Dr. Steffen Murau| steffenmurau.com

2016 | ‘European Monetary Integration and the Public-Private Money Divide. Can Post-Crisis Reforms Harmonize Private Money Creation in the Eurozone?’

Based on the conceptual framework of the ‘Money View’, this paper argues that European monetary integration until the Eurocrisis only focused on harmonizing public money on a supranational level while neglecting private credit money creation. The privately issued credit money supply in the European Monetary Union (EMU) is made up of both bank deposits and ‘shadow money’ forms (e.g. money market fund shares and repurchase agreements). The paper discusses if the institutional evolution and the political reform projects after the crisis have led to an upload of the frameworks for private credit money creation on a European level. On the one hand, the paper takes into account the ECB’s role in compensating the unwillingness of European banks to continue intra-EMU cross-border lending by tolerating and supporting TARGET 2 balances. On the other the hand, it addresses the Banking Union reforms. The paper finds that with regard to bank deposits as ‘traditional’ private credit money, a spill-over is taking place that by and large leads to monetary integration further down the monetary hierarchy and seems to establish the public-private partnership for deposit creation on a European level. Finally, the paper defines an avenue for further research on the creation and regulation of shadow money in the EMU.

Presented at the 3rd Workshop in International Studies of the European International Studies Association (EISA), Tübingen (04/2016)

Related articles

‘Primary Dealers in the Offshore US-Dollar System. Intermediating Treasury and Central Bank Balance Sheets’ (with Will Bateman)

This study analyzes the Primary Dealer model for the issuance and distribution of sovereign debt as a distinctive feature of today’s international monetary system, the Offshore US-Dollar System. Primary dealers are a group of private […]

Learn More

‘A Feature, Not a Bug. The US Dollar in the European Monetary Union’ (with Torsten Ehlers)

The European Monetary Union (EMU) is often seen as an attempt to shield Europe from USD dominance. However, as BIS data shows, the USD’s volume and share in EMU cross-border payments has been constantly rising […]

Learn More

‘Macro-Financial Innovation in Times of Crisis: The Role of the Recovery and Resilience Facility in Transforming the Eurozone’s Monetary Architecture’ (with Friederike Reimer, Andrei Guter-Sandu, and Armin Haas)

The Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), introduced as EU’s main macro-financial response to the Covid-19 pandemic, has been hailed as Europe’s Hamiltonian moment and raised great expectations for future fiscal integration. Despite its promised radicality, […]

Learn More