The News-Times (Sunday)

Euro currency remains work in progress after 20 years

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The euro is about to celebrate its 20th birthday, but the countries that use it are still wrestling with how the shared currency should work and how to fix flaws exposed by the debt crisis that marred its second decade.

The euro was launched on Jan. 1, 1999, when 11 countries fixed their exchange rates to it and handed decisions on interest rates to the newly-founded European Central Bank. Euro notes and coins went into circulatio­n three years later.

The shared currency was seen as a solution to the constant quarrels over exchange rates that had marked European politics after World War II and as a logical extension of the European Union’s tarifffree trade zone. Britain, notably, opted out, but 19 of 28 EU countries use the euro.

The euro is credited with increasing trade between members. But countries have struggled to adjust to trouble after giving up two big safety valves: the ability to let their currency’s exchange rate fall to boost exports, and to adjust their own interest rates to stimulate business activity.

One partial solution could be a central budget to keep paying bills when member countries are slammed with recessions. European leaders called for some sort of central pot of money in 2015 and are finally working on how to set one up. Finance ministers were tasked at this month’s summit with filling in the details by June. The budget remains, however, a severely limited version of an original 2017 proposal from French President Emmanuel Macron.

Another key patch — EU-wide deposit insurance to help prevent bank runs during times of stress — has been put off.

Meanwhile, the possibilit­y of a new crisis like the one that threat- ened to break up the euro in 20102012 lurks. Italy’s populist government chafes at spending restrictio­ns that go along with the euro and wants to spend more on social welfare. Italy’s dispute with the EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, is on ice for now. But Italy’s large debt load of 132 percent of annual economic output, lack of pro-business reforms and slow economic growth over its euro membership remain a simmering threat that could blow up during the next recession, whenever it comes.

The original euro setup under the Maastricht Treaty signed in 1992 made it clear that economic policy and spending were strictly national responsibi­lities, and member states were forbidden from bailing each other out. That concept went by the wayside in 2010, when the more financiall­y solid countries led by Germany gave bailout loans to weaker ones whose debts were no longer sustainabl­e, and enforced tough austerity as a condition.

European leaders have since added new tweaks and crisis protection­s, including EU-level scrutiny of bank finances. There’s also a standing rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism. The European Commission now scrutinize­s countries’ budgets before they’re submitted to national parliament­s. Perhaps most important was a 2012 European Central Bank promise to buy bonds of countries facing excessive borrowing costs, a pledge that helped calm the storm on financial markets.

But there’s little agreement on going further. Germany and northern European government­s like the Netherland­s resist sharing risks and spending, fearing they’ll end up paying for shenanigan­s in less well-run economies. From the other direction, France’s Macron has pushed for a substantia­l central budget, against considerab­le resistance.

“We have evolved into a new, post-Maastricht framework, but we don’t really have a political vision which explains what that new framework actually is,” said Lucas Guttenberg, deputy director of the Jacques Delors Institute in Berlin and a former ECB economist.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? President of European Central Bank Mario Draghi laughs during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany.
Associated Press file photo President of European Central Bank Mario Draghi laughs during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany.

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