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Owing to the global financial crisis of 2007-2009 and subsequently
the Eurozone crisis, the accession of Central and Eastern European
countries to the European Union and the Eurozone has not been an
easy one. The EU's Eastward Enlargement analyses challenges that
these countries currently face in their pursuit of economic
self-reliance. Covering a period from the second half of the 1980s
to the present, Yoji Koyama provides unique and objective analyses
of the European Union and the Euro system from a non-European's
perspective. He offers a detailed reexamination of the fundamental
problems of the European Union, which in turn have affected the
autonomous development of countries such as Poland, the former
Yugoslavia, Albania, and the Baltic States. This book is a useful
addition to the scholarship available on the Euro system and
Central and Eastern European countries. It will help readers gain a
more holistic understanding of the ongoing Eurozone crisis and the
future of the Eurozone project.
In May 2004, eight countries of Central and Eastern Europe were
admitted to the European Union (EU). In January 2007, Romania and
Bulgaria, and in July 2013, Croatia were admitted to the EU. These
new EU member states (NMS) are not given the right to opt out as
the UK and Denmark have, and they are obligated to adopt the Euro.
Among eleven new member states, five countries adopted the euro:
first Slovenia (2007), followed by Slovakia (2009), Estonia (2011),
Latvia (2014) and Lithuania (2015). This book considers the
problems of the Eurozone Enlargement by reviewing the experiences
of NMS which have adopted the Euro and considering prospects of NMS
which have not yet adopted the Euro. The book is divided into two
parts. Part One mainly deals with NMS which have already adopted
the Euro and takes a closer look at their experiences. Chapter One
explains the evolution and the current situation of the EMU in
order to get an overall picture of the Eurozone. Chapter Two
discusses Slovenia's experiences of the euro adoption and its
lessons. Chapter Three discusses the experiences of Slovakia which
adopted the euro in January 2009 exhibiting, in contrast to
Slovenia, a favorable performance. Although having seriously
suffered from the 2008 global financial crisis, the Baltic States
have recovered quickly. Chapter Four discusses what kind of lessons
could be drawn from the experiences of the Eurozone NMS, focusing
on Latvia and Slovakia. Part Two deals with the NMS which have not
adopted the Euro yet, but are expected to. Chapter Five not only
discusses Poland's prospects for Euro adoption but also serves as
an introduction to Part Two as a whole. It deals with not only the
criteria which should be met by prospective Eurozone member NMS
(i.e. explicit Maastricht convergence criteria), but also the
criteria of implicit and substantial convergence (i.e. The Czech
Republic and Slovakia maintaining close economic relations in spite
of their separation in 1993). Slovakia adopted the Euro in January
2009 while the Czech Republic has not yet adopted it. Chapter Six
discusses the current situation and challenges of the Czech
Republic in comparison with Slovakia. Chapter Seven analyses the
Hungarian situation both from a perspective of a comparison with
other CEE countries, and from a historical perspective of its
long-term transition process. Chapter Eight considers challenges
facing Croatia, which has an industrial structure quite similar to
Greece. Among prospective Eurozone member states, Romania is the
only one country which has its target date for Euro-adoption of
January 1, 2019. Chapter Nine considers Romania's current situation
and its challenges. Chapter Ten discusses challenges facing
Bulgaria, which has maintained the currency board system. Although
the Western Balkan countries are not discussed directly, this book
has important implications for them. The authors of the book
include five economists from Central Eastern Europe and three
economists from Japan. This book is a product of international
academic cooperation between Europe and Asia.
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