Why Do Different Countries Use Different Currencies?

During long periods of history, countries have pegged their currencies to an international standard (such as gold or the U.S. dollar), severely restricting their ability to create money and affect output, prices, or government revenue. Nevertheless, countries generally have maintained their own currencies. The paper presents a model where agents have heterogeneous preferences-that are private information-over goods of different national origin. In this environment, it may be optimal for countries to have different currencies; we also identify conditions where separate national currencies do not expand the set of optimal allocations. Implications for a currency union in Europe are discussed.
Publication date: February 1998
ISBN: 9781451923087
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Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , International - Economics , International - Economics , money , random matching , heterogenous preferences , currency union , EMU , foreign currency , foreign buyer , exchange rates , foreign goods , currency substitution

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