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Where would we be now without the euro? - by Hans Martens and Fabian Zuleeg
As John Thornhill noted in the Financial Times earlier this month: "The creation of the 15-country euro zone has introduced greater stability into the heart of the European economy, ending the frenzy of competitive devaluations that marked previous financial panics." It is easy to forget that not very long ago, a financial crisis in Europe went hand-in-hand with currency turmoil. In volatile financial markets, speculation often focuses on exchange rates, especially in cases where countries aim to maintain a level of parity with other currencies.
As former European Central Bank Executive Board member Otmar Issing recently put it in The Japan Times: "It is not difficult to imagine what would have happened during the recent financial-market crisis if the euro-area countries still had all their national currencies: immense speculation against some currencies, heavy interventions by central banks and finally a collapse of the parity system."
In times of rising scepticism towards the EU, highlighting the benefits of established 'core' common policies is all the more necessary. More needs to be done to improve Europe-wide supervision and coordination. But maybe the time has come for countries that are not in the euro zone (or indeed those which have not yet joined the EU), to reconsider whether it is better to be outside when coordination and integration inside can offer a degree of additional stability in an uncertain and volatile world.
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