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Thoughts on developments inEuro area
Ilmārs Rimšēvičs
Governor of the Bank of Latvia
June 8, 2010
The European dream – a common currency
April 1989 – Delors report: three stages for the establishment of Economic and Monetary Union.
July 1990 – Stage one: capital controls abolished.
November 1993 – Maastricht Treaty operates.
The European dream – a common currency
January 1994 – Stage two: European Monetary Institute created.
May 1998 – The 11 Member States were authorized to introduce the euro.
June 1998 – The European Central Bank was established.
The European dream – a common currency
January 1999 – Stage three: • Irrevocable fix of the exchange rates;• Non-physical introduction of the euro;• The ECB – central bank for the euro;• The Stability and Growth Pact comes into force;• ERM II replaces the European Monetary System.
January 2001 – Greece joins the third stage of EMU.
January 2002 – Euro notes and coins in circulation.
Initially euro fell below the parity with US dollar, yet it recovered in the subsequent years
Maastricht convergence criteria: a meaningful framework for smooth participation in single
currency area
Greece has failed to comply with the Maastricht criteria already from the very beginning
Other large member states have also experienced difficulties with meeting fiscal targets
General government budget balance (% of GDP)
The same problem persisted with public debt
General government debt (% of GDP)
However, the problem was “solved” by weakening SGP rather than strengthening fiscal
positions of the respective member countries
• The SGP rules were applied inconsistently - the Council of Ministers failed to apply sanctions against France and Germany, despite punitive proceedings being started when dealing with Portugal (2002) and Greece (2005).
• In 2005, the SGP was reformed: under the pressure of France and Germany - the rules were relaxed; the decision to declare a country in excessive deficit became more conditional (a significant departure from the original emphasis on simple rules and strict compliance).
• The SGP did not succeed in preventing the occurrence of excessive deficits in many euro area countries; at present, 13 no 16 are subject to EDP.
Result: most EU countries are in excessive deficits
General government budget balance (% of GDP)
Result: debt levels are high and raising, above the threshold for the Euro area as a whole
General government debt in 2009 (in % of GDP)
Maastricht criteria
Result: the Euro area fiscal numbers are clearly outside the “comfort zone” …
Greece
Portugal
Spain
Ireland
Italy
Euro area
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
-16 -15 -14 -13 -12 -11 -10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0
Deb
t % o
f GD
P
Deficit, % of GDP
SGP “comfort
zone”
… And markets have ceased to tolerate unsustainable fiscal developments
5 year EUR CDS spreads
Response: extraordinary steps taken to remove immediate pressures
• Temporary European stabilization mechanism established allowing for overall financial support of up to EUR 750 billion from the EU and the IMF, subject to strong conditionality.
• Extraordinary measures taken by the ECB• Suspending minimum rating requirements for collateral
eligibility on debt instruments guaranteed or issued by Greece;
• Injecting liquidity by conducting interventions in the euro area public and private debt securities markets (Securities Market Programme).
Response: fiscal consolidations across Europe
Strong commitment to fiscal consolidation is crucial to achieve fiscal sustainability
A significant tightening of fiscal policy is critical to restore fiscal sustainability and market confidence;
Strict compliance with recommendations under EDP should be ensured;
Economic reforms to raise growth and thereby generate tax revenues are essential;
However, besides the urgent need for fiscal consolidation, the surveillance and prevention of budgetary risks should be strengthened.
The present framework might not be sufficient to ensure fiscal sustainability in medium to long run
• Sanctions should be strengthened so that they are more severe and effective;
• A mechanism for the exclusion of an individual member state from the monetary union in case rules are seriously breached might be one of the possible solutions.
Latvia: ambitious fiscal consolidation and adoption of 2010 budget helped to restore calm in financial market;
Interest rates down to below pre-crisis level
Money market rates (%)
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
RIGIBOR 3M RIGIBOR 6M RIGIBOR 12M
2011 budget will be the centerpiece in restoringconfidence and putting economy back on sustainable path
General government consolidated budget (% of GDP, ESA’95)
2011 budget scenario
Nominal GDP
Revenue Expenditure BalanceBalance, %
of GDP*
12830.1 4288.5 5490.3 -1201.8 -9.4%
Agreed budget deficit target for 2011
6.0% = 769.8 mln LVL
Required consolidation to reach deficit target
432.0 mln LVL
BoL: general government budget forecast for 2011, ESA’95
* - no policy change scenario
Meeting fiscal targets would qualify Latvia for Euro introduction in 2014
Measure-ment EUROBudget strategy
General government consolidated budget (% of GDP)