Integrating Eastern Europe into the Global Economy Convertibility through a Payments Union

This book is designed as a modest contribution to the ongoing deliberations about how to ease the fairly tight constraints on the external payments of many countries of the eastern part of Europe. In the fIrst instance, this inquiry is addressed to those that have embarked on wide-ranging systemwide...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van Brabant, J.M.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 1991, 1991
Edition:1st ed. 1991
Series:International Studies in Economics and Econometrics
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • 2. The desirability of economic union
  • 3. Theoretical merits of a customs union
  • 4. Practical problems and economic union
  • 5. Linking a payments facility with an economic union
  • 6. Key features of a payments union
  • 4. Paths to convertibility
  • 1. The global economy at Bretton Woods
  • 2. On currency convertibility
  • 3. Possible roads to convertibility
  • 4. Western Europe’s return to convertibility
  • 5. Marketization, transition, and convertibility
  • 6. Toward a payments union for Eastern Europe?
  • 5. Technical aspects of a payments union
  • 1. Overall conceptualization of the CEPU
  • 2. Payments problems and a regional payments unions
  • 3. Technical issues of a payments union
  • 4. A hypothetical capital fund
  • 5. A payments union with the Soviet Union?
  • 6. Macroeconomic surveillance and the transition
  • 1. Macroeconomic responses in a paymentsunion
  • 2. Adjustment under traditional and modified planning
  • 3. Standard adjustment policies and the PETs
  • 1. Backdrop to the payments constraint
  • 2. Consensual transition policies
  • 3. Regional cooperation and economic reform
  • 4. Backdrop to the proposal to create a payments union
  • 5. Toward convertibility through a payments union
  • 6. Organization
  • 1. The prevailing socioeconomic situation
  • 1. Problems of changing Eastern European societies
  • 2. The current socioeconomic situation in Eastern Europe
  • 3. The drift of the reform debate
  • 4. The nature of the payments problem
  • 5. Shocks of mutating trade and payment regimes
  • 6. Western assistance to combat liquidity shortage
  • 2. The collapse and dissolution of the CMEA
  • 1. The CMEA’s demise
  • 2. CMEA reform discussions
  • 3. Salient obstacles to buoyant intragroup interactions
  • 4. Reforming the trade and payment regimes
  • 5. Balance-of-payments constraints and a payments union
  • 3. Economic union in Eastern Europe
  • 1. The outlook for economic union at this juncture
  • 4. Fund-type adjustment programs and the PETs
  • 5. CEPU adjustment, commercial policy, and diplomacy
  • 6. Other issues of managing a payments union
  • 7. Downside risks of a CEPU
  • 1. Backdrop to the debate
  • 2. The rump order of priority
  • 3. General arguments against payments unions
  • 4. Comments on the CEPU and their merits
  • 5. An evalution of the criticisms
  • 8. Enlarging the European economic space
  • 1. The basic preoccupations of European integration
  • 2. What needs to be bridged?
  • 3. On the transition to ME status
  • 4. On the sequencing of reforms
  • 5. Economic transition and east-west assistance
  • Conclusions