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Lessons for the Euro from Breakup of ruble area lessons for euro

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Lessons for the Euro from the Ruble Experience Lesson 1: Beware the free rider problem . . . Free riders can undermine a currency area when they have an incentive to put national interests above the interests of the currency area as a whole The nature of the free rider problem—monetary vs. fiscal—was different in the ruble area from that in the euro area, but the problem is real in both cases Post P100703 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/ Lesson 2: Exit barriers are not symmetric It is hard for countries with weak economies to leave a stable currency area because doing so can trigger defaults and bank runs These exit barriers do not apply to countries with strong economies that want to leave a weak, inflation-ridden currency area A hypothetical scenario for breakup of the euro area : A coalition of high-debt countries captures control of the ECB. They try using inflation to ease their debt burdens and stimulate their economies. At that point, strong, low-inflation economies like Germany could be tempted to leave the euro and could do so without risk of default, inflation, or bank runs.

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Lessons for the Euro from the Ruble Experience Lesson 1: Beware the free rider problem . . . Free riders can undermine a currency area when they have an incentive to put national interests above the interests of the currency area as a whole The nature of the free rider problem—monetary vs. fiscal—was different in the ruble area from that in the euro area, but the problem is real in both cases Post P100703 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/ Lesson 2: Exit barriers are not symmetric It is hard for countries with weak economies to leave a stable currency area because doing so can trigger defaults and bank runs These exit barriers do not apply to countries with strong economies that want to leave a weak, inflation-ridden currency area A hypothetical scenario for breakup of the euro area : A coalition of high-debt countries captures control of the ECB. They try using inflation to ease their debt burdens and stimulate their economies. At that point, strong, low-inflation economies like Germany could be tempted to leave the euro and could do so without risk of default, inflation, or bank runs.

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