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Under the direction of Nobel laureate Robert A. Mundell and Paul J.
Zak, eminent contributors to Monetary Stability and Economic Growth
offer a unique insight into the way that economists analyse the
causes of money (mis) management in the US, Latin America, Europe
and Japan, and prescribe stabilising reforms. Their lively
discussion provides answers to various questions including: How
does monetary stability affect economic growth? How can nations
best achieve monetary stability? When is monetary union desirable?
Which anchors for monetary stability are likely to be most
effective? How will the euro affect financial markets and the
international monetary system? Is international monetary reform
possible, and how can it be achieved? The mechanisms that link
monetary policy - including foreign exchange regimes and the
international monetary system - to economic performance are
examined, and the ways in which countries can stimulate economic
growth are explored. This superb narrative volume, brought alive by
the debate between leading economists, is contextualised by the
editors' excellent introduction. It will be of immense interest to
students, researchers and teachers of macroeconomics and financial
economics as well as professional economists.
The introduction of the euro was an important event for the world
economy and the international political system. For the first time
in history, a substantial group of European countries-eleven of the
fifteen members of the European Union including three members of
the G-7-have voluntarily agreed to replace their national
currencies with a single currency. The euro area has already become
established as the second largest currency area in the world and
will therefore become a major player in the international monetary
system. The creation of the euro poses a number of interesting
questions. Will the euro be a strong or a weak currency? Will the
euro challenge the leading position hitherto held by the United
States dollar and would sharing of the burdens and advantages of
reserve currency status improve or worsen the stability of the
international monetary system? How will the euro affect US
relations with Europe? Does the formation of the euro intensify
European integration in other fields? Is a bi-polar international
monetary system viable? These and other issues motivated the
Luxembourg Institute for European and International Studies and the
Pierre Werner Foundation to organize an international conference in
Luxembourg on December 3-4, 1998, on the eve of the birth of the
euro. At the outset we were aware that the issue of the euro went
far beyond pure economics. Money, after all, is too important a
subject to be left to economists.
The introduction of the euro was an important event for the world
economy and the international political system. For the first time
in history, a substantial group of European countries-eleven of the
fifteen members of the European Union including three members of
the G-7-have voluntarily agreed to replace their national
currencies with a single currency. The euro area has already become
established as the second largest currency area in the world and
will therefore become a major player in the international monetary
system. The creation of the euro poses a number of interesting
questions. Will the euro be a strong or a weak currency? Will the
euro challenge the leading position hitherto held by the United
States dollar and would sharing of the burdens and advantages of
reserve currency status improve or worsen the stability of the
international monetary system? How will the euro affect US
relations with Europe? Does the formation of the euro intensify
European integration in other fields? Is a bi-polar international
monetary system viable? These and other issues motivated the
Luxembourg Institute for European and International Studies and the
Pierre Werner Foundation to organize an international conference in
Luxembourg on December 3-4, 1998, on the eve of the birth of the
euro. At the outset we were aware that the issue of the euro went
far beyond pure economics. Money, after all, is too important a
subject to be left to economists.
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