Small EU states  <http://euobserver.com/9/23488/?rk=1> rush to join single 
currency

13.02.2007 - 17:41 CET | By Andrew Rettman

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Cyprus has applied to join the eurozone on 1 January 
2008, as part of a trend that is seeing the EU's smallest new members rush to 
get into the single currency while bigger economies such as Poland and Romania 
pull further away from the euro-horizon. 

Nicosia's formal letter of application arrived on the European Commission's 
desk on Tuesday (13 February), starting a process that should see EU states 
give the green light at the EU summit in June and the Cypriot pound replaced by 
euro notes and coins by February next year. 
  
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The move follows Slovenia's euro-entry last month, with commission officials 
also expecting Malta to apply in time for the June summit and with Lithuania, 
Latvia and Estonia planning to join between 2009 and 2010. Lithuania had 
applied to join this year, but missed the criteria by a whisker. 

Added together the total populations of these six smaller, eurozone-friendly 
states amount to 10 million people and the total size of their economies comes 
to €134 billion. The eurozone's biggest member, Germany, alone has 82 million 
people and is worth €2.2 trillion. 

A number of other tiny non-EU states have also already adopted the euro as 
their official currencies for a mixture of reasons: Monaco, San Marino, the 
Vatican City, Andorra, Montenegro as well as the UN-run province of Kosovo all 
use the EU currency, even though Liechtenstein prefers the Swiss franc. 

By contrast, analysts predict that inflationary pressure is likely to see 
Slovakia miss its formal 2009 target. Bulgaria could join as late as 2012. High 
public deficits in the Czech republic and Hungary mean that 2012 would be 
optimistic and Romania is looking at 2014.

Meanwhile, Poland - the biggest of the new EU states - has not even set a 
target date, with the country's eurosceptic government instead planning to hold 
a referendum on euro entry in 2010 in a scheme that could clash with its EU 
accession treaty promise to join the eurozone.

"Some of these are simply lacking the fiscal conditions but others are 
manoeuvring to widen the public deficit as much as they can while they can 
still get away with it," HSBC analyst Juliet Sampson said. "In Poland, it's 
much more political."

"The bigger eastern European countries are not so keen," Credit-Suisse expert 
Dennis Brandes said. "You could say the Cyprus move is a vote of confidence for 
the euro. But I'm not sure that it will affect the bigger picture."

The euro has taken a beating in public opinion terms in the past year with 
former Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi last July saying the euro had "screwed" 
his economy and with an FT-Harris survey last month showing that most people in 
Germany, Italy, France and Spain preferred their old currencies.

Under EU law, once a country joins the euro there is no legal mechanism for 
getting out of the currency again. "Some people in Italy are discussing this. 
But legally speaking, it's for eternity and any kind of break up would have a 
catastrophic effect on the currency," Credit-Suisse's Mr Brandes said. 

Cypriots unsure

In Cyprus itself a recent Eurobarometer showed that 55 percent of people have a 
negative or very negative opinion about the euro, while just 33 percent support 
the switch to the common currency. The old Cyprus pound is also unloved 
however, as it is associated with a period of UK colonial rule that ended in 
1960. 

"My personal feeling has always been that people in Cyprus are looking forward 
to changing to the euro," a Cypriot diplomat told EUobserver. "Perhaps there is 
some concern about the risk of prices being rounded up."

He added that the advent of the euro could even improve chances for the 
reunification of the island, with a 2004 referendum on a UN reunification plan 
rejected by the Greek Cypriots because - among other reasons - they did not 
like the idea of having two currencies (the pound and the Turkish lira) and two 
central banks. 

"Now nobody [in the Turkish Cypriot north] would say anything against the euro, 
so this might create a better climate. This aspect of the solution won't be 
disputed anymore," the diplomat explained.
 
© 2007 EUobserver
 
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Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of 
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know 
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)



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