Abstrakt: |
Introduction The Maastricht Treaty set out convergence of interest rates as one of the key criteria for deciding whether a country in the European Community (EC) can joint the European monetary union (EMU) when it is established in the late 1990s. Specifically, long-term interest rates should be within two percentage points of the average of the three member countries with the lowest rates. There is wisdom in such a test criterion. Politicians occasionally declare their support for regional integration without fully realizing the degree of loss of economic independence that is implied. If a country's interest rate is tied closely to that of its neighbours, it cannot independently use monetary policy to stimulate domestic demand. The criterion of interest rate convergence is a clear test of whether a country is in fact prepared to make the sacrifice of monetary sovereignty that joining EMU will require. Interest rate convergence comprises two distinct kinds of integration. First, it implies the elimination of capital controls and other barriers to the movement of capital across national boundaries, which we call financial integration or ‘country integration’. Second, it implies the elimination of investor perceptions that the exchange rate is likely to change in the future, which we call ‘currency integration’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |