Monetary Union with Voluntary Participation

40 Pages Posted: 3 Jan 2004

See all articles by William Fuchs

William Fuchs

University of Texas at Austin - Department of Finance; Charles III University of Madrid - Department of Economics

Francesco Lippi

LUISS university; Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance (EIEF); Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

Date Written: November 2003

Abstract

A monetary union is modelled as a technology that makes surprise devaluations impossible but requires voluntarily participating countries to follow the same monetary policy. It is shown that for low discount factors and sufficiently correlated shocks welfare in the union is higher than that achievable when countries coordinate while retaining their own independent policy. Optimal policy, when participation in the union is voluntary, is characterized and shown to respond to agents' incentives to leave by tilting current and future policy in their favour. This contrasts with the static nature of optimal policy when participation is exogenously assumed. This finding implies that policy in the union will not be exclusively guided by area-wide developments but will occasionally take account of member countries' national developments. Finally, we show that there might exist states of the world in which the union breaks apart, as occurred in several historical episodes. The Paper thus provides a first formal analysis of the forces behind the formation, sustainability and disruption of a monetary union.

Keywords: Limited commitment, monetary union, cross-country spillovers

JEL Classification: C70, E50, F33

Suggested Citation

Fuchs, William Martin and Lippi, Francesco, Monetary Union with Voluntary Participation (November 2003). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=480722

William Martin Fuchs

University of Texas at Austin - Department of Finance ( email )

Red McCombs School of Business
Austin, TX 78712
United States

Charles III University of Madrid - Department of Economics ( email )

Calle Madrid 126
Getafe, 28903
Spain

Francesco Lippi (Contact Author)

LUISS university ( email )

Viale di Villa Massimo, 57
Rome, 00161
Italy

Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance (EIEF) ( email )

Via Due Macelli, 73
Rome, 00187
Italy

Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

London
United Kingdom