Abstract

Since the entry of Bulgaria into the European Union, the country's full membership in the Economic and Monetary Union has become one of the national economic policy goals. In the recent period Bulgaria fulfils all the nominal convergence criteria, except for the criterion on exchange rate stability as long as the country does not participate in the ERM II mechanism (although Bulgaria has a currency board arrangement in place since 1997 and the Bulgarian currency is pegged to the euro). Despite that, Bulgaria remains the EU member with the lowest level of GDP per capita and lowest productivity and income levels. In June 2018 the Bulgarian authorities submitted a letter of intent to the EU policy makers to join the ERM II mechanism and the banking union. In July 2020 the mutual agreement to include the Bulgarian lev in the ERM II mechanism and Bulgaria to join the banking union was achieved. In the context of the future full EMU membership it is important to assess the evolution and the state of Bulgaria's real convergence. This paper looks at the Bulgaria's real convergence, understood as the convergence of GDP per capita, labour productivity and convergence of price levels. We use the Beta and Sigma convergence methods and explore the convergence in the 1999-2018 period. We also compare Bulgaria's real convergence to the real convergence of other CEE countries that are EU members (Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia), part of which have already accepted the euro and the other part are still outside of the euroarea. We also try to explain the economic reasoning behind the EMU accession path of Bulgaria. The results of the survey show that Bulgaria lags behind in its convergence process from other CEE countries, but at the same time we believe that the benefits of the euroarea membership outweigh the possible negative consequences.

Highlights

  • Since the entry of Bulgaria into the European Union in 2007 the country has pursued an adoption of the euro and full membership into the Economic and Monetary Union

  • A Coordination Council for preparation of the Republic of Bulgaria for euroarea membership was established in 2015 and in June 2018 the Bulgarian authorities submitted a letter of intent to the EU policy makers to join the ERM II mechanism and the banking union

  • In July 2020 the finance ministers of the euroarea member states, the President of the European Central Bank and the finance ministers and central bank governors of Denmark and Bulgaria have achieved a mutual agreement to include the Bulgarian lev in the ERM II mechanism

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Since the entry of Bulgaria into the European Union in 2007 the country has pursued an adoption of the euro and full membership into the Economic and Monetary Union. The country favoured a strategy for quick euro adoption to follow immediately after the EU entry, stating 2010 as a target This strategy was incorporated in the single official document for euro acceptance in Bulgaria, namely an Agreement between the Council of Ministers and the Bulgarian National Bank on introduction of the euro in Bulgaria dated 25 November 2004. We can compare them to the standing point of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which are all small economies with hard peg regimes prior to their EMU entry that pursued prompt euro adoption upon their EU accession Those economies entered the EU in 2004 and immediately after that entered the ERM II mechanism (in 2004 and 2005). The presence of Beta convergence is a necessary but not sufficient condition for Sigma convergence

Literature review
Results and Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call