The euro is the result of the most
significant monetary reform in Europe since the Roman Empire. Although the euro was only formally put
into circulation on January 1, 2002, the idea of creating a single
currency has been around for decades. In 1992, the Economic and
Monetary Union (EMU) was formed which set the basics for the creation of the
single currency. Seven years later on January 1, 1999 the euro was born when
the participating countries established exchange rates between their own
currencies and the euro creating a monetary union. Now, the euro area member
states have a single currency, a common interest rate, and a common central
bank (European System of Central Banks.) The banks headquarters’ is in
Frankfurt, Germany. The members of the EU that use the Euro are Belgium, Germany, Greece, Spain,
France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Austria, Portugal, Finland.
Some EU countries that do not use the Euro are Denmark, Sweden, and the U.K.. All the decisions and procedures in the EU are
based on treaties agreed upon by these countries. Since its establishment,
people, goods, services, and money are free to move throughout the union as if
it were one country. It is the second largest currency in the world, second to
the US dollar.
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