Economics of Monetary Unions

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Asymmetric Demand Shocks
Asymmetric Monetary Policies
Category=KCBM
Central Bank
Central Bank Money
Central Bank's Balance Sheet
Central Bank’s Balance Sheet
currency area
Currency Union
Debt Restructuring
debt restructuring Europe
ECB
ECB Govern Council
Economic History
Emergency Liquidity Assistance
Emu
Emu Membership
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EU integration
EU Law
Euro
Euro Area
European Deposit Insurance Scheme
European Economic History
Eurozone
Eurozone Challenges
Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve System
Fiscal Capacity
fiscal integration
fiscal transfers
fiscal transfers in monetary unions
fiscal union
gold standard
macroeconomic asymmetries
macroeconomic integration
monetary and banking union
monetary history
Monetary Union
monetary unions
National Sovereigns
NCBs
Oca
optimal currency area theory
public trust central banking
Risk Multiplier
Safe Asset
TARGET2 Balances
TARGET2 payment system
trade imbalances

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367347864
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Mar 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this book, a historical analysis of the precedents of the euro is examined within the context of the current issues affecting the Eurozone and the long-term effects of the institutional changes implemented since 2010.

The book begins by placing the Eurozone challenges in the historical context of previous monetary unions, drawing on the experience of the gold standard. It then specifically focuses on the problems arising from the running of permanent trade imbalances within the Eurozone. The authors explore the advantages and disadvantages of being a member of the Eurozone and attempt to measure the optimality of a currency area by the calculation of an index on internal macroeconomic asymmetries. They address the proposals recently made in favour of a fiscal union in the Euro zone; including the economic and political feasibility of fiscal transfers in the Eurozone. The final two papers discuss whether the monetary union is in fact more than just that, and whether it will lead inevitably to some form of political union if it is to survive.

With chapters by leading experts from both Europe and the UK, this book will appeal to students in Economics, Finance, Politics, EU integration and European studies; as well as academics and professional economists doing research in EU integration, the Euro zone, monetary history and monetary and banking unions in Europe, the UK and elsewhere.

Juan E. Castañeda is Director of the Institute of International Monetary Research and a Senior Lecturer in Economics at the University of Buckingham. He has worked with the European Parliament’s Committee of Economic and Monetary Affairs and has been an Honorary Senior Visiting Fellow in Cass Business School, visiting researcher at the Centre of Monetary and Financial Alternatives at Cato, and lecturer at UNED University in Madrid. He is a member of the IEA’s Shadow Monetary Policy Committee.

Alessandro Roselli is a visiting fellow at Cass Business School, City University, London and at the University of Buckingham, UK. He has spent most of his career at the central Bank of Italy and has been A.C. Jemolo fellow at Nuffield College, University of Oxford. He has written extensively on banking, finance and economic history.

Geoffrey E. Wood is Professor in Monetary Economics, University of Buckingham and Emeritus Professor in Economics, Cass Business School. He has lectured in Economics at the University of Warwick and in Banking and Finance at City University, London, where he has been Professor since 1986. He worked at the Bank of England as Economist, and later as Special Adviser on Financial Stability.