Discussion paper

DP1975 The Optimality of a Monetary Union Without a Fiscal Union

The paper explores the case for monetary and fiscal unification. Monetary policy suffers from an inflation bias because the monetary authorities are not able to commit. With international risk-sharing in a fiscal union, fiscal discipline suffers from moral hazard. An inflation target alleviates the inflation bias but weakens fiscal discipline. In a monetary union, however, this adverse effect on fiscal discipline is weaker. This advantage of monetary unification may outweigh the disadvantage of not being able to employ monetary policy to stabilize country-specific shocks. While monetary unification may thus be optimal, international risk-sharing may be undesirable because it weakens fiscal discipline.

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Citation

Beetsma, R and L Bovenberg (1998), ‘DP1975 The Optimality of a Monetary Union Without a Fiscal Union‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 1975. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp1975