Fr. 69.00

Optimal Currency Areas and the Euro, Volume III - Risk Sharing and Fiscal Federalism

English, German · Hardback

Will be released 01.04.2026

Description

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Even before its launch, economists questioned whether the Euro Area had what it takes to become an optimal currency area. The onset of the crisis in 2010 confirmed challenges in its construction that many had partly predicted. But has the Euro Area changed over time, and what key drivers are necessary to strengthen it in the future? 
This is the third of three volumes that use optimal currency area theory and applied econometric techniques to provide a compact analysis of the Euro Area, its evolution and future perspectives. This volume is dedicated to a criterion often seen as critical for an optimal currency area: a risk-sharing mechanism. Did the Euro Area s stabilization mechanisms work as intended? In this timely book, the authors discuss the extent to which the Euro Area has developed fiscal transfers, insurance schemes, and financial markets that allow its members to share macroeconomic risks and smooth asymmetric shocks. The book is of interest to a wide range of researchers in financial economics, macroeconomics and economic policy. 

List of contents

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Literature Review and Theory.- Chapter 3: Descriptive and Quantitative Analyses.- Chapter 4: Recommendations and Conclusion.- Chapter 5: Putting it all together.

About the author

Johannes Dreyer
is Associate Professor at Roskilde University, Denmark. His fields of research include financial economics, macroeconomics, and the study of Optimal Currency Areas.

Peter Schmid
is Professor at FOM University of Applied Sciences, Germany and contract professor at the Free University of Bolzano, Italy. His fields of research include general business administration, economics, finance and entrepreneurship.

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Summary

Even before its launch, economists questioned whether the Euro Area had what it takes to become an optimal currency area. The onset of the crisis in 2010 confirmed challenges in its construction that many had partly predicted. But has the Euro Area changed over time, and what key drivers are necessary to strengthen it in the future? 

This is the third of three volumes that use optimal currency area theory and applied econometric techniques to provide a compact analysis of the Euro Area, its evolution and future perspectives. This volume is dedicated to a criterion often seen as critical for an optimal currency area: a risk-sharing mechanism. Did the Euro Area’s stabilization mechanisms work as intended? In this timely book, the authors discuss the extent to which the Euro Area has developed fiscal transfers, insurance schemes, and financial markets that allow its members to share macroeconomic risks and smooth asymmetric shocks. The book is of interest to a wide range of researchers in financial economics, macroeconomics and economic policy. 

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