| Frontpage » Publications » Publication series » Working Papers » 2007 » John Lewis, Karsten Staehr. The Maastricht Inflation Criterion: What is the Effect of Expansion of the European Union? |
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Following the Maastricht criteria, a country seeking to join the European
Monetary Union cannot have inflation in excess of 1.5 percent plus
the average inflation in the three "best performing" EU countries. This
inflation reference value is a non-increasing function of the number of
EU members. Looking backwards, the effect of increasing the number
of EU countries from 15 to 27 would have been sizeable in 2003 and
2004, but relatively modest since 2005. Monte Carlo simulations show
that the expansion of the EU from 15 to 27 members reduces the expected
inflation reference value by 0.15-0.2 percentage points, but with
a considerable probability of a larger reduction. The treatment of countries
with negative inflation in the calculation of the reference value has
a major impact on the results. * John Lewis works for De Nederlandsche Bank (Netherlands Central Bank) and Tallinn
University of Technology. Karsten Staehr works for Eesti Pank and Tallinn University of
Technology. Corresponding author: Karsten Staehr, Eesti Pank, Research Department, Estonia
Blvd. 13, 15095 Tallinn, Estonia. Phone: +372 668 0716. Authors' e-mail addresses: j.m.lewis@dnb.nl, karsten.staehr@epbe.ee The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of Eesti Pank. Contents
The Maastricht Inflation Criterion: What is the Effect of Expansion of the European Union?, Working Papers of Eesti Pank No 11/2007 (PDF*)* To read PDF file, you need Adobe® Acrobat® Reader freeware, it may be downloaded from Adobe homepage. |