Synopses & Reviews
The creation of the EMU and the introduction of the Euro is a historic event for the EU countries. The debates on the desirability of the EMU provoked a vast economic literature dealing with the theory of the optimum currency area, costs and benefits of the EMU, symmetric versus asymmetric shocks, alternative mechanisms of adjustment in a monetary union and so forth. Until recently, for the Central European candidate countries for a full membership in the EU, these issues seemed to be too far away, as they concentrated on devising their own monetary and exchange rate systems suitable for their transition period. The challenges of the EMU for the Central European countries have scarcely been dealt with in both Western and Eastern economic literature. Inclusion of Central European Countries in the European Monetary Union aims to fill this gap, by focusing on the most direct issue of relevance for the Central European countries with respect to the EMU - why, how and when these countries are expected to join the EMU. The papers included in this volume study the relationship between the EU accession process of the Central European candidate countries and their involvement in the process of European monetary integration. The book focuses on two main issues. First, are these countries - now or possibly later - a part of the European optimum currency area so that they should belong to the Euro area in the near future? Second, if so, how and when should they undertake necessary adjustments in their monetary and exchange rate policies and join the ERM 2 and the EMU?
Table of Contents
Preface. 1. Introduction. Challenges of European Monetary Union for Central European Countries; P. De Grauwe, V. Lavrac. 2. Are Central European Countries Part of the European Optimum Currency Area? P. De Grauwe, Y. Aksoy. 3. Slovenian and European Trade Structures; D. Gros, G. Vandille. 4. Fiscal Consolidation in the Central European Countries and European Monetary Union; P. De Grauwe, V. Lavrac. 5. Exchange Rate Policy of Central European Countries in the Transition to European Monetary Union; G. Tullio. 6. Inclusion of Central European Countries in the European Monetary Integration Process; V. Lavrac. 7. Integrating Central and Eastern Europe into the European Union: The Monetary Dimension; P. Backé. 8. Echoing the European Monetary Integration in the Czech Republic; O. Dedek. 9. Monetary Arrangements and Exchange Rate Regime in a Small Transitional Economy (Slovenia); I. Ribnikar. Index.