Union
Reichstag, 1945 Frankfurter Allee, 1945 A Climate for Radical Change:
What is European Union and Euro zone. European Union Political Union Started Members Economic co-operation EU member states and affects 326 million.
Lecturer: Miljen Matijašević Session 4, 31 Mar 2015.
History of the Euro By Lindsey Johnston. Agenda The European Union Treaties The European Central Bank The Euro/Eurozone Who does not use the Euro? Pros/Cons.
European Union and Economic and Monetary Union
EUROPEAN UNION. Basic info: The European Union is a political-economic union of 28 member states. Motto: “United in diversity” European flag: 12 stars.
The Response of Europe to the Collapse of Bretton Woods
HNC/HND Unit European Union policies & global financial stability.
Special Topics in Economics Econ. 491 Chapter 4: Monetary Union & the European Experience.
Background information on the euro and euro area The euro banknotes and coins were introduced on 1 January 2002, after a transitional period of three years.
THE EUROPEAN UNION Dr. Afxendiou Sachem North High School
The European Union and the Euro Crisis Layna Mosley Dept. of Political Science UNC Chapel Hill
1 ECONOMICS 3150M Winter 2014 Professor Lazar Office: N205J, Schulich
International Finance
The United States & the Global Economy Chapter 5 Eco 2013 Fall 2007 Maria C Mari, CPA.
European Union.
European Union The Block Besir Besler Maxime Vignon.
From Europe to Euro Elisabeth Prugl, Co-Director Miami-Florida European Union Center of Excellence.
Standard SS6G5b: Describe the purpose of the European Union and the relationship between member nations.
Alexander Consulting Enterprise 10/16/2015 The European Union and the EURO.
The European Union (Don’t write) Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, United Kingdom, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain,
The European Union. “Original” 15 members of the EU 1. Austria 9. Italy 2. Belgium 10. Luxemburg 3. Denmark* 11. Netherlands 4. Finland12. Portugal 5.
Globalization and Recent Economic Developments Chapter 1.
EU Enlargement. The EU Quick History  1950s – The European coal community begins to unite European countries politically and economically, the founders.
THE EUROPEAN UNION. HISTORY 28 European states after the second world war in 1951 head office: Brussels 24 different languages Austria joined 1995.
11 From Europe to the Euro 2011 Euro Challenge orientation
©The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2004 The changing terminology The term European Economic Community dates from the Treaty of Rome of Use of the term European.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 6: Exchange rate regimes Read: Chapters 2 Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.
International Organizations Trade & Economic Interdependence -- The WTO, NAFTA & EU (Cont’d) Jan. 22nd, 2003.
Standard SS6G5b: Describe the purpose of the European Union and the relationship between member nations.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 7: Crises Read: Chapters 2 Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.
 Used by 17 of 27 countries  Used for all payments starting in 2002  Should be used by all countries once they join THE EURO.
European Union. Refresher  Market: the interaction of buyers and sellers exchanging goods and services  Trade: the process of buying, selling, or exchanging.
Monetary Union.  An advanced stage of trading arrangements including free trade between members, common external barriers, free movement of factors,
Alexander Consulting Enterprise 1/10/2016 The European Union and the EURO.
European Union Established in accordance with Masstricht Treaty (1993) 27 countries –Motto: Unity in Diversity Four Freedoms –People –Goods –Services.
The United States of Europe
Purpose of the European Union For its members to work together for advantages that would be out of their reach if each were working alone Believe that.
The European Union. Important Events in EU History May 9, 1950 – French Leader Robert Schuman proposes the idea of working together in coal and steel.
European Union. Principal Objectives Establish European citizenship Ensure freedom, security & justice Promote economic and social progress Assert Europe’s.
THE EUROPEAN UNION Background 11 June Image by Rock Cohen. Used with permission europa.eu – official website of the EU.
The European Union Objectives Identify countries within the EU Explain the political and economic structure of the EU What is the importance of.
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Unit 2 Business Development GCSE Business Studies.
European Union Duy Trinh.
Economic and Monetary Union
The European Monetary Union – First Years
European Economic and Monetary Union
The European Monetary Union – First Years
European Union.
The European Union.
The European Parliament – voice of the people
The European Parliament – voice of the people
The European Union and the EURO.
Europe The European Union.
Chapter 8: International Groupings History of the EU: Timeline
The Euro CGG3O.
The European Union © 2014 Brain Wrinkles.
History, introduction and importance today
Presentation transcript:

1 ECONOMICS 3150B Fall 2015 Professor Lazar Office: N205J, Schulich

2 Lecture 11: October 20 Ch. 16

3 Financial Crisis 2 Debt wall for Greece (and perhaps Italy, Spain, Belgium and France) Greece default likely – traders/speculators bet against Greek debt Costs for Greece of rolling over debt and financing ongoing deficits Austerity demanded – impacts on GDP and revenues

4 Financial Crisis 2 Mark-to-market rules – debt would have been reduced and interest costs of Greece would decline Problem: holders of Greek debt, primarily EU banks, did not have to reduce value of Greek and other debt if expectation that interest and principal payments will be made on schedule –If bonds sold, loss would have to be recorded –Capital of banks would decline – need to raise additional equity or merge with stronger banks –ECB: fear of weakening banks and contagion effects because of unknown linkages and size and participants in credit derivatives markets

