Euro-Wary Slovenians Already Miss Their Tolar 

By DAN BILEFSKY and NICHOLAS WOOD
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/nicholas_wood/
index.html?inline=nyt-per> 

Ivanka Rihtar has seen four currencies come and go in Slovenia during her
lifetime. Ms. Rihtar, a 70-year-old storekeeper, has little nostalgia for
any of them today.

Soon after she was born, Slovenia used occupation notes introduced during
the occupation of Ljubljana by Axis forces during World War II. Next came
the Yugoslav dinar, which was used for 45 years and was abandoned when
Slovenia declared independence in 1991. Then, she said, Slovenes grew
accustomed to using temporary tokens, issued by the government ahead of the
creation of Slovenia’s own currency, the tolar.

Slovenia’s adoption of the euro on Monday was one change too many for Ms.
Rihtar, who works in Ljubljana’s open-air fruit and vegetable market. She
opposes the move, which made the former Yugoslav republic the first of the
European Union
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/europea
n_union/index.html?inline=nyt-org> ’s formerly Communist members to join the
currency union.

“We are an independent country,” she lamented before the switch took place.
“We should have our own currency.”

Such skepticism about the euro — which began circulating as notes and coins
just five years ago, hailed with great fanfare as an economic means to unite
the Continent — is spreading across the European Union’s newest member
states, even though many of them once viewed adopting the euro as a badge of
honor.

None of the recent entrants, except for Slovenia, are ready to join the euro
zone. Half abandoned their entry plans over the last six months, and failed
to produce new timetables for joining. The lack of progress reflects
persistent fiscal problems and political opposition to the tough economic
changes that euro entry demands.

The newcomers have also looked on with frustration as the older members have
refused to loosen the rules to take into account the budget shortfalls and
higher inflation rates caused by rapid growth after shedding decades of
Communist rule.

Lithuania, one of the first of the newcomers to break with communism, hoped
to adopt the euro on Monday, but it failed to meet the European Union’s
inflation test by 0.06 of a percentage point this summer. Poland failed to
muster the political consensus in favor of joining, and is threatening to
hold a referendum on the issue in 2010. Hungary, burdened by political
instability, has abandoned its previous target of entering the euro zone in
2010. Even Estonia, a Baltic tiger lauded for its economic prowess, has
decided to move back its entry date from 2008 to 2010.

While the European Union’s newcomers grapple with whether to join the euro
club, those already in are having their own doubts. In Italy, France and the
Netherlands, there has been a public backlash against a perceived rise in
prices since the euro’s introduction.

In France, Ségolène Royal, the Socialist presidential nominee, and her
presumed main opponent on the right, Nicolas Sarkozy
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/nicolas_sarkoz
y/index.html?inline=nyt-per> , have criticized the European Central Bank
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/europea
n_central_bank/index.html?inline=nyt-org> , which is responsible for setting
monetary policy for the 12 countries that use the euro. Ms. Royal and Mr.
Sarkozy have asserted that the bank is depressing growth by keeping interest
rates too high. French officials recently suggested that countries should
have a say over monetary policy, much to the annoyance of the bank, which
regards its independence as sacrosanct.

Official figures suggest that fears that the euro has made things more
expensive are more imagined than real, though some merchants seized on the
adoption of the currency to camouflage price increases for everyday items.

Full-year inflation in euro zone countries was 2.2 percent in 2002, the year
euro notes and coins were introduced, compared with 2.5 percent in 2001. Yet
consumers across the euro zone complained of sudden price increases.

Such ambivalence has not gone away. Five years later, most Germans still
long for their old currency, according to a recent poll by the market
research firm Forsa. The poll, for Stern magazine and RTL television, showed
that 58 percent of Germans would prefer the deutsche mark over the euro. In
a recent survey by TNS-Sofres in France, 52 percent of those polled said
giving up the franc had been “quite bad” or “very bad” for France, compared
with 45 percent in 2003.

In Italy, a growing tide against the euro has led some politicians to call
for the country to abandon the currency in a bid to restore Italy’s sagging
economic competitiveness.

In Slovenia, however, polls indicate that the euro is still generally
embraced, in part because it represents a final break with the Communist
past. Much of the population is already familiar with the currency from
shopping trips to Austria and Italy. But pride in the country’s readiness to
join has been offset by fears that the euro will make life more expensive.

“I think a lot of small things are going to be more expensive,” said Bostjan
Kozina, who owns a vegetable store. “We won’t raise here because there is
too much competition, and people would notice straight away. But I think
small things like coffee will go up.”

To try to assuage such concerns, the government has urged retailers not to
raise prices. All goods on display in Slovenia since March have been priced
in euros and tolars, and the dual pricing will remain in place until June.

While Slovenians brace themselves for a change in their currency, some
economists argue that the euro’s successes are more symbolic than economic,
and that it is misguided to push Eastern and Central European countries into
joining a currency that has yet to yield the economic advantages its
champions promised.

Robin Shepherd, who is a trans-Atlantic fellow of the German Marshall Fund
of the United States and is based in Bratislava, said the euro had provided
no obvious economic benefits to the 12 countries that use it. By contrast,
in Britain, which has clung fiercely to the pound, the economy has
outperformed that of the euro zone in five of the seven full years of the
euro’s existence. (The euro was introduced as an accounting currency in
1999, with coins and notes first distributed in 2002.)

Other critics of the euro add that the euro zone’s one-size-fits-all
monetary policy has proved too inflexible for countries growing at different
speeds, while the euro has not managed to challenge the dollar as the
world’s reserve currency, though it is making gains and rose about 11
percent against the dollar in 2006.

The euro’s defenders retort that the single currency has had the
psychological effect of binding together the Continent, easing cross-border
purchases for consumers and reducing the cost of transactions. They contend
that the strict criteria for joining the euro club have motivated countries
to strive for smaller budget deficits and lower inflation rates.

The discipline required for euro entry, for example, has helped Slovenia
achieve steady growth of 4 percent a year, while managing to cut inflation
to 2.3 percent, compared with 10 percent a decade ago.

There is a “tendency to take the euro as a scapegoat, which is
extraordinarily unjust, unfair and false,” the European Central Bank
president, Jean-Claude Trichet
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/jeanclaude_tri
chet/index.html?inline=nyt-per> , recently told a committee of the European
Parliament
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/europea
n_parliament/index.html?inline=nyt-org> . Mr. Trichet added that the euro
zone had achieved much better results in economic growth, job creation and
inflation in the years since its introduction.

Whatever the economic challenges of the euro, in Slovenia, the biggest
problem consumers may face is learning to handle small change. The euro will
be valued at 239 tolars, a rate that has been in place since 2004 but which
does not lend itself to easy mathematical conversion.

To try to help Slovenians cope, the Bank of Slovenia sent free calculators
to 760,000 households.

Dan Bilefsky reported from Brussels and Nicholas Wood from Ljubljana,
Slovenia.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/03/business/worldbusiness/03euro.html?pagewan
ted=print



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