We compare monetary union to flexible exchange rates in an asymmetric, three-country model with active monetary policy. We find that countries with a high degree of nominal wage rigidity benefit from monetary union, especially when they join other, similarly rigid countries. Countries with relatively more flexible wages tend to be worse off in unions with countries that have more rigid wages. We examine France, Germany and the UK and find that the welfare implications of monetary arrangements depend more on the degree of wage asymmetry than on other types of asymmetries and that the higher wage flexibility in the UK would make its participation in EMU costly. Copyright 2005 Royal Economic Society.
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
This paper analyses the implications of heterogeneity in the type of downward wage rigidity (nominal...
We compare monetary union to flexible exchange rates in an asymmetric, three-country model with acti...
Membership in a monetary union (EMU) is likely to imply stronger incentives for nominal wage flexibi...
Membership in a monetary union (EMU) is likely to imply stronger incentives for nominal wage flexibi...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
Abstract. The authors test whether the introduction of a common currency and the single...
Abstract. The authors test whether the introduction of a common currency and the single...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
Membership in a monetary union reduces the possibilities to counteract fluctuations in productivity ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
This paper analyses the implications of heterogeneity in the type of downward wage rigidity (nominal...
We compare monetary union to flexible exchange rates in an asymmetric, three-country model with acti...
Membership in a monetary union (EMU) is likely to imply stronger incentives for nominal wage flexibi...
Membership in a monetary union (EMU) is likely to imply stronger incentives for nominal wage flexibi...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
Abstract. The authors test whether the introduction of a common currency and the single...
Abstract. The authors test whether the introduction of a common currency and the single...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
Membership in a monetary union reduces the possibilities to counteract fluctuations in productivity ...
This paper examines different levels of wage moderation in EMU member states since the introduction ...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
We study the gains from increased wage flexibility using a small open economy model with staggered p...
This paper analyses the implications of heterogeneity in the type of downward wage rigidity (nominal...