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1 Může eurozóna přežít? Oldřich Dědek Národní koordinátor pro zavedení eura v ČR Leden 2012
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2 Benefits from lost exchange rates More fair and less distortive competitive environment Devaluations have equivalent effects to across-the-board export subsidies and import surcharges Discrimination of tradable goods Absence of internal monetary shocks in Euro Area Fixed but adjustable regimes incompatible with free capital mobility (Impossible Trinity) Overshooting and herd behaviour of floating exchange rates Global economic downturn is a symmetric shock that contradicts OCA prescriptions Europe versus strong economic centres in USA, china, Japan, India, Russia One US dollar versus 40 different American dollars Key players interested in maintaining common currency Germany (export-oriented economy), France (absence of German hegemony), Italy (stable currency)
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3 Real estate bubbles Cumulative increase in housing prices (in real term). OECD, Economics: Key tables from OECD. Criticism of euro: Excessively weak monetary conditions were echoed in real estate bubbles Limited power of monetary policy to address effectively asset bubbles (likely sharp conflicts with other objectives)
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4 Building up of Greek debt Sharp increase of debt occurred much earlier prior to entry into the Eurozone Elimination of exchange rate risk does not eliminate the need to evaluate properly credit risks Back to fragmentation of European financial markets? 1970198019901993199520002005200720092010 17.722.371.098.397.0103.7100.3105.0126.8140.2 Economic Comission: General government consolidated debt (excessive deficit procedure) Criticism of euro: No threat of currency crises encourages excessive indebtedness
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5 Current account imbalances Gros D.: The long shadow of the fall of the wall, Vox, June 2010 Criticism of euro: Single currency precludes adjustment through exchange rate changes Germany: former „sick man of Europe“ Devaluations are not the substiute for structural changes Danger of balance sheet mismatches (Iceland, Hungary)
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6 CB bank balance sheet expansion European Central Bank: Monthly Bulletin, February 2002.
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7 Institutional descendants of crisis More integrated regulatory framework - European System of Financial Supervisors EBA – European Banking Authority EIOPA – European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority ESMA – European Securities and Markets Authority Strengthened fiscal surveillance Amendments to the Stability and Growth Pact Directive on minimum requirements for national fiscal frameworks Strengthened macroeconomic surveillance European Systemic Risk Board (ECB) System for prevention and correction of macro-imbalances (Excessive Imbalance Procedure) European Semester Euro bulwark EFSM – European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism EFSF – European Financial Stability Facility ESM – European Stability Mechanism Pact for Euro Further far-reaching changes are in the pipeline
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