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ARTICLE:
The European Currencies in Turmoil
Article Synopsis: An examination of the series of
crises in the European Monetary System in 1992, 1993
Relevant Chapters: 30, 31
Topics Covered: Monetary policy, monetary
independence, fixed exchange rate system, European Monetary
System
Focus Questions:
- Why does a fixed
exchange rate system entail a loss of international
monetary independence?
- Using a diagram,
illustrate the loss of international monetary
independence in the European Monetary System
(EMS).
- Why did Germany
raise interest rates between 1990 and 1992?
- How were the
crises of 1992 and 1993 in the EMS related to loss of
international monetary independence?
- How were the
crises of 1992 and 1993 resolved?
The European
Currencies in Turmoil
source: "The
European Currencies in Turmoil" by The United States
Government Printing Office. Economic Report of the
President, Washington: 1994, pp.
244-245.
The EMS [European
Monetary System] has experienced a series of crises since
the summer of 1992. Germany adopted tight monetary policies
in response to inflationary pressures that arose following
German reunification in 1990. As a result, German short-term
interest rates, which had been rising since 1988, continued
to rise, reaching nearly 10 percent by the summer of
1992.
German policy, in
turn, created a dilemma for other ERM [exchange rate
mechanism] participants. Maintaining fixed parities with the
deutsche mark them to tighten monetary policy despite
stagnating or declining output, rising unemployment, and low
rates of inflation.
When investors are
free to choose among assets denominated in different
currencies, the rates of return they expect to receive for
comparable degrees of risk cannot vary too far from one
currency to another. Expected exchange-rate changes are
important in determining expected rates of return on assets
denominated in different currencies. If, for example,
investors expect the French franc to depreciate relative to
the deutsche mark, they will move funds from French franc
deposits into deutsche mark deposits unless they are
compensated by a higher franc interest rate. Thus interest
rates on franc-denominated assets would have to rise above
the interest rate on deutsche mark assets to prevent
sustained flows of capital out of franc assets and into
deutsche mark assets.
Speculative pressures
motivated by the possibility of a change in parities
precipitated a crisis in September 1992. In the United
Kingdom, where output had declined by more than 4 percent
from its previous peak and the unemployment rate had topped
10 percent, pressure increased to realign or to drop out of
the EMS so that interest rates could be lowered. Finland and
Sweden, although not formal participants in the ERM, had
been unilaterally maintaining pegged exchange rates, and so
faced similar dilemmas as their economies went through deep
and prolonged recessions. In September 1992, Finland, the
United Kingdom, and Italy decided to allow their currencies
to float, with the last two effectively leaving the ERM.
Sweden followed in November. Spain, Portugal, and Ireland
all devalued within the ERM between September 1992 and
January 1993.
A second crisis
erupted in mid-July 1993, following additional signs of
growing slack in the European economies. Massive speculative
capital flows occurred. Belgium, Denmark, France, and
Portugal all raised interest rates and intervened heavily to
defend their currencies. Nonetheless, the Belgian franc, the
French franc, and the Danish krone dropped through their ERM
floors. Selling pressures on these currencies continued, and
on August 2, 1993, the countries participating in the ERM
decided to widen the bands around the (unchanged) central
parities to ±15 percent. (A separate agreement
maintains bands of ±2.25 percent for the deutsche mark
and the Dutch guilder.) Since all currencies were well
within the wider bands, central banks were not obliged to
intervene and the speculative crisis stopped.
The wider bands allow
the participating countries much greater latitude to change
interest rates independently. For the most part, however,
the authorities have not used this ability to push interest
rates down. Instead, they have sought to maintain relatively
stable exchange rates with the deutsche mark and have cut
interest rates only in parallel with Germany. By the end of
1993 the Belgian, Danish, France, Portuguese, and Spanish
currencies were within or near the old ERM limits relative
to the deutsche mark. The United Kingdom aggressively cut
interest rates after leaving the ERM in September
1992.
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