Journal article

Fiscal discipline and the question of convergence of national interest rates in the European Union


Authors listAlexander, V; Anker, P

Publication year1997

Pages335-352

JournalOpen Economies Review

Volume number8

Issue number4

ISSN0923-7992

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008234929142

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
In this paper, interest-rate convergence in Europe is related to the behavior of integrated federal political systems. Our main results are: Before the final fixing of exchange rates, national interest rates will converge toward the German bond yield in countries eligible to become EMU members in part because no-bailout clauses are not credible in the starting period of EMU. Should such clauses become more credible after 2002 because the EU government and its redistributive mechanisms remain weak, the ''market-discipline hypothesis'' has a greater chance to apply. But it may still prove unequal to the task of discouraging excessive fiscal deficits on its own.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleAlexander, V. and Anker, P. (1997) Fiscal discipline and the question of convergence of national interest rates in the European Union, Open Economies Review, 8(4), pp. 335-352. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008234929142

APA Citation styleAlexander, V., & Anker, P. (1997). Fiscal discipline and the question of convergence of national interest rates in the European Union. Open Economies Review. 8(4), 335-352. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008234929142


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 06:49