The costs of a common currency
- Explain how wage flexibility allows countries to reduce the cost of a monetary union when an asymmetric demand shock occurs.
- Explain how distrust about the solvency of a country can amplify the effects of asymmetric demand shocks, and why trust has the opposite effect.
- The mobility of labour was also identified as a possibility to adjust to asymmetric shocks. Identify the similarities and the differences between labour mobility and wage flexibility. Are the implications for the cost of a monetary union the same?
- Differences in preferences of the national monetary authorities concerning inflation and unemployment can be a source of cost of a monetary union. Do you think these differences in preferences are important today in Europe? What about other parts of the world?
- Explain why countries with a very centralized wage bargaining system may find it easier to avoid a wage price spiral after an oil shock than countries with less centralized wage bargaining.
- A monetary union implies that the short-term interest rate set by the common central bank is the same for everybody. Does that mean that all interest rates are equalized in a monetary union?