Good or Bad The euro debuts

4 January, 1999: The euro debuts





On this day in 1999, for the first time since Charlemagne's reign in the ninth century, Europe is united with a common currency when the "euro" debuts as a financial unit in corporate and investment markets. Eleven European Union (E.U.) nations (Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain), representing some 290 million people, launched the currency in the hopes of increasing European integration and economic growth. Closing at a robust 1.17 U.S. dollars on its first day, the euro promised to give the dollar a run for its money in the new global economy.



Euro cash, decorated with architectural images, symbols of European unity and member-state motifs, went into circulation on 1 January 2002, replacing the Austrian schilling, Belgian franc, Finnish markka, French franc, German mark, Italian lira, Irish punt, Luxembourg franc, Netherlands guilder, Portugal escudo and Spanish peseta. A number of territories and non-EU nations including Monaco and Vatican City also adopted the euro.



Conversion to the euro wasn't without controversy. Despite the practical benefits of a common currency that would make it easier to do business and travel throughout Europe, there were concerns that the changeover process would be costly and chaotic, encourage counterfeiting, lead to inflation and cause individual nations to loose control over their economic policies. Great Britain, Sweden and Demark opted not to use the euro. Greece, after initially being excluded for failing to meet all the required conditions, adopted the euro in January 2001, becoming the 12th member of the so-called eurozone.



The euro was established by the 1992 Maastricht Treaty on European Union, which spelled out specific economic requirements, including high degree of price stability and low inflation, which countries must meet before they can begin using the new money. The euro consists of 8 coins and 7 paper bills. The Frankfurt-based European Central Bank (E.C.B.) manages the euro and sets interest rates and other monetary policies. In 2004, 10 more countries joined the EU - Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. Several of these countries plan to start using the euro in 2007, with the rest to follow in coming years.
 
Having linked currencies can be a real pain in the A. Ireland any one ? :deadhorse:
 
HAHA... love the flogging a dead horse smiley. The only thing it would make easier was spending your own countries currency at other Euro nations.... but saving a trip to the currency exchange isnt really reason to change. :)
 
...but saving a trip to the currency exchange isnt really reason to change. :)

And it wasn't the reason to introduce the euro either.

I forgot all the reasons why it made sense to indroduce one currency. But there were a lot of them.

Downside is that in the Netherlands the pensions are largely funded by emplyers and employees while they work and are put in large reserves at insurers and pensionfunds. It is not possible (like the old Maxwell villain did) for the company's to access these funds. In many other European countries however the pensions are paid by the government form the taxes paid by the workforce. So no reserves there. If they start printing euro's to get to the money the Dutch reserves will get less value due to inflation...

But, as they say, when Germany sneezes, the Netherlands catch a cold. (Our economy is very much linked to that of Germany because we are that close. Economically we are often referred to as the 17th state of Germany.) And in Germany they tend to keep their books better then in France or Italy....

BTW the single currency was introduced on january the 1st of 2002. Not in 1999. I remember wel because I married in january 2002 and negotiated prices in guilders and paid in euro's....
 
BTW the single currency was introduced on january the 1st of 2002. Not in 1999. I remember wel because I married in january 2002 and negotiated prices in guilders and paid in euro's....

It was introduced to world financial markets as an accounting currency on 1 January 1999 in the forum of cheques, travellers cheques and such like. The coins and notes entered circulation in 2002.
 
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