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| The Euro
The Euro
The Treaty of Maastricht
The decisive step towards a unified, fully integrated, lasting and
effective community of member states was the Single European Act (SEA –
come into force 1987), which was signed in Maastricht (”Treaty of
Maastricht”) after a year of negotiations at government level. The Treaty
of Maastricht, which came into force on 1 November 1993, is a covering agreement
that creates a ”European Union” with new aims.
The Treaty envisages a European Union based on three
”pillars”:
- Economic and Monetary
Union
- common foreign and security
policy
- co-operation in the spheres of
justice and home affairs
What exactly does the Treaty of Maastricht aim at?
- common security
- the introduction of a single
currency that is comparable with the national currencies of the best performing
member states
- turning the single European
currency into one of the most stable currencies world-wide
- set up strong and balanced
economic and monetary decision-making power
- a stage-by-stage movement
towards to the economic and monetary union
The timetable:
EMU (European Monetary Union) is the consequence of the Single Market which
came into effect in 1993 and is indispensable for the for the smooth functioning
of the Single Market. The introduction of EMU is to take place in three
phases:
Phase A:
- listing the participating
Member-States
- setting up the ESCB (European
System of Central Bank) and the ECB (European Central
Bank)
Phase A/II:
- Production of banknotes and
coins
- Adoption of complete legal
framework
- National steering
structure
- Banking financial community
changeover plan
Phase B:
- Fixing of conversion rates
- Euro becomes a currency
- ECB conducts single monetary
and exchange rate policy in Euros
- Whole sale payment system in
Euros
Phase B/II:
- continue of changeover
- public an private operators
start changeover when ever they like to
Phase C:
- introduction of notes and
coins
- completion of changeover
- only use of the Euro
- withdraw of the old coins and
notes
- completion of the changeover of
private and public operators
What are the main elements of EMS (European Monetary System)
?
- The Exchange Rate Mechanism
(ERM)
- The European Currency Unit
(ECU)
The ERM was devised to minimise currency fluctuations.
The ECU’s functions are:
- Denominator for the ERM
- Basis a divergence
indicator
- Denominator for operations in
the intervention and credit mechanisms
- Reserve instrument and a means
of settlement between monetary authorities in the
Community
It will be a basket currency, when the EMU is completed.
The five convergence criteria established in the Treaty of Maastricht
are:
- Inflation
The inflation
rates may not be more than 1,5 % above the average of the three best performing
members over one year
- Interest rates
Long-term
interest rates mustn’t be above 2 % of the three best performing members,
in terms of price stability
- National budget deficit
shouldn’t exceed 3 % of Gross Domestic Product
- National debt shouldn’t
exceed 60 % of Gross Domestic Product
- Exchange Rate
Currencies
must have respected the normal fluctuations margins provided by the ERM for at
least the last two years.
These criteria are important for the
stability of the Euro. So that it may establish as a world currency. Now they
are called Stability Pact.
The participating member states are:
France, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg, Austria, Italy, Finland,
Denmark, Spain, Ireland and Portugal
The main opportunities that will occur through the Euro
are:
- End of Transaction costs
- End of Currency crises and no
more inswances currency fluctuations
- Easy comparison of prices
- Stabilisation of economic
environment
- Creation of a world
currency
The Euro banknotes were designed by the Austrian Robert Kalina. One Euro
will consist of 100 Cents. The following banknotes and coins will be issued:
- Banknotes: 5, 10, 50, 100, 200
and 500 Euro
- Coins: 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50
Cents, 1 and 2 Euro
1 Euro are 13,7603 ATS.
The changeover from Schilling to Euro means that one system of measurement
is replaced by an other, whereas the value of what is measured doesn’t
change.
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