 |
In or Out: Does It Matter?
An Evidence-Based Analysis of the Euro's Trade Effects
|
|
Should the euro area worry about admitting new members who are economically
very different from incumbents? What are the costs and benefits of euro
adoption for potential joiners? In an interview with Romesh Vaitilingham,
Richard Baldwin discusses the empirical evidence on the size and nature
of the euro's pro-trade effects. He goes on to explore the important policy
implications of these findings: – the lessons for potential joiners;
and lessons for the euro area’s current members and for its economic management. |
|
|
 |
CEPR Discussion Papers
2955 and 2956
The Euro and the International Financial
System
and
The European Contribution to International Financial
Stability |
|
The euro and the euro area will be a major absentee from the
IMF-World Bank meetings in Washington. The biggest structural change in international finance since Bretton Woods has so far had little impact on the international financial architecture. It is time for the euro to grow up and play its proper role in the international financial
system. |
|
|
 |
Trade
Liberalization and Poverty:
A Handbook
|
|
This
interview is with L Alan Winters, one of the authors of Trade
Liberalization and Poverty: A Handbook. This Handbook, published
with the Department for International Development (DFID), examines
how openness to trade is a key element of economic policy and how
our concerns about the world’s poor should affect our attitude
towards and implementation of trade liberalization. |
|
|
 |
The
Geneva Report on the World Economy 3
How Do Central Banks Talk
|
|
This interview is with Charles Wyplosz, one of the authors of How Do
Central Banks Talk?, the third in the series of Geneva Series on
the world economy. James Morgan talks to him about the report,
which evaluates recent changes in how central banks talk to the
markets, to the press, and to the public, and assesses the
communications strategies of the major central banks. |
|
|
 |
Monitoring
European Integration 11 (MEI)
Nice Try: Should the Treaty of Nice be Ratified? |
|
The Nice summit of
December 2000 sought to improve the European Union’s
decision-making rules ahead of Eastern enlargement. A new CEPR
Report argues that it largely failed in this objective, but that
the Treaty should be ratified nonetheless – it can be repaired
at the next Intergovernmental Conference in 2004. |
|
|
 |
Monitoring the European Central Bank 3
Defining a Macroeconomic Framework for the Euro
Area
|
|
This
interview is with Jordi Galí, one of the authors of
Defining a Macroeconomic Framework for the Euro Area, the third
in the Monitoring the European Central Bank series.
James Morgan the former BBC World Service economics correspondent, talks to
him about the report. |
|
|
 |
CEPR Discussion Paper 2630
Agglomeration, Integration and Tax Harmonisation
|
|
This
interview is with Richard Baldwin, the author of
Agglomeration, Integration and Tax Harmonisation.
James Morgan the former BBC World Service economics correspondent, talks
to him about the paper and how it considers tax competition and tax
harmonization in the presence of agglomeration forces and falling trade
costs
|
|
|
 |
CEPR Policy Paper 5
EMU
and Portfolio Adjustment |
|
James
Morgan, interviews Laura Bottazzi and Jean-Pierre Danthine, two of
the authors of "EMU and Portfolio Adjustment", CEPR
Policy Paper 5. The paper discusses the principal factors
influencing the portfolio reallocation process following the
introduction of the euro. |
|
|
 |
The
Geneva Report on the World Economy 2
Asset
Prices and Central Bank Policy
|
|
This
interview is with the authors of Asset Prices and Central Banks.
James Morgan, the former BBC World Service economics
correspondent, talks to four of the authors, Stephen G Cechetti,
Hans Genberg, John Lipksy and Sushil Wadhwani, about their
controversial conclusion. That is – central banks sometimes have
to take asset prices into account when setting monetary policies.
That raises many questions – such as how do you
recognize an asset bubble? What action do you take? It’s
all very difficult, but the exercise is worthwhile.
|
|
|
 |
Monitoring
European Integration 10 (MEI)
Integration
and the Regions of Europe: How the Right Policies Can Prevent
Polarization |
|
James
Morgan, the former BBC World Service economics correspondent, talks
to Paul Seabright about Europe: How the Right Policies Can
Prevent Polarization. This far-reaching report discusses three
possible outcomes of regional policy and development in Europe and
compares regional differentials with those in the United States.
And, how did Ireland succeed where Italy failed? |
|
|