The creation of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) and the
start of the Euro in 1999 are historical marks for Europe. With the
start of the new currency and the ECB the world economy also is facing
a major structural change and new challenges. In a historical
perspective the European Monetary Union has the unique feature that a
common new institution, the ECB, has been created. This is in marked
contrast to the Scandinavian and the Latin Monetary Union (France,
Italy, Belgium th and Switzerland) in the late 19 century which was a
period in which national central banks were created in order to
stabilize the respective national financial systems. In the starting
year 1999 the European Central Bank had favorable conditions in the
sense that low inflation rates and an economic upswing had coincided;
while this should contribute to a Euro appreciation in the long run
the short term exchange rate developments were in marked contrast as
the new currency lost about 115 of its value within 16 months; while
exchange rate volatility has not been unusual in the 1980s the
continued and strong fall ofthe Euro vis-a-vis the US dollar, the
pound, the Swiss franc and the Yen has raised concerns. The strong
initial fall of the Euro has created some problems in establishing the
new currency as a strong contender for the US dollar. Moreover, there
are some theoretical challenges since the portfolio model offers a
rather different message than the purchasing power parity.
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New Approaches and Application to the Euro
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783642569135
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter