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Euro currency turns 10; seen fulfilling promise
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-12-29 09:32 FRANKFURT, Germany -- Ten years ago, Europe launched its grand experiment with a shared currency, and watched it plunge in value before recovering.
As the anniversary approaches of the January 1, 1999, arrival of the euro, economists say the new currency is finally fulfilling its promise as a way to lower borrowing costs, ease trade and tourism, boost growth and strengthen the European community.
"After 10 years it has truly created a zone of security and stability," French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said in mid-December. "From all these points of view, the euro has in fact proven wrong the forecasts some made against the euro 10 years ago." When it was launched for non-cash purposes in 1999, just 11 countries were on board -- Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain. Notes and coins were added on January 1, 2002, and the original 11 have been joined by Cyprus, Greece, Malta and Slovenia, with Slovakia slated to join on January 1, bringing the total to 16. Now, some people in longtime holdouts such as Sweden and even strongly euro-skeptic Britain are beginning to reconsider the question. Smaller countries such as Iceland, which has stayed out of the EU, and EU member Hungary, which hasn't yet met the requirements to join the euro, have seen their currencies sink in value and been forced to ask the International Monetary Fund for bailouts. Otmar Issing, a former board member of the European Central Bank, said the euro's appeal has been its ability to provide a sense of stability and shelter from the storm of global crises. The bank, created specifically to oversee the euro, has taken a strong anti-inflationary stance that mirrors that of its chief predecessor, Germany's Bundesbank central bank. "The euro is a stable currency, inflation expectations were under control right from the start," Issing told The Associated Press. "Not surprisingly, quite a few observers, with probably the majority of economists to the fore, were more than skeptical as to the outcome of this experiment," he said. The chief complaints from governments during the euro's first 10 years have arisen from the bank's one-size-fits-all interest rate policy, which can't give rate cuts to individual countries if their economy dips while others rise. But the credit crisis has swept over the global economy due to heavy bank losses on securities backed by US mortgages to people with shaky credit has hit everyone at pretty much same time. That has helped people forget the euro's early plunge, from around $1.18 at launch to only 82 cents by October 2000. The European Central Bank joined with the Federal Reserve and other central banks in intervening in currency markets to prop it up. Howard Archer, an economist with IHS Global Insight in London, said "Obviously in the early days, the euro was weaker and there was some worry about its values." |