Eurozone/Timelines: Difference between revisions
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* 1990: The Rome Summit of the European Council agrees that Stage 2 of EMU will begin on 1st January 1994 | * 1990: The Rome Summit of the European Council agrees that Stage 2 of EMU will begin on 1st January 1994 | ||
* 1992: Signing of the Maastricht Treaty | * 1992: Signing of the Maastricht Treaty | ||
* 1999: Stage 3 begins. The exchange | * 1999: Stage 3 begins. The [[exchange rate]]s of the participating nations are fixed and the [[euro]] begins to trade on financial markets | ||
* 2002: Euro notes and coins enter into circulation in all participating Member States. | * 2002: Euro notes and coins enter into circulation in all participating Member States. | ||
* 2008: [[Crash of 2008|Financial crisis]]. | * 2008: [[Crash of 2008|Financial crisis]]. | ||
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:: The [[European Central Bank]] starts a series of reductions of its [[discount rate|main refinancing rate]] | :: The [[European Central Bank]] starts a series of reductions of its [[discount rate|main refinancing rate]] | ||
* 2009: The bank reduces its main refinancing rate to 1 per cent, and introduces a [[quantitative easing]] as part a programme of "enhanced credit support"[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Eurozone/Timelines&action=edit] | * 2009: The bank reduces its main refinancing rate to 1 per cent, and introduces a [[quantitative easing]] as part a programme of "enhanced credit support"[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Eurozone/Timelines&action=edit] | ||
* 2010 Launch of the [[Eurozone crisis#The Financial Stability Facility|European Financial Stability Facility]] | * 2010: [[Eurozone crisis]]. Launch of the [[Eurozone crisis#The Financial Stability Facility|European Financial Stability Facility]] | ||
* 2011 The | * 2011 The [[European Central Bank]] raises its main refinancing rate to 1.25 per cent in April and to 1.5 per cent in July, and reduces it again to 1.25 per cent in November[http://www.ecb.int/press/pressconf/2011/html/is111103.en.html]. |
Revision as of 04:11, 4 November 2011
- 1970: The Werner Report
- 1972: The snake
- 1973: European Monetary Cooperation Fund
- 1974: Council Decision on the attainment of a high degree of convergence in the Community
- 1975: Launch of the European Currency Unit
- 1978: European Council resolution
- 1979: Launch of the European Monetary System
- 1986: The Single European Act is signed
- 1989: The Delors Committee report calls for the establishment of the European Monetary Union through
- The Madrid Summit of the European Council agrees that Stage 1 (the completion of the internal market and the removal of all obstacles to financial integration) will start on July 1st 1990.
- 1990: The Rome Summit of the European Council agrees that Stage 2 of EMU will begin on 1st January 1994
- 1992: Signing of the Maastricht Treaty
- 1999: Stage 3 begins. The exchange rates of the participating nations are fixed and the euro begins to trade on financial markets
- 2002: Euro notes and coins enter into circulation in all participating Member States.
- 2008: Financial crisis.
- The spread between the three-month EURIBOR and the overnight indexed swap rate rises to over 200 basis points.
- The European Central Bank starts a series of reductions of its main refinancing rate
- 2009: The bank reduces its main refinancing rate to 1 per cent, and introduces a quantitative easing as part a programme of "enhanced credit support"[1]
- 2010: Eurozone crisis. Launch of the European Financial Stability Facility
- 2011 The European Central Bank raises its main refinancing rate to 1.25 per cent in April and to 1.5 per cent in July, and reduces it again to 1.25 per cent in November[2].