Katana VentraIP

There are three stages of the EMU, each of which consists of progressively closer economic integration. Only once a state participates in the third stage it is permitted to adopt the euro as its official currency. As such, the third stage is largely synonymous with the eurozone. The euro convergence criteria are the set of requirements that needs to be fulfilled in order for a country to be approved to participate in the third stage. An important element of this is participation for a minimum of two years in the European Exchange Rate Mechanism ("ERM II"), in which candidate currencies demonstrate economic convergence by maintaining limited deviation from their target rate against the euro.


The EMU policies cover all European Union member states. All new EU member states must commit to participate in the third stage in their treaties of accession and are obliged to enter the third stage once they comply with all convergence criteria. Twenty EU member states, including most recently Croatia, have entered the third stage and have adopted the euro as their currency. Denmark, whose EU membership predates the introduction of the euro, has a legal opt-out from the EU Treaties and is thus not required to enter the third stage.[1][2]

On 1 July 1990, exchange controls are abolished, thus capital movements are completely liberalised in the .

European Economic Community

The in 1992 establishes the completion of the EMU as a formal objective and sets a number of economic convergence criteria, concerning the inflation rate, public finances, interest rates and exchange rate stability.

Treaty of Maastricht

The treaty enters into force on 1 November 1993.

Stage 1 (July 2015 – June 2017): The EMU should be made more resilient by building on existing instruments and making the best possible use of the existing Treaties. In other words, "deepening by doing". This first stage comprise implementation of the following eleven working points.

Capital Markets Union

Banking union of the European Union

Economy of the European Union

European Central Bank

European Supervisory Authorities

Internal Market

Simonazzi, Annamaria; (2000), "Italy towards European Monetary Union (and domestic socio-economic disunion)", in Moss, Bernard H.; Michie, Jonathan (eds.), The single European currency in national perspective: a community in crisis?, Basingstoke: Macmillan, ISBN 9780333792933.

Vianello, Fernando

Hacker, Björn (2013). (PDF). Berlin: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Internat. Policy Analysis. ISBN 9783864987465.

On the way to a fiscal or a stability union? The plans for a "genuine" economic and monetary union

Miles, Lee; Doherty, Gabriel (March 2005). "The United Kingdom: a cautious euro-outsider". . 27 (1): 89–109. doi:10.1080/07036330400030064. S2CID 154539276.

Journal of European Integration

Howarth, David (March 2007). "The domestic politics of British policy on the Euro". . 29 (1): 47–68. doi:10.1080/07036330601144409. S2CID 153678875.

Journal of European Integration

EMU: A Historical Documentation (European Commission)

The euro (European Commission Economic and Financial Affairs)

subject file by the CVCE (Centre of European Studies)

European integration process: 1969–1979 Crises and revival: Economic and Monetary Union cooperation

Completing Europe's Economic and Monetary Union: Five presidents' report (EC, EP, ECB, Eurogroup and Council)