Publication

Jul 2001

Financial markets in Euroland differ from those of a national monetary union in two regards. First, capital markets in general and banking markets in particular show a greater degree of segmentation than national financial markets as a result of information costs and regulatory barriers to full integration. Second, financial market structures differ among the members of Euroland, which potentially affects the transmission of (monetary) shocks. This paper provides a simple model of a currency union which takes these peculiarities into account, focusing on the interaction of financial structures, the degree of capital mobility, the transmission of shocks, and the portfolio choices of banks.

Download English (PDF, 50 pages, 173 KB)
Author Claudia M Buch
Series Kiel Institute Working Papers
Issue 1062
Publisher Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Copyright © 2001 Kiel Institute for the World Economy
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser