Making Emu Work: Some Lessons from the 1990s
Jerome Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 326
15 Pages Posted: 11 Apr 2001
Date Written: March 2001
Abstract
This paper investigates the lessons learned from Europe's convergence process of the 1990s. The paper challenges the conventional focus on labour market institutions and "structural rigidities" as the root cause of Europe's poor employment record. Instead, it is argued that macroeconomic demand management, particularly monetary policy, played the key role. Concentrating on Germany, the analysis shows that fiscal consolidation was accompanied by monetary tightness of an extraordinary degree and duration. This finding is of interest for the past as well as the future, for the Maastricht regime much resembles the one that produced the unsound policy mix of the 1990s: a constrained fiscal authority paired with an independent monetary authority free to impose its will on the overall outcome. The analysis thus highlights a key asymmetry in the Maastricht regime that is not unlikely to continue to inflict a deflationary bias on the system. It is argued that this policy bias may be overcome only if the ECB deliberately assumes its real role of generating domestic demand-led growth, thereby resolving Euroland's key structural problem: asymmetric monetary policy. Concerning the conventional structuralist theme, the analysis debunks the "Dutch myth" of supply-led growth through structural reform. Depicting a popular fallacy of composition, we stress that the peculiar Dutch strategy of demand-led growth does not present itself as an option for Euroland.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Can Monetary Policy Affect the Real Economy?
By Philip Arestis and Malcolm C. Sawyer
-
An Alternative Stability Pact for the European Union
By Philip Arestis, Kevin Mccauley, ...
-
Reflections on the Current Fashion for Central Bank Independence
By Jörg Bibow
-
The Nature and Role of Monetary Policy When Money is Endogenous
By Philip Arestis and Malcolm C. Sawyer
-
By Philip Arestis and Malcolm C. Sawyer
-
Easy Money Through the Back Door: The Markets vs. The ECB
By Jörg Bibow