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Mundell, the Euro, and Optimum Currency Areas

TLDR
Mundell as discussed by the authors argued that if a common money can be managed so that its general purchasing power remains stable, then the larger the currency area-even one encompassing diverse regions or nations subject to asymmetric shocks-the better.
Abstract
May 2000 Robert Mundell seems to be on both sides of the debate over European monetary unification and on the adoption of common monetary standards in other parts of the world. But this paradox can be resolved by noting that there are two Mundell models-earlier and later. From his theory of optimum currency areas published in 1961, Mundell seemed to be arguing in favor of making currency areas fairly small, as defined by the domain of labor mobility, so as to better offset asymmetric shocks, i.e., those affecting one area differently from another. However, in two important papers written in 1970, but not published until 1973 in an obscure conference volume, Mundell presents a different, and surprisingly modern, analytical perspective. If a common money can be managed so that its general purchasing power remains stable, then the larger the currency area-even one encompassing diverse regions or nations subject to asymmetric shocks-the better.

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Citations
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After the Crisis, the East Asian Dollar Standard Resurrected: An Interpretation of High Frequency Exchange Rate Pegging

TL;DR: In this article, the informal rules of the game under which the East Asian dollar standard operates might be improved to lengthen the term structure of finance-including exchange rate obligations-to make the system more resilient, and tighten bank regulation so as to reduce moral hazard in international capital flows.
Posted Content

The Rules of the Game: International Money and Exchange Rates

TL;DR: The Rules of the Game as mentioned in this paper is a collection of essays written over the course of thirty years by a major figure in the field that analyze and compare a wide variety of important international monetary regimes.
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Reinventing monies in Europe

Nigel Dodd
- 01 Nov 2005 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a conceptual vocabulary that enables us to take account of two apparently conflicting trends in the world's money flows: state-issued currency is undergoing a process of homogenization, while money in a generic sense is diversifying through the rapid growth of new monetary forms.
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Mundell Revisited: A Simple Approach to the Costs and Benefits of a Single Currency Area

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed an analytical model to evaluate the costs and benefits of a single currency area within a unified framework, inspired by the separate arguments of Mundell (1961) and (1973).
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Optimum currency area theory: an approach for thinking about monetary integration

TL;DR: In this paper, a short survey of empirical studies on the OCA theory in the connection with the EMU and the Czech Republic is presented, and the authors calculate OCA-indexes for Czech Republic, EU, Germany and Portugal.
References
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A Theory of Optimum Currency Areas

TL;DR: A theory of optimum currency areas is proposed in this paper, where the authors argue that periodic balance-of-payments crises will remain an integral feature of the international economic system as long as fixed exchange rates and rigid wage and price levels prevent the terms of trade from fulfilling a natural role in the adjustment process.
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Capital Mobility and Stabilization Policy Under Fixed and Flexible Exchange Rates

TL;DR: The theoretical and practical implications of increased mobility of capital have been discussed in this paper, where the authors assume the extreme degree of mobility that prevails when a country cannot maintain an interest rate different from the general level prevailing abroad.
Book ChapterDOI

The Case for Flexible Exchange Rates

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The case for flexible exchange rates

TL;DR: In this paper, the double objective of the return to convertibility and the liberalisation of imports cannot be reached unless exchange rates are allowed to move, and the authors show that a policy of fluctuating rates is superior to these methods.
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European Monetary Unification

TL;DR: In this paper, the International Finance Division of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Research Department of the International Monetary Fund and completed during visits to the Bank of France and the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin, acknowledge the support and hospitality of all these institutions while absolving them of responsibility for the views expressed here.