5 Financial Crisis 2 Pull the plug and restructure Greek debt –Unknown consequences –Banks unable to lend; unwilling to lend to other banks

6 Basel 1975: Concordat –Allocates responsibility for supervising multinational banks between home and host countries 1988: Basel I –Bank capital of 8% of risk-adjusted assets 1997: Core Principles for Effective Banking –25 principles for minimum necessary requirements for effective bank supervision –Licensing, supervision methods, reporting requirements for banks, cross-border banking 2004: Basel II –Capital requirements and new risk adjustments

7 Central Bank Swaps Central banks lenders of last resort to domestic banks in domestic currencies European banks invested in US MBS –Highly rated, so less capital required to backstop under Basel II rules –Interest rate premium for AAA-rated securities (“Money for nothing”) –Borrowed short-term US $ to hedge/finance investments –When financial crisis 1 hit – European banks did not want to sell MBS and incur loss (write-down of capital); needed to roll-over short-term loans in US $ –Inter-bank lending froze

8 Central Bank Swaps US Fed became global lender of last resort –Swap lines to other central banks so that e.g. ECB could borrow from Fed (swap Euros into US $) and lend to domestic European banks –Wound down swap lines in February 2010 –Reactivated later in 2010 as Greek debt crisis erupted

9 Economic Integration Varying degrees of integration Preferential free trade arrangements – lower trade barriers among participating countries Free trade area –All trade barriers removed among participants –Each country retains own barriers against non-members –Sources of products need to be identified Definition of domestic product (domestic content requirements)

10 Economic Integration Customs Union –Common trade barriers against non-members –Trade creation vs. trade diversion Trade creation if tariffs blocked trade prior to customs union Trade diversion if customs union leads to substitution of imports from partner country from non-partner country (lower cost imports from outside union replaced by higher cost imports from union member) –Gains more likely if trade creation more prevalent than trade diversion  high pre-union tariff barriers; low tariffs with ROW; many countries part of customs union; closer geographically are members of union (transportation costs, tastes: lower obstacles to trade among members) Common market –Free movement of capital and labor –Harmonization of labor and other laws

11 Economic Integration Economic Union –Monetary union – single currency –Restrictions on fiscal policy –Harmonization of monetary policy, fiscal policy, tax rates –EU has had difficulty in dealing with economic and financial crisis – no single response as in the U.S. Political union

12 Optimum Currency Area High degree of economic integration Labor and capital mobility Similar economic structures – symmetric external shocks Limited policy autonomy – large spillover effects Limited role for exchange rate movements to insulate against external shocks Single currency reduces transactions costs associated with hedging currency risks

13 European Union Treaty of Rome, 1957 –Customs union Single European Act, 1986 – amended Treaty of Rome –Eliminated internal barriers to trade, capital movements and labor migration Maastricht Treaty, 1993 –Single European currency and central bank –Convergence criteria: Country’s inflation rate in year before admission must be no more than 1.5% above average of three EU members with lowest rate of inflation Two consecutive years in ERM band with no devaluation Long-term nominal interest rates no more than 2% above level in 3 member states with lowest inflation rates in previous year Government deficit < 3% of GDP in previous year Government debt below or approaching 60% of GDP in previous year

14 European Union Treaty of Schengen, 1995 –Common border system and immigration policies, free travel zone Treaty of Amsterdam, 1997 –Strengthened rights of EU citizenship, expanded powers of European Parliament, common foreign and security policy Treaty of Nice, 2001 –Rules for EU expansion, modifies voting procedures European Financial Stability Facility created in 2010 –ECB takes extraordinary steps to support banks and governments –Prior to 2010, ECB could not directly finance member states’ fiscal deficits, or provide bailouts to member governments or national bodies

15 European Union 28 countries in EU 19 in Eurozone –Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain 8 have own currencies –Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Sweden, UK 1 in ERM (Exchange Rate Mechanism) –Denmark

16 European Union 1 Euro: –13.76 Austrian schillings –40.34 Belgian francs –0.59 Cyprus pounds –15.65 Estonian kroon –5.95 Finnish markkas –6.56 French francs –1.96 German marks – Greek drachmas –0.79 Irish pounds – Italian lira –0.43 Maltese lira –2.20 Netherland guilders – Portuguese escudos – Spanish pesetas –30.13 Slovakian koruna – Slovenian tolar

17 European Union Financial crisis: Round 2 Does Greece meet conditions for currency area? Would Greece be better off outside Eurozone with ability to have own currency depreciate – to offset negative impacts of restrictive fiscal policy? No fiscal transfers within EU – compare to US and Canada

18 Sovereign Debt and Defaults Private debt – CCAA, ch. 11 –Convert debt into equity –Convert into new debt with lower face value and lower interest rates –Receive cash for fraction of value at maturity (pennies on the dollar) Sovereign debt –Conversion into equity not an option –Convert into new debt with lower face value and lower interest rates –Defer interest and principal payments, possible reduction in interest rate –Receive cash IMF: provides new loans to make payments on outstanding debt – loans generally made with conditions (re. macroeconomic policies – reduce debt, low inflation rate targets; microeconomic policies – privatization, deregulation)  beneficiaries are current creditors