Croatia joining euro shows its appeal endures: Lagarde

 

Bloomberg

European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde said the currency union’s newest member proves that the euro has lasting appeal.
“Croatia worked hard to become the 20th member of the euro area, and it succeeded,” Lagarde said in a statement. “It shows the euro is an attractive currency, which brings stability to its members.”
The Adriatic country of 3.9 million, scarred by war a generation ago, just completed its transformation and became the latest country to join the world’s biggest currency zone. It also means the ECB Governing Council increases to 26
policymakers, with Croatian National Bank Governor Boris Vujcic joining the ranks of rate setters.
Croatia became the first European Union member to join both the Schengen area and the eurozone on the same day.
“Being able to cross internal borders without controls is one important achievement, being able to pay cross-borders using the same EU currency is another,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a news conference at a Croatian border crossing.
Two other euro hopefuls aren’t so fortunate. Romania’s bid for membership has been hampered by internal squabbling, evidenced by the highest turnover of governments in
the EU.
Bulgaria, the bloc’s poorest country, wants to join in 2024, but wary European officials aren’t convinced that its economy and scandal-plagued banking system are ready for currency prime time.
Ultimately adopting the euro is actually a condition of signing up to the EU, though the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Sweden don’t seem interested. Denmark, which clinched an opt-out on acceding before the dawn of the currency, isn’t budging either.
“Only six EU member states are not members of the club,” excluding Denmark, Lagarde said separately in an interview with Croatian newspaper Jutarnji list.

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