Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 May 2010
Today, in 2008, the euro is the common currency of fifteen EU countries with around 320 million inhabitants, and most other member states are aiming to join the euro area in the near or not-so-distant future. With the issuance of euro-denominated banknotes and coins at the beginning of 2002, the former national currencies were taken out of circulation, their names henceforward consigned to the history books. The fact that isolated attacks by populist politicians fail to elicit much support for a return to the national currency only serves to confirm that the common currency has become an irreversible reality, and that going back is not really an option.
Globally, too, the euro has become firmly established as the second most important currency after the US dollar. By some measures, for example in terms of its share of global official reserves, the euro still lags a long way behind; but in other respects, notably in its role as currency of denomination for credit, the euro has more or less drawn level with the American currency. Investors all around the world put their faith in the euro and buy euro-denominated long-term paper. Confidence in the stability of the euro is reflected in inflation expectations that are firmly anchored at low levels, helping explain what are, historically, exceptionally low long-term nominal interest rates.
